UNDP report looks at links between sex work, HIV and the law
New UN report takes a stark look at links between sex work, HIV and the law in Asia and the Pacific
18 October, Bangkok -- Nearly all
countries of Asia and the Pacific criminalize some aspects
of sex work. Criminalization increases vulnerability to HIV
by fuelling stigma and discrimination, limits access to
sexual health services and condoms. Removing legal penalties
for sex work allows HIV prevention and treatment programmes
to reach sex workers and their clients more effectively.
These are some of the findings in an unprecedented study
issued today by the UN Development Programme (UNDP), the UN
Population Fund (UNFPA) and the Joint United Nations
Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). The report clearly
distinguishes between adult consensual sex work and human
trafficking for sexual exploitation.
Sex Work and the Law examines 48 countries in Asia and the Pacific to assess laws, legal policies and law enforcement practices that affect the human rights of sex workers and impact on the effectiveness of HIV responses.
Where sex work
has been decriminalized, there is a greater chance for safer
sex practices through occupational health and safety
standards across the industry. Furthermore, there is no
evidence that decriminalization has increased sex work.
The report describes countries that use
punitive law enforcement practices, confiscate condoms as
evidence of illegal conduct, require compulsory or coerced
HIV testing, deny government services and certain rights to
sex workers, and have compulsory detention centres. The
report notes:
• Eleven countries where sex workers
report condom confiscation or police harassment
for
possessing condoms (China, Fiji, India, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines,
Sri Lanka and Vietnam).
• Six countries that require
mandatory testing of sex workers for HIV or sexually
transmitted infections (STIs) as a condition of employment
(Guam (unincorporated territory of the United States), Indonesia, Philippines,
Singapore, Thailand, and several states of Australia); and
three countries where compulsory or coerced HIV testing for
sex workers has been reported (China, India and
Vietnam).
• At least four countries in which
compulsory detention of sex workers for rehabilitation or
re-education is reported (China, India, Myanmar, Sri
Lanka).
“There is no evidence from countries of Asia
and the Pacific that criminalization of sex work has
prevented HIV epidemics among sex workers and their
clients,” In fact, the report states that “evidence from
the jurisdictions in the region that have decriminalized sex
work – New Zealand and New South Wales (Australia) –
indicates that the approach of defining sex work as
legitimate labour empowers sex workers, increases their
access to HIV and sexual health services and is associated
with very high condom use rates.”
“Following on
the report on the Global Commission on HIV & the Law, this
report illustrates the importance of having the right
policies and laws in place so that sex workers’ rights are
protected, and they are not discriminated against in HIV and
health services,” says Rathin Roy, UNDP Asia-Pacific
Regional Centre Manager.
The report highlights current
laws, policies and practices that are helpful to HIV
responses. A snapshot:
• Decisions of the
Supreme Courts of Bangladesh, India and Nepal recognize the
human rights of sex workers.
• The Ministry of
Interior of Cambodia issued a Directive that condoms will
not be used as evidence for arrest.
•
Legislation in Fiji and Papua New Guinea make it unlawful to
deny a person access to condoms or other means of protection
from HIV.
• National HIV laws in Cambodia,
Fiji, Lao PDR, Papua New Guinea and the Philippines offer
some protections in areas such as prohibition of compulsory
testing, and rights to confidentiality and to protection
from discrimination for those who are HIV-positive.
•
Legislation in Vietnam requires the government to implement
harm reduction interventions including condom programmes
with sex workers, and protects peer educators from
prosecution.
• Rules of the Social Security
Fund of Thailand enable sex workers to access state social
security benefits.
“While much more needs to be done,
there are examples of supportive laws and policies that
protect the rights of those most vulnerable to HIV and
maximize their access to HIV and sexual and reproductive
services. These are vital lessons that need to be applied
more widely,” said Nobuko Horibe, Regional Director
UNFPA.
Commenting on the report findings and recommendations, Ms. Chantawipa Apisuk, the Director of Empower, a Thai Foundation led by sex workers, said: “When Sex Work is recognized as legitimate work rather than criminalized, then sex workers will be protected under labor law”.
The report also highlights how significant advances in recognition of the rights of sex workers can occur even in contexts where the sex industry is illegal. For example, education of police and empowerment of sex workers has helped to reduce human rights violations in India and Thailand, and health authorities in many countries now actively support sex worker organizations to deliver HIV prevention programmes to their peers.
“At regional and global levels, countries have pledged to revise and remove laws, policies and practices that block the HIV response. This report will be a vital resource to inform national reviews on such laws and practices to be carried out the next two years towards the ultimate vision of ending AIDS,” said Steven J. Kraus, Director, UNAIDS Asia and the Pacific.
The report can be downloaded at: http://www.snap-undp.org/elibrary/Publication.aspx?ID=699
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