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Sex workers seek decriminalisation of trade

Published: 23 Jul 2015 - 08:32 am | Last Updated: 11 Jan 2022 - 09:31 pm

New Delhi: Sitting on a cold concrete slab, Sunita Devi reapplies her red lipstick as she prepares for customers at a dingy brothel along the Indian capital’s infamous GB road. 
“We don’t go to men, they come to us. We want to earn a living with dignity just as in any other profession,” Devi, dressed in a traditional cream and green salwar-kameez, said, in the bustling red light district. Like millions of other sex workers, Devi, 35, is anxiously waiting for the country’s highest court to hand down a ruling which they hope will finally clarify the age-old profession’s legal status.  
Soliciting is illegal in India along with running a brothel and pimping, but the law, an archaic throw back to British colonial times, is vague on prostitution itself.  
Sex workers are hoping the Supreme Court’s ruling will force the government to decriminalise the industry. They say they are tired of being randomly targeted by police and sent to correction homes where they say conditions are worse than jails.  Some 2,800 women and 4,800 men were arrested in 2013, the latest government figures show but with a conviction rate less than 35 percent, cases continue to languish in courts for years.
 “Don’t look at us as if we are criminals and please don’t arrest our clients,” said Devi, who was sold by the boyfriend she eloped with for 50,000 rupees (around $800) to a man who in turn struck a deal with a brothel pimp. Devi opted to stay on at the brothel, where clients buy a token and select a woman of their choice, once she realised she could earn “a good 500 rupees ($8) a day or more” without having to “work too hard”.   
On average, she sees two men a night, up to five in busier times. 
India has nearly three million sex workers which focuses on black market industries worldwide.  “The law is very ambiguous. Who is exploiting whom? The woman who gets paid or the one seeking pleasure?” asked Tripti Tandon of the Lawyers Collective advocacy group. 
Public health workers want decriminalisation, saying women and clients are forced underground for fear of arrest, making it difficult to limit the spread of HIV and other diseases. But anti-trafficking campaigners argue any kind of legitimacy would fuel the industry, leading to a jump in smuggling of mainly poor and uneducated women from rural areas as well as children into brothels, a major problem in India.AFP