https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/0966369X.2011.552319?journalCode=cgpc20
Those are some pretty low prices. @xabashi How does $2 CAD sound?

Traditionally, to provide for and support men was considered by society to be a reputable position for a woman and respect was often gained through duties carried out for husbands and male relatives. Therefore, in tracing the history of prostitution in Ethiopia, it is important to recognise that cultural values and beliefs have changed regarding the status of this work. Previously, prostitution was reserved as an occupation for high status respectable women who were thought to provide important services. During the middle ages, such women travelled with the Emperor's camp offering sexual services and later in the nineteenth century were found to offer such services to sailors, both local and foreign, at the coastal towns. It was from this point, although particularly through European infiltration into Ethiopia during the Italian occupation in the 1930s, that a different perspective emerged of prostitution as dirty, diseased, and not a service, confining women to hidden locations and degrading medical inspections. This thinking changed the value of sex workers in Ethiopia from respected to insignificant and despised, creating a prostitute identity that was in conflict with traditional societal norms and values.
These girls earned very little money from clients, often as little as 30 birr (£1.50) for the whole night, and generally worked from the small local bars and Tella and Araki.


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