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Thailand Sex Work News

The International Union of Sex Workers (IUSW) reports that Thailand has approximately 250,000 sex workers, making it one of the countries with the highest numbers globally. Despite these figures, sex work remains illegal in Thailand, and workers face ongoing challenges in securing basic labor rights.

The IUSW's recent report, "Sex Worker Statistics by Country, Gender," estimates that there are over 50 million sex workers worldwide, with 41.6 million female and 10.4 million male. The organization anticipates that this number will grow due to expanding opportunities for providing sex-related services.

The report lists the top countries for sex work, with China leading at five million sex workers, followed by India (three million), the US (one million), and several others, including Thailand and Brazil (250,000 each).

Although Thailand ranks among the top ten countries with the highest numbers of sex workers, the industry remains illegal under the Prevention and Suppression of Prostitution Act. Despite the law, there is widespread recognition of the industry's existence.

Activists and sex workers in Thailand are pushing for the legalization of sex work to secure labor rights similar to those in other professions. Chatchalawan Mueangchan, a human rights activist from the Empower Foundation, revealed that a Protection of Sex Service Act was submitted to the Ministry of Social Development and Human Security (M-Society) over five years ago but has yet to progress despite multiple referendums.

Chatchalawan and other industry representatives recently renewed calls for progress on the act, emphasizing the need for equal labor rights for sex workers, as highlighted during recent events like Labour Day.

Prostitution, often referred to as the “world’s oldest profession,” is a persistent phenomenon that has existed in various forms across different cultures, societies, and locations throughout history. However, the moral and legal status of prostitution varies widely among countries, and so does its prevalence. A relevant question that emerges is: which country has the highest rate of prostitution?

To address this question, one must take into account the multiple factors that influence the occurrence of prostitution. These may include socioeconomic conditions, legal frameworks, and cultural norms. Moreover, obtaining reliable data on this sensitive topic is challenging, as it often depends on estimates and research on the illicit trade. Nevertheless, based on the available information, it is possible to identify some countries with notably high rates of prostitution.

It should be noted that some countries are renowned for having large sex industries due to tourism, local demand, or economic necessity. Countries such as Thailand, Cambodia, and parts of Germany (where prostitution is legal and regulated) are frequently cited in debates about the sex industry. However, having a prominent sex industry does not necessarily imply that these countries have the “most” prostitution; it simply means that it is more visible and regulated.

Prostitution is a widespread phenomenon, with varying rates across different countries. This section provides an overview of the countries where prostitution is most common.

Germany has legalized prostitution, resulting in an increase in the number of sex workers and brothels. Thailand has a large sex tourism industry, attracting visitors from around the world. Brazil also has a high rate of sex tourism, especially during the Carnival season. China has technically outlawed prostitution, but it is still prevalent, particularly in urban areas.

Colombia has a sizable prostitution market, driven mainly by drug-related violence and poverty. India and the Philippines also face high rates of prostitution due to poverty and a lack of employment opportunities for women. Spain continues to struggle with the issue of prostitution, as it is neither fully legal nor criminalized.

Australia, Finland, Bolivia, and the Netherlands have some regulation of sex work, leading to a degree of tolerance toward the industry. France and Denmark have illegalized prostitution, but it still occurs in these countries, partly due to their appeal to tourists.

Mexico, the United States, Argentina, Canada, and Nevada (where it is legal) have considerable levels of prostitution, with authorities attempting to regulate or combat the industry. Japan, South Korea, and New Zealand have significant issues with prostitution despite efforts to curb the trade.

Some European countries, such as Lithuania, Austria, Latvia, Croatia, Czech Republic, Turkey, Belgium, Italy, and Slovenia have varying degrees of regulation or penalties for prostitution. Finally, even in countries like Zimbabwe, where prostitution is illegal, it persists as an underground business.

The factors that contribute to high rates of prostitution in these countries include poverty, unemployment, drug addiction, and global demand for sex services. These factors should be taken into account when discussing prostitution in a specific country.

Thailand’s government has stopped the country’s leading pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) services from operating, jeopardising an approach that has attracted international attention and is at the heart of Asia’s largest PrEP programme.

Around 80% of people using PrEP in Thailand receive it from a clinic led and staffed by members of the community that it serves. But under new rules, only government doctors can prescribe PrEP and community services cannot dispense it. Another rule change stops PrEP being issued to people excluded from the country’s main health insurance system.

Most of the services affected are ‘key-population led services’. Key populations are groups of people who are disproportionately affected by HIV – in Thailand, men who have sex with men, transgender women and sex workers. The clinics are run by community members and have meaningfully engaged the wider community to create services that respond to their needs.

A tourist had parts of his right earlobe bitten off and swallowed in front of him by a drunk Thai prostitute.

Kannika Kamton, 25, is said to have approached the 55-year-old tourist after hopping onto an open-back bus in Thailand while “severely intoxicated from alcohol”

As the victim screamed in agony, Kamton swallowed the chunk of flesh.

The Ministry of Social and Human Development is seeking public feedback over one month. Unlike Miss Rotten Egg's case, this exercise was proceeding quietly without much media attention. Those who knew what was going on did not know what the ministry intended to do with the opinions gathered.

Hopefully, the ministry will get serious about rewriting this archaic law after failed attempts to do so two years ago.

In Thailand, paying for sex is not illegal if it is consensual. But under the law, sex workers can be arrested for approaching potential clients, advertising their services or working in brothels. However, clients are left alone.

Thai, Only Fans star and her boy friend were arrested for producing erotic vides on the channel.  The produced sexually explicit content on the OnlyFans social media platform. Their arrest has sparked a wave of fear and resentment among other creators.  It is time the Thai government revisted existing laws on pornographic content.

"It is time the state admits that sex is natural act. As long as sex is performed within private spaces, it is not wrong."

"As long as sexually-explicit murals still exist on temple walls, the state cannot claim this crackdown was meant to uphold peace and morality," he concluded.

Thailands escorts and sex workers and prostitutes and others who depend on the nightlife industries held a protest on Tuesday. They have been overlooked for compensation during the COVID19 lockdowns of bars and clubs.  We pay our taxes like anyone else, but we receive no aid.

Sex workers in Thailand have launched a petition calling for prostitution to be decriminalised and urging authorities to remove all penalties for selling and buying sex.

“The law punishes sex workers - 80% of whom are mothers and the main breadwinner for the whole family,” said Mai Junta, a representative from Empower.

More than 24,000 people were arrested, prosecuted and fined for sex work-related offences in Thailand last year, according to the Royal Thai Police.

Surang Janyam, director of the Service Workers in Group, a Thailand-based support organisation for sex workers, said the prostitution law should be repealed to allow sex workers to be protected under labour laws.

A BRIT was arrested in Thailand today for allegedly beating and stabbing a prostitute to death with a machete and pool cue during a drug-fuelled romp.

The suspect – reported to be a 46-year-old from Northern Ireland – was nabbed this afternoon in the notorious Sin City resort of Pattaya.

He took the woman to his rented bungalow where they romped all night without sleeping after both taking Yaba – a powerful methamphetamine – police say.

But the pair started arguing this morning before the Brit battered Onn with a snooker cue until it snapped, it is claimed.

A British tourist has undergone medical treatment after he ripped his penis during a ferocious sex session with a Thai prostitute.

The unnamed holidaymaker in his 30s called emergency services while yelling incoherently down the phone on Saturday night.

When they arrived the man was wearing shorts and there was a Thai prostitute in the room with him. 

The white bed sheets were covered with a large amount of fresh blood.

The panic-stricken man explained to the team that he was having sex so hard that his frenulum – a small piece of skin that connects the foreskin to the penis – had ripped.