Survive in the Cracks—the Sex Industry in Macau
Sex workers wander in Lisboa Hotel lobby. Original photo by Hazel.
The current state of sex workers’ lives
Miss Lin comes from
Mainland China. She spends her days in her room, sleeping, listening to music,
or cooking for herself. But when darkness falls, she puts on make-up, a tight
skirt, and high-heeled shoes, and strolls through in a luxury shopping mall
looking for men who will pay her for sex.
After a short while, a
man looks at her to show his interest, and follows her to a corner. After a
brief chat, she leads him to her room.
Miss Lin is a young
single mother with a 4-year-old child. After a friend who works as a sex worker
gave her an introduction, she moved to Macau and became a prostitute. She
regards her work simply as a means of making money, and doesn't feel ashamed
about her occupation, because just like other people, she is relying on her own
effort to look after her family.
Miss Lin is not alone.
There are many prostitutes
like Miss Lin in Macau. Most come from Mainland China, Japan, Mongolia, or
Europe. They can be found in Macau’s casinos, karaoke bars, nightclubs, massage
parlors, hotels, and residential building, or on the street. In general, they
charge from 12 to 125 US dollars a time, although sometimes the fee is less
than 12 dollars.
Among the most visible
are those to be found every evening in the lobby of Macau’s famous Lisboa
Hotel. Under multicolored lights, young women in sexy outfits wander around staring
at the men passing by and asking them “Have a try?”
“With pinching and
scraping, the majority of savings these women earn are remitted home to their
husbands or children,” says Lee Yuk Ling, who works at the Chi Tang Women
Association. “They hardly ever buy
themselves any luxuries. To avoid embarrassment, they have to tell their family
members that they are working as waitresses or hotel cleaners, concealing the
real occupation.”
Lee’s association is one of just a few
organizations in Macau that reach out to the prostitutes, providing medical
booklets, condoms and other sex products and informing them how to protect
themselves. Some also offer free blood tests to prevent or treat sexually
transmitted diseases. In addition to economic and psychological pressures,
these women also face danger such as the threat of violence during their work.
Ian Hon Lane. Original photo by Danika.
A low-rent building for sex workers.Original photo by Danika. |
Lee Yuk Ling at the Chi
Tang Women Association said that because of the high cost of treatment in
Macau, she had several times had to take injured sex workers to a hospital
across the border in Zhuhai.
Is it legal or not?
The dangers faced by sex
workers are common. Prostitutes often ask organizations such as Chi Tang Women
Association for help, instead of the government.
Professor Luo Weijian, the
vice-chairman of Macau’s Law Reform Commission, noted that prostitution is
illegal in Macau, but it
is very difficult to determine which behavior
someone should be accused of.
“For instance, if sex
workers and consumers are acting privately and with mutual consent in a
non-public place,” he said, “the police have no right to accuse them.”
That is why police
cannot arrest women wearing flashy dresses and looking for customers in hotel lobbies.
Another
factor making it difficult
is that police are not allowed to search
private places where
prostitutes work unless they already have evidence.
Sex workers were arrested by the police. Photo from Macau Daily.
According to Prof. Luo,
the Macau authorities handle legal and illegal workers differently. Since there
is no way for a woman to apply for a legal visa as a sex worker, foreign
prostitutes are considered as illegal immigrants and have little protection
from the government or the law.
Should it be a side industry to gambling?
In Macau, the sex business is intimately related to
the gambling industry.
Experts
say serious gamblers actually don’t like sex workers, and tend to think that
a beautiful girl in a sexy outfit standing
near them will bring bad luck. Instead, sex workers attract casual visitors
to the casinos rather than real gamblers.
According to the Macau
Statistics Office, about 50% of visitors visit Macau for the first time every
year. They are curious about many things, and that includes the sex trade.
Since the Macao government has no clear legislation
on the sex
business, casino operators are helpless. Dr. Fong Ka Chio,
the director of the Institute for the Study of Commercial Gaming, believes that
casino operators in Macau don't like the sex business.
“They want sex workers to leave, and the real
gamblers to come,” he said.
Gamblers and sex workers outside the casino.Original photo by Hazel.
But large-scale moves against the sex industry in
casinos will certainly affect the gambling industry, since the
revenue of
the casinos depends on how long gamblers stay. If they are attracted to
the sex business outside the casino, there is no benefit for the gambling
industry. And the so-called benefits that produced by sex business have nothing to do
with the casinos.
“A
study shows that, 60% of the gross domestic product of Macau comes from
gambling industry. However, the sex business has nothing to contribute.” Dr.
Fong Ka Chio said.
In some countries, the sex
business is legal, with officially approved Red-light
districts
in places like the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland and Japan.
The scale of Macau's sex business is not small, but there is no legal
district at
all.
Dr. Fong argues that, “The
Macau government should set up a red light district, in order to strengthen
the specification management of sex business.”
Lee
Yuk Ling at the Chi Tang Women Association also noted that, “If the legalization of sex
business in Macau is difficult, the government should strengthen the management and fundamentally forbid
it; if legalized, the government should set up the
red light district to safeguard the rights and interests of women and protect
the image of the city.”
Casino Lisboa.Original photo by Danika.
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