Thai debate on legalising prostitution set for late November
November 4, 2003
Bangkok — Thailand will hold a two-day public hearing this month to debate
whether to legalise its famous sex industry and will invite prostitutes to take
part, Justice Minister Pongthep Thepkanjana said Tuesday.
"There will be a brainstorming session involving people from every segment of
society including prostitutes who will share their information," Pongthep said
of the November 27-28 hearing.
"If the public hearing finds that we should amend the current law, we will do
it," he said.
The most recent legislation passed to govern the industry, the Protection and
Suppression of Prostitution Bill, was passed in 1996. It substantially
increased penalties for selling children into the trade while reducing
punishment for sex workers.
Any modification of existing laws would likely be done through the repeal of up
to four key articles, said Chulalongkorn University professor Narong
Phetprasert, a researcher for the ruling Thai Rak Thai (TRT) party.
The articles, one of which makes it illegal for a woman to "behave" like a
prostitute, are exploitative and provide opportunities for police to take
advantage of sex workers, Narong told AFP recently.
Narong has drafted a proposal to repeal the articles, and said Prime Minister
Thaksin Shinawatra has expressed his support but wants to close down brothels
engaging in bonded prostitution, where women are virtually enslaved.
One of the major concerns in the legalisation debate is a proposal to register
sex workers, a move the women fear will stigmatise them permanently.
Chantawipa Apisuk of Empower Foundation, which champions the rights of
Thailand's estimated 200,000 sex workers, said registration would do nothing to
tackle the bribery, unfair profit-sharing and repressive regulations that
plague the industry.
Thailand's freewheeling sex trade can be seen in every corner of the kingdom,
from Bangkok's famous neon-lit red light districts to a vast network of massage
parlours and decrepit brothels in every town and village.
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