Women resort to sex work out of desperation, says Amnesty International SA

Amnesty International in South Africa has called for the decriminalisation of sex work and the protection of sex workers, following the discovery of bodies of six women, believed to be sex workers in Joburg. File Picture.

Amnesty International in South Africa has called for the decriminalisation of sex work and the protection of sex workers, following the discovery of bodies of six women, believed to be sex workers in Joburg. File Picture.

Published Oct 12, 2022

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Pretoria – Amnesty International in South Africa has called for the decriminalisation of sex work and the protection of sex workers, following the discovery of bodies of six women, believed to be sex workers in Joburg.

“If you look at who are the majority of sex workers … the majority are young, usually black women who are really doing sex work in order to feed their families and their dependants. That is the reality of sex workers in this country,” Amnesty International South Africa’s executive director Shenilla Mohamed told broadcaster Newzroom Afrika.

“People don’t go into sex work in South Africa in particular because it is a great thing to do. It is often out of desperation. We, and others have been fighting for decades for the decriminalisation of sex work for the simple reason that everyone has a right to be protected under the law. Everyone has a right to be safe. Decriminalising it will give these people rights that they do not have, making them less vulnerable to abuse even from police and State officials.”

On Tuesday, the National Prosecuting Authority said it will oppose bail when Sifiso Mkhwanazi, the 20-year-old arrested after the bodies of six women were found, makes his second appearance before the Joburg Magistrate’s Court on October 18.

Mkhwanazi was arrested by the police on Sunday, after the gruesome discovery of the six bodies at his father’s panel-beating factory in Selby, Joburg.

His case was remanded to October 18 for further investigations, an identity parade and his formal bail hearing. It is expected that more women will be called to identify him as more reports of other missing women surface.

Mkhwanazi is set to apply for bail when he appears in court on Tuesday next week.

Mohamed said her organisation will continue to fight for the decriminalisation and “there is hope on the horizon but the reality is that it is taking too long”.

Scores of activists and advocacy groups representing sex workers gathered outside the Joburg Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday, where the 20-year-old man was appearing.

Katlego Rasebitse, spokesperson for the Sisonke National Sexworker Movement told journalists outside the court that the repeated calls for sex work to be decriminalised has been falling on deaf ears.

IOL