Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Thailand News and Discussion Forum | ASEANNOW

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Thailand drafts bill to decriminalize its billion-dollar sex trade

Featured Replies

  • Popular Post

image.jpeg
FILE - Dancers wearing face shields dance inside a bar at Patpong nightlife district in Bangkok, July 9, 2020.

 

By Zsombor Peter

 

BANGKOK — From the rows of massage parlors, pulsing night clubs and rowdy bars of Thailand’s gaudy red-light districts, the country’s billion-dollar sex trade operates all but in the open.

 

Technically, the sex they sell is illegal, but a new government-led plan aims to change that. It calls for repealing the 1996 Prevention and Suppression of Prostitution Act, which makes most sex work a crime, and replacing it with a new law, the Protection of Sex Work Act, affirming the rights of sex workers and their places of business to sell sex.

 

The bill’s proponents hope it will help the country’s sex workers — estimated to number anywhere from 100,000 to 300,000 — ply their trade more safely and earn higher wages. Opponents fear it will leave many sex workers exploited by middlemen and trafficking gangs, and clash with the country’s values and traditions.

 

“The law is now out of date,” said Jintana Janbumrung, director-general of the Department of Women’s Affairs and Family Development, which is spearheading the reform effort.

 

By giving sex workers legal status, she said, “they can be workers who have access to the same welfare as other occupations, whose rights will not be violated, who will not be exploited by their clients or sex business operators [and have] a better quality of life.”

 

Full story: https://www.voanews.com/a/thailand-drafts-bill-to-decriminalize-its-billion-dollar-sex-trade/7040409.html

 

VOA

-- © Copyright Voice of America 2023-04-08
 

- Cigna offers a range of visa-compliant plans that meet the minimum requirement of medical treatment, including COVID-19, up to THB 3m. For more information on all expat health insurance plans click here.

 

The most versatile and flexible rental investment and holiday home solution in Thailand - click for more information.

 

  • Replies 53
  • Views 6.5k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Most Popular Posts

  • Another bill that makes no sense as there is no sex trade in Thailand.     

  • renaissanc
    renaissanc

    The Police in Bangkok, Pattaya, etc., will be crying now. How will they be able to extort money from sex trade workers, bars, and whoever else each month when the law has been passed? 

  • sidneybear
    sidneybear

    It's illegal? Who would have thought.

Posted Images

  • Popular Post

Another bill that makes no sense as there is no sex trade in Thailand. 

 

 

  • Popular Post

It's illegal? Who would have thought.

  • Popular Post

What sex trade? 

  • Popular Post

So Happy endings are official now. :thumbsup:

 

29 minutes ago, quake said:

So Happy endings are official now. :thumbsup:

 

Not yet.

  • Popular Post

what sex work? what are they on about? ive never seen anything of the sort!

  • Popular Post

This has about the same chance of passing in the next Parliamentary session as the Cannabis Control Act.

 

 

 

 

Edited by bamnutsak

33 minutes ago, Moonlover said:

Not yet.

I guess the curtain will stay up for now. :cheesy:

my spidey senses are tingling....

  • Popular Post
2 hours ago, sidneybear said:

It's illegal? Who would have thought.

If I had known that i would have stayed well clear......too late now (after 30 years).

Edited by Will B Good

  • Popular Post
1 hour ago, Moonlover said:

Not yet.

Happy Endings not yet official, they are still cumming.????????

  • Popular Post

Thailand, progressive on policy, first weed, now sex workers.

Much better than the absolute prudes that ran the show during and since the Thaksin regime.

  • Popular Post

sex workers vote too....Boys in green fishing?...getting desperate?

Edited by d4dang
grammar

A lot of revenue will be sorely missed.

  • Popular Post

The Police in Bangkok, Pattaya, etc., will be crying now. How will they be able to extort money from sex trade workers, bars, and whoever else each month when the law has been passed? 

  • Popular Post
1 hour ago, expat_4_life said:

Thailand, progressive on policy, first weed, now sex workers.

Much better than the absolute prudes that ran the show during and since the Thaksin regime.

I hate to tell you this, but Prayut has been in power for 9 years now and none of these advances had anything to do with his closeted mind. 

But Thaksin, Thaksin…….

Things will continue but the RTP won't extort money from the girls. I guess the pubs will still be guilty of human trafficking though. 

  • Popular Post

That's a good idea.  Legalize it and regulate it.  And with the regulation of the trade, focus on ending human trafficking, especially under-aged minors.

  • Popular Post
Quote

Thailand drafts bill to decriminalize its billion-dollar sex trade

I wonder if they thought this through... This means that there will suddenly be prostitutes in Pattaya and maybe elsewhere.

Edited by klauskunkel

5 hours ago, webfact said:

From the rows of massage parlors, pulsing night clubs and rowdy bars of Thailand’s gaudy red-light districts, the country’s billion-dollar sex trade operates all but in the open.

It must all be an illusion from what we've been previously told.

It doesn't exist.

  • Popular Post
5 hours ago, webfact said:

The bill’s proponents hope it will help the country’s sex workers — estimated to number anywhere from 100,000 to 300,000

That's just Pattaya right?

4 hours ago, quake said:

So Happy endings are official now. :thumbsup:

 

No not yet...

44 minutes ago, renaissanc said:

The Police in Bangkok, Pattaya, etc., will be crying now. How will they be able to extort money from sex trade workers, bars, and whoever else each month when the law has been passed? 

Nothing will change in that respect. I've seen owners of legitimate businesses not connected with the sex trade making payoffs to police. I assume it's a form of protection to ensure the Thai mafia stay away.

Gambling breaks Thai law too, pa som sip is the Thai national card game played in all the rural villages.

1 hour ago, renaissanc said:

The Police in Bangkok, Pattaya, etc., will be crying now. How will they be able to extort money from sex trade workers, bars, and whoever else each month when the law has been passed? 

Don't worry about them. They will find a way

All sounds like a terrible inflationary idea to me.  

5 hours ago, Artisi said:

What sex trade? 

Chicken farmers they raise C$%ks

1 hour ago, connda said:

That's a good idea.  Legalize it and regulate it.  And with the regulation of the trade, focus on ending human trafficking, especially under-aged minors.

Nobody cares about that.

Legalized = taxable

  • Popular Post

Interesting timing with Parliament currently dissolved and an election  due in a month.

2 hours ago, connda said:

That's a good idea.  Legalize it and regulate it.  And with the regulation of the trade, focus on ending human trafficking, especially under-aged minors.

Like many other things I doubt if they will set up an agency to regulate it. If it's going to be anything like 'regulating' (policing) the traffic then...you know what I mean. My guess is that the workers will get little aid but the the Taxman will be thinking 'shall we tax per ฿1000, by client or by service performed'...Wonder if VAT will be added?

Create an account or sign in to comment

Recently Browsing 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.