Clicky

Home away from Home

You are currently browsing the Sao Lao weblog archives for the day Friday, March 23rd, 2007.

 

March 2007
M T W T F S S
« Feb   Apr »
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  

Pages

Recent Comments

  • DJ: No, you don’t need to have a license to ride a bicycle here or a scooter but you have to go under a speed...
  • DJ: It has its own charms. I can try living here. The nice thing about this place is that you can pretty much go...
  • DJ: Thanks Nye, I thought they were geese but they have such short neck, unlike my geese in Vientiane. I know what...
  • DJ: Hey there Padek, Yes, it was a good investment. Next time you’re in Leiden we can have a bike race. :)
  • Nye: Do you need a license to ride a bicycle there?  I’ve not rode one in so long, I don’t know if I still...

Recent Trackbacks

Archive for March 23rd, 2007

Sex Trade in Laos

Author: DJ
23.03.2007

I read a very disturbing news about sex trade in Laos from Radio Free Asia. Of course the culprit of the problem is poverty. While I understand prostitution is the oldest form of profession, the Lao girls and women should have a choice on choosing this type of job. I don’t think the majority of them would freely select this line of work as a career if they have more options available to them.

club in Vientiane, photo by SiRa

Survey Shows Grim Reality of Lao Sex Trade
2007.02.08

BANGKOK—Lao women seeking to escape poverty and poor education are increasingly ending up as sex workers in Laos and neighboring Thailand, mainly to support their families and themselves, experts say.

Though many consider it “bad work,” they believe prostitution amounts to the best economic opportunity they have, according to a survey of sex workers conducted last year in the country’s capital, Vientiane.

Many are children when they start, trafficked or tricked into the sex trade.

“Every one of them said they don’t want to do it,” Thatsaphone Sombandith, a Lao researcher who conducted the survey, said in an interview. “They say it’s necessary because of poverty, because they have nothing to live on.”

With an estimated per capita income of U.S.$460 in 2005, Laos is one of the poorest countries in East Asia. Classified by the United Nations as a Least Developed Country in 2004, 71 percent of its population live on less than U.S.$2 a day, and 23 percent on less than U.S.$1 a day.

Lao women, many of whom work in bars called “little shops,” come from different provinces to work in Vientiane, Thatsaphone said. “They come from Luang Namtha, from Luang Prabang, from Sayaboury…from Khammouane.”

Vulnerable to disease

Many become infected with sexually transmitted diseases, Thatsaphone added. “Depending on the place, on the area of the shop, they get infected,” Thatsaphone said. “Almost the entire shop is infected.”

Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button