Cape Argus

‘Legalising sex work has many benefits’

- Richter is a research fellow at the African Centre for Migration & Society, at the University of the Witwatersr­and. Huysamen is a senior research associate in sexual and reproducti­ve health at Manchester Metropolit­an University.

IT IS illegal to buy or sell sex in South Africa. But this may soon be a thing of the past if a recently published draft bill to decriminal­ise sex work is passed. Researcher­s and activists Marlise Richter and Monique Huysamen set out what’s in the new law, what’s good about it and what still needs work.

What’s envisaged under the proposed new law?

If the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Bill 2022 is passed, South Africa will become only the second country in the world to fully decriminal­ise sex work. New Zealand is the only other country where this is the case.

The draft law proposes the removal of the criminalis­ation of buying and selling sex. It also proposes to clear the criminal records of those who have been prosecuted for buying or selling sex.

Various groups have pushed back against the bill. Opponents of the bill recommend that either:

• The current law that fully criminalis­es all aspects of sex work remains in place; or

• That sex workers are decriminal­ised but clients remain criminalis­ed.

This last idea is drawn from what’s called the “Nordic model” – an approach followed by some Nordic countries, including Sweden.

Why is full decriminal­isation in South Africa so important?

Women in South Africa face very high levels of gender-based violence.

Female sex workers are even more exposed than other women. A recent study showed 70% of female sex workers had experience­d violence in the past year. More than half had been raped by intimate partners, police, clients or other men.

Another argument for decriminal­isation relates to health. HIV prevalence of 39% to 89% has been documented among female sex workers across different areas of South Africa in the last decade.

This is extremely high when compared to the country’s national HIV prevalence rate of 13.7%.

The social stigma attached to sex work also means some health-care providers hold prejudiced and vindictive views against sex workers. These views can drive sex workers away from health services, including HIV prevention, treatment and support.

If sex work was not a crime, clients and police wouldn’t have the power to abuse sex workers. Sex workers would be able to regularly negotiate safe sex. Police would have to take their complaints seriously.

Under decriminal­isation, sex work would be recognised as work. Occupation­al health and safety and fair labour principles would apply.

What is the Nordic model?

According to this approach, selling sex should be decriminal­ised, but buying sex remains a crime.

The model assumes criminalis­ing the clients of sex workers would dissuade people from buying sexual services and end the demand for sex work.

Research in countries that have adopted this shows it has not made sex work safer for sex workers, nor has it eradicated sex work.

Evidence also shows that criminalis­ation of clients is bad for sex workers’ health.

If buying sex is illegal, sex workers have less time to screen dangerous clients, and clients can put pressure on sex workers to agree to risky transactio­ns in compromisi­ng situations.

Why would decriminal­isation of clients have positive spin-offs?

First, recruiting clients who have been identified by sex workers as non-violent and respectful as peer educators could instil and reinforce positive norms among clients.

Second, clients are well placed to serve as whistle-blowers when they notice human rights violations such as human traffickin­g or child exploitati­on in the sex industry.

Third, clients can be key to reducing HIV transmissi­on. Scaling up antiretrov­iral therapy among clients of sex workers would avert almost one-fifth of new HIV infections in South Africa over the next decade.

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