Mail & Guardian

Sex work must be legalised in the best interests of South Africa

- Relebohile Motana

“I am a sex worker. I have blood running through my veins and human rights just like all South Africans.”

This is a cry of a sex worker who was denied medical assistance for a suspected sexually transmitte­d infection (STI) at a public clinic in Mpumalanga.

The illegal status of sex work allows for discrimina­tion, social isolation and stigmatisa­tion of sex workers. This does society no good because, for example, when sex workers’ condoms are confiscate­d by police, they have unprotecte­d sex, which raises the rate of STI and HIV infections.

Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa recently launched the South African National Sex Worker HIV Plan 20162019, developed by the South African National Aids Council in collaborat­ion with the department­s of health, social developmen­t and justice and civil society organisati­ons.

But, to implement the plan, the hostile legal and conservati­ve attitudes will have to be addressed.

The plan, which acknowledg­es that sex workers have rights to life, dignity and health services, was informed by research done by the United States’s Centers for Disease Control and the University of California, which studied the prevalence of HIV among female sex work- ers in South Africa.

The study revealed a 59.6% rate, by far the highest of any community in the country and three to four times higher than among women in the general population. The figure in itself is alarming but it also means that sex workers have a good chance of transmitti­ng HIV to their partners.

To reduce the rate of transmissi­on, the plan’s objectives include:

Encouragin­g the use of condoms, and reducing risky behaviour by creating a safe environmen­t for sex workers and their clients; and

Providing services through peerled programmes to make condoms and sex education resources readily available, to encourage responsibl­e sexual behaviour, and to provide places or “drop-in centres” throughout the country where they can meet.

Sex work is illegal in terms of the Sexual Offences Act of 2007. If the government wants sex workers to receive the services suggested by the sex worker HIV plan, it will have to legalise sex work. South Africa will fail to reduce HIV transmissi­on rates if sex work is regarded as being immoral and is stigmatise­d.

Many sex workers join the industry to take care of their families or to survive. Melissa, a sex worker from Chatsworth in Durban, came to Johannesbu­rg in search of a job. But she did not have a matric qualificat­ion and couldn’t find work. Out of desperatio­n, she became a sex worker, charging just R100 for straight sex, and from R200 to R300 for other sex services.

If a safe environmen­t is not created for sex workers, they will not see that they can be assisted to face their social and economic challenges. Decriminal­ising sex work will allow their rights to be restored.

It will also provide a platform for the government and the relevant organisati­ons to assist those who have turned to the sex industry for survival.

Legalising sex work is not the same as legalising illicit addictive drugs. Legalising drugs opens a window for crime. In contrast, legalising sex work will encourage society to see sex workers as people who have health and psychologi­cal needs that can be addressed, which in turn will help to improve society’s health in general, especially in relation to HIV.

Legalising sex work will also eliminate the confusion that exists in the government. The department of health distribute­s condoms to sex workers and the South African Police Services confiscate­s them. If sex work is legalised, those in the government will start to speak the same language.

The Commission for Gender Equality supports the decriminal­isation of sex work. One of its commission­ers, Janine Hicks, argues that “it is the only viable approach to promoting and protecting the dignity and rights of sex workers”.

Society should not see the decriminal­isation of sex work as an opportunit­y for people to cheat on their partners or as an easy way for people to escape poverty.

Instead, it should be seen as an opportunit­y to reduce the stigma attached to sex work, which prevents sex workers from being empowered to have safe sex and receive treatment for STIs.

The decriminal­isation of sex work has yielded positive results in New Zealand and in several states in Australia. Studies show that decriminal­isation encouraged sex workers to protect themselves, it improved their relationsh­ips with the police, and the demand for their services remained unchanged.

It makes no sense for the government to allow conservati­ve attitudes to prevent the decriminal­isation of sex work. The continued criminalis­ation of sex work will drive sex workers away from the initiative­s created to reduce HIV and the state will lose the battle to reduce new infections — and the general population will remain prey to it.

 ?? Photo: David Harrison ?? Mean streets: Decriminal­ising prostituti­on will promote and protect the human rights and dignity of sex workers.
Photo: David Harrison Mean streets: Decriminal­ising prostituti­on will promote and protect the human rights and dignity of sex workers.

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