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| China's 'custody and detention' system for sex workers will cease from December 29 |
Chinese lawmakers Saturday voted to abolish the "custody and education" punishment system, which allowed police to hold sex workers and their clients without charge for up to two years, state media reported.
Critics say
the nearly three-decade-old system has little to do with education.
"Sex
workers are subjected to police violence... forced labour, compulsory testing
for sexually transmitted disease... humiliation and physical violence at these
centres," said Shen Tingting, director of advocacy and policy at Asia
Catalyst, an NGO working with marginalised groups in the region.
Abolishing
this system is a "significant positive step," she said.
The
arbitrary detention system will cease from December 29, and those held at
"education centers" should be released immediately, state news agency
Xinhua reported.
There has
been a public push to close the centres ever since China's top legislative
committee abolished its system of "re-education through labour camps"
in 2013.
Shutting
the labour camps -- introduced as a speedy way to handle petty offenders --
ended a practice long criticised by human rights groups.
Yet
authorities retained the right to detain sex workers and their clients, and in
2014 police announced that popular actor Huang Haibo would be held for six
months for having solicited a prostitute.
That
prompted a rare instance of dissent from state media, which questioned the
system.
Although
illegal, prostitution remains widespread in China, with an estimated several
million sex workers.
Under
current laws prostitutes and their clients can be fined up to 5,000 yuan ($714)
and face up to 15 days of administrative detention.
"Sex
workers' issues seldom sits on the agenda of the government," said Shen,
adding that abolishing detention centers is only a small step towards
safeguarding the rights of prostitutes.
"Chinese
law and policies focus on prohibition and cracking down on sex work rather than
providing a framework to ensure the health and safety of sex work as a
profession."

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