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(Essay) An Essay: Legalising Prostitution in India
An
Essay: Legalising Prostitution in India :
Introduction
Welcome to a world trapped between 'illegal' and 'immoral': Prostitution might
be illegal in India, but the business of life goes on. Calling it illegal is a
superfluous formality and denouncing it as an immoral blotch on society.
Recognizing it as a profession will at least reduce the real illegalities that
come with it, like child prostitution, drug abuse, and crime.
National scenario
Societies in which prostitution is legal have concluded that it is best
to regulate a profession, which will never disappear. India should learn from
these societies, rather than pretend that prostitution doesn't exist here.
Especially when figures reveal that the business of sex-workers takes a dip when
it is vacation time for colleges. There are over 2.5 million prostitutes in
India and a quarter of them are minors! Child prostitution is one of the issues
facing our country today. The increasing incidence of the HIV virus is on the
verge of a threshold, which, if crossed, could see the epidemic affecting,
perhaps, everyone in the world. This profession makes the sex-worker the most
vulnerable.
Global scenario
Globally prostitution is legal in Canada, France, Wales, Denmark,
Holland, most of South America, including Mexico (often in special zones),
Israel, Australia, and many other countries. It's either legal or tolerated in
most of Asia; Australia has a sex-service company whose stocks are traded on the
stock exchange.
Pros of legalisation
No governments, no matter how hard they have tried, have been successful
in abolishing prostitution. Prostitution is a reality and the chances of
eliminating it are practically nil. By legalising prostitution, we also legalise
the fight against Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) and the AIDS epidemic.
Just like laws have managed to do with untouchability, legalising prostitution
will give dignity to sex-workers and save them from living as second grade
citizens. A separate hub can be created for it and health of sex workers can be
monitored. Legalisation will deter police from extorting money from the helpless
sex workers who are forced to give a part of their income to the policemen to
let them live in peace. Legalisation of the profession will at least give a
human face to the profession, where prostitutes are, otherwise, are treated as
outcastes.
Norms should be laid out for registration in terms of space, hygiene and medical
facilities available. There should be periodical medical check-ups, and it must
be made mandatory for every individual in the profession to possess a proper
health certificate. Brothels should also be taxed like any other business house,
and a certain amount should be earmarked by the government for providing medical
facilities to sex workers. Their families and especially their children should
be taken care of. A rehabilitation programme for sex workers wanting to opt out
should also be worked out. Sex workers should be made to work only in the
alloted areas or zones. Brothels must be situated away from residential areas
and educational institutions.
In India women are forced into prostitution due to poverty and illiteracy. So
women in this profession become carriers of AIDS and other deadly diseases. To
combat with this situation, women’s organisations can be brought in to work at
the grass-root level and to form a link between the sex workers and the
government.
Cons of legalisation
As it is said, “Every coin has two sides.†Legalisation too has some
shortcomings: Legalising prostitution would benefit the facilitators and the
pimps, not their victims. In India, where women are coerced into the trade and
kept in it almost like bonded labour, such a move will not benefit them.
Commercial sexual exploitation is a form of slavery and slavery cannot be
legalized. India should not compare itself with other Wesren countries, where
prostitution enjoys legal status because our societal customs are most unlike
those in the West. Since abortion is illegal in India, there is no question of
legalising prostitution. So giving this business a legal status only means
society is giving approval to the flesh trade. Some critics say, prostitution
wrecks personality and affects marriage relationships. Prostitution affects
family life, communicates diseases and thus brings social disorganization.
Conclusion
Closeting the flourishing profession of prostitution as a morality issue
not only amounts to ignoring the exploitation of the commercial sex-workers, who
feed on the income they generate, but the larger issue of AIDS. What is required
is a practical approach. By according legitimacy to the sex-worker, millions of
women who enter into this trade to feed their families will be freed from the
clutches of pimps, brothel-owners and cops on the take. Legalising prostitution
will see these women, who live life on the edge everywhere, gaining access to
medical facilities, which can control the spread of AIDS. Timely sex education
to sex workers can make them aware of venereal diseases attached with this
profession. Employment opportunities for women, who have no alternative than to
enter this profession, can play wonders. Removal of widow marriage, the social
custom that is still followed in most of the Indian villages, can help curb
prostitution.
There is a very strong need to treat the sex industry as any other industry and
empower it with legal safeguards, which would rid this workplace of exploitative
and unhealthy practices. The rising number of AIDS cases in India and the number
of innocents being forced into the flesh trade are alarming. The time has come
for lawmakers to be more serious about this issue. Legalisation is the answer.
Courtesy : iasaspirant.rediffblogs.com/