While dealing with a PIL
filed by Bachpan Bachao Andolan about large scale child trafficking in the
country, a bench of Justice Dalveer Bhandari and Justice AK Pattnaik are
reported to have advised the Solicitor General, “When you say it is the
world’s oldest profession and when you are not able to curb it by laws. Why
don’t you legalize it.?”
It is noteworthy that the
judges were not dealing with those women who take to this profession as a choice
but children who are abducted, trapped, bought and sold by criminal mafias
to be inducted into the flesh trade.I am left wondering whether the Hon’ble
judges of the Supreme Court intend to legalize child trafficking
as well—all because our government agencies are unable and unwilling to
curb the criminal mafias who are pushing vulnerable children from
impoverished families into the flesh trade.
It is extremely misleading
to describe prostitution as one of the "oldest professions" in
history. Even today there are numerous communities world over, including
in India, which have no history of prostitution. Many do not even have a
word to describe it. This demeaning form of transaction between men and women
is characerstick of those societies which take a very perverse view of
male sexuality. The assumption is that men being men, they are unable to
control their sexual urges and therefore they need all kinds
of avenues for satisfying their insatiable hunger for sex with
mutiple partners.It also assumes that men should not be expected to take
responsibility for out of wedlock progeny. Women have to bear
the brunt of "illegtimate" births. This perverse mindset that
takes a very lowly view of male sexuality and moral fibre and expects
society at large and women in particular to be indulgent towards their
irresponsible behaviour. Using this logic even rape is often justified on
grounds that the man concerned was unable to control his sexual urge or
that a woam asked for it. I am convinced no self respecting man will
use such a cynical view of male sexuality which amount to declaring men unfit
for socially responsible behaviour. Most self respecting men view sex
trade being more demeaning for men than for women. That is why some of the
strongest voices against prostitution in literature, cinema and in social
reform movements have come from men.
There are compelling reasons
to decriminalize prostitution for the following
categories of persons:
a) Those that enter the
sex trade voluntarily—as do many high society call girls—simply because if a
person wishes to enter into a demeaning relationship with another for
monetary or other favours, there is no way the government can stop the
practice because it is enacted in private;
b) Those that
gravitate towards this profession due to poverty related reasons or
abusive family circumstances because such victims of circumstances ought not
be treated as criminals.
It is well acknowledged that
arrests and rescue operations by the police are mostly a theatrical exercise to
keep the terror alive so that the sex workers and pimps dare not resist
paying bribes. Therefore, draconian laws put in the hands of the police
add to the problem instead of curbing prostitution.
However, no self respecting
society can afford to “legalize” the dehumanization of millions of those who
have been coerced into flesh trade through force, fraud, abduction or
violence.
Till the early 1990’s
defense of the right of prostitutes came mainly from feminist groups and those
gender sensitive men who argued that laws penalizing prostitutes amounted
to punishing the victims while letting off their male clients who
exploited their poverty and vulnerability. Many of them demanded laws
that punished men who trafficked in women as well as men who live off
prostitutes as pimps and those who visit them as clients.
However, in recent years the
discourse on the subject have undergone sea-changes due to the scare of AIDs
in first world countries. This has led billions of dollars, pounds and
Euros as well as other resources being directed towards “safe sex
practices”, with special focus on condom use among sex workers. From
Prince Charles to Bill Gates to Hollywood stars as well as some western
government and major donor agencies have all joined the campaign to
legalize prostitution because they feel that is the only way condom use,
regular health checkups including HIV tests can be promoted among sex
workers and their customers.
Earlier sleazy lawyers
helped sex workers get bail when arrested. Today, with the availability of
massive international grants for this work, some of the best lawyers in
India have emerged as defenders of the rights of prostitutes. While
some still stay with the old-fashioned view that sex workers are trapped in the
profession due to poverty related circumstances, many argue that renting
out one’s body to a customer for a few hours is no different from a
doctor, teacher or an architect renting out his intellectual skills to an
employer for a
monthly
salary. Therefore, they demand that sex work should be legalized and
treated with the same dignity and respect as any other profession.
However, those who demand
that prostitution should be “legalized” and treated with “respect and dignity”
at par with all other professions and occupations need to answer a few
basic questions:
What does the term
“legalize” actually imply? Does it mean that a prostitute can open a sexshop
anywhere she likes and advertise her services? Does it mean men or women
supplying call girls should be able to set up an office in any
neighborhood they like, just as doctors set up their clinics, proclaiming that
call girls are available between such and such hours? How many of us are
willing to let our young children grow up amidst an atmosphere where renting
a woman’s body for sex is considered a perfectly legitimate activity?
If people come to know that
a mafia don has set up a call-girl racket in their neighbourhood, do they have
the right to seek its removal or does it mean other citizens have to suffer
the presence of such activities in the name of “respecting” the rights of
sex workers to an occupation of their choice and thereby endanger their
own lives?
Those who demand that sex
work be given the same “respect” as any other profession, need to explain whose
duty it is to give or ensure “respect” for prostitutes and pimps? Is the
government expected to enact a law requiring people not to shun
prostitutes, as for instance it did to ban the practice of
untouchability? One can prove that one does not practice
untouchability by freely intermixing and inter-dining with castes condemned as
untouchables. How does one prove one’s “respect” for a prostitute?
Do we have to send our children to brothels to intermix with the children
of sex workers or do we hold special functions to socially honour the most
successful among them? If prostitutes cannot win the respect of the
clients they service, how can the rest of society be made to respect them?
We are told that at least
feminists have a duty to respect women for making this choice. If feminism is
about respecting each and every choice women make, then why are we not
willing to respect women who choose to worship at sati shrines or those
who abort female fetuses because they prefer being mothers of sons rather than
daughters?
Countries where sex work is
legal are not free from dehumanizing forms of sex slavery and prostitutes do
not command social respect. Therefore, copycat solutions will not work.
While there is need to decriminalize this activity and free sex workers
from the terror and extortionist grip of the police, to make it respectable and
socially acceptable would mean turning a blind eye to the dehumanizing
circumstances through which the vast majority of children and women are
trapped into trading their bodies.
The author is a Professor at
the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies and founder editor Manushi. She
can be reached
at editor@manushi-india.org
First Published in The
Indian Express December 15, 2009
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