THAILAND: Anti-Trafficking Measures Prove Controversial

By Ruxandra Guidi on October 21, 2013—
“Twenty-eight-year-old Mai has been a sex worker in Chiang Mai for a decade now. Originally from Burma, she previously worked as a domestic helper, a dishwasher, and baker but says none of these jobs allowed her to make as much money as she does now.

“There are good and bad things to any job,” she says. “When I came to do sex work, I realized this is a job that gives me enough income to really look after my family and move ahead in life. I was not tricked into it and I don’t see myself as a victim.”

Mai says she was introduced to prostitution by a friend who had been pulled out of prostitution in a police raid at a brothel two years ago. Shortly thereafter the woman involved had returned to work as a sex worker though.

Part of a bigger problem

The UN estimates that around 2.5 million people globally are victims of trafficking. Recently, a US government report highlighted Thailand as having an increasing number of victims of human trafficking. As a response, the Thai government have stepped up their focus on anti-human trafficking issues, so much so that last year, the Royal Thai Police ordered all police units to spend at least 10 days each month doing anti-trafficking work.

Thai school girl Wipa Hunthond, 11 years old, works at her job selling flowers to motorists on busy Asok intersection in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday 16 November 2005, still dressed in her school uniform. Her working day starts after school at 1600 and normally finishes at around 2300, or until she has sold out all her daily garlands. Wipa who goes to the Sawasdee School, is one of seven children who work this polluted intersection to help her family meet costs. Hundreds of school children in Bangkok and other Thai cities work daily like Wipa before and after school to make ends meet. As Asia celebrates the United Nations Universal Children's Day set this Sunday 20 November 2005, the world's fastest growing region faces increasing demands to protect the rights of children and provide for them their daily needs. Foto: Narong Sangnak +++(c) dpa - Report+++
Child workers in Thailand are a bigger issue, say some experts

But while Thai law enforcement authorities are trying to meet this quota by pulling sex workers out of brothels, there is little evidence to suggest that the sex workers they are rescuing are actually victims of trafficking. In 2012, the Thai Royal police investigated three times as many cases of sex trafficking as the year before but that lead to only a couple of arrests.

Although prostitution is illegal in Thailand, it is practised openly and is even partly regulated. Earlier this year, the largest organisation for sex workers in Thailand called for a stop to the “rescues” of prostitutes in Bangkok, arguing that many of them have not been trafficked, but choose to work in a profession which pays them more than the bare minimum.

“It’s not up to me to say whether what the sex workers are doing is right or wrong,” says Sam Derbali, a criminologist at Mahidol University in Bangkok. “But, I think there are other places to focus on, like children, or people who are exploited in the factories who cannot leave or those on the fishing boats. No-one knows what happens to them.”

Evangelical groups also involved

Still, many American evangelical groups in Thailand are focusing on the sex trade problem, offering women an alternative to sex work. Critics argue that these groups fail to address the root causes of sex work, including poverty and a lack of education, and are too quick to assume that none of the women have a choice. They also suggest that evangelical groups are largely motivated by the prospect that reformed sex workers will convert to Christianity.

Twenty-four-year-old Mint is one of these women. She fell into sex work in the same way as many other working-class women in Thailand. First, she got a job at a factory in Bangkok. Then, a co-worker suggested she also work nights at a bar, a typical entry into prostitution.

Mint says she wasn’t forced into sex work – in three days she could earn as much as what she would earn in a month at the factory. But many clients were violent, and Mint nearly died from such an attack a couple of years ago.

“I felt I had hit rock bottom because I couldn’t do anything. I worked as a prostitute, I couldn’t go to the police and ask them to arrest that guy,” she remembers. “I had no money to send to my grandmother, no money to pay for rent. It was the worst time of my life.””

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