• About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Our Team
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contributors
  • FAQ
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
Monday, July 13, 2026
The Kashmir Horizon
EPAPER
  • HOME
  • Region
  • City News
    • Srinagar
    • Jammu
  • News In Focus
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Ideas
    • My Idea
    • Friday Faith
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Business
  • Sports
  • India
  • World
  • Snapshots
  • ePaper
No Result
View All Result
The Kashmir Horizon
  • HOME
  • Region
  • City News
    • Srinagar
    • Jammu
  • News In Focus
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Ideas
    • My Idea
    • Friday Faith
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Business
  • Sports
  • India
  • World
  • Snapshots
  • ePaper
No Result
View All Result
The Kashmir Horizon
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion Ideas

The Plight Of Women

Guest Author by Guest Author
June 1, 2018
in Ideas
A A
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterWhatsappTelegramEmail

A prostitute is a person, “who allows her body to be used for lewd purposes in return for payment”. Prostitution is the sale of sexual services, such as oral sex or sexual intercourse, for money. Prostitution the word itself speaks about the plight of a women .It is not a problem which exists in India but exists throughout the world. Prostitution was a part of daily life in ancient Greece. Prostitution is technically illegal but widely practiced in India. By one count prostitution is an $8 billion a year industry with more two million prostitutes and 275,000 brothels. In another count in all of India, there are as many as 10 million commercial sex workers. Their core clientele has traditionally been truck drivers, migrant workers and other men separated from their families for long periods of time. Many teenage girls turn to prostitution to raise money for their families or out of need for money to deal with a debt or a problem related to their husbands. Some village girls are tricked into entering the trade in the cities with promises of good money or another kind of job. One survey found that a third of all prostitute enter the trade because of poverty and more than a forth become prostitutes after marital problems. The prostitution continued from ancient and medieval India and has taken a more gigantic outlook in modern India, the devadasi system still continues ,according to a report of National Human Rights Commission of the Government of India,” after initiation as devadasis, women migrate either to nearby towns or other far-off cities to practice prostitution”.
The practice of dedicating devadasis was declared illegal by the Government of Karnataka in 1982 and the Government of Andhra Pradesh in 1988. However the practice is still prevalent in around 10 districts of north Karnataka and 14 districts in Andhra Pradesh. Districts bordering Maharashtra and Karnataka, known as the “devadasi belt,” have trafficking structures operating at various levels. The women here are in prostitution either because their husbands deserted them, or they are trafficked through coercion and deception. “Most of these women were either forced by gang members and others to take up this profession or were betrayed with false promises of a job. Both the central government and the state governments have enacted statutes to repress and abolish prostitution. By some estimates child prostitution in India is a multi-billion dollar industry. India may have half a million children in brothels, more than any other country in the world. Many are barely in their teens. A shocking number have HIV or AIDS. No children enter the prostitution trade on their free will. Some are runaways or victims of abuse. Other have been sold by their parents, abducted or enticed by gifts. Between 5,000 and 7,000 young girls are brought from Nepal to India to become prostitutes every year. Children are also brought in from Bangladesh. According to human rights groups, about 90 percent of the Bombay prostitutes are indentured servants, with close to half trafficked from Nepal. Some families sell their daughters into prostitution. An estimated 200,000 to 300,000 Nepalese women have been shipped to India as prostitutes and sex slaves, with between 5,000 and 7,000 new girls, usually between 10 and 20, arriving every year. Many of them are brought by traffickers who sell the girls for as little as $1,000 a piece.
Some Countries around the World That Have Legalized Prostitution
1. New Zealand; – Prostitution has been legal for Kiwis since 2003
2. Austria: – Prostitution is completely legal in Austria. Prostitutes are required to register, undergo periodic health examinations, be 19 years old or older, and pay taxes.
3. Belgium: – They have been trying to remove the stigma, violence and fear associated with prostitution by not just legalizing it but also running proper state of the art brothels with fingerprint technology and keycards! 4. Bangladesh:- Male prostitution is illegal, but everything else is legal.
Where does India stand?
Prostitution itself is not illegal in our country, but soliciting and public prostitution is illegal. Owning a brothel is also against the law, but, as places like GB Road and Kamathipura prove, these laws are rarely enforced.
Causes of prostitution:
• Ill treatment by parents. Bad company. Family prostitutes. Social customs. inability to arrange marriage, Lack of sex education, media. Prior incest and rape. Early marriage and desertion. Lack of recreational facilities, ignorance, and acceptance of prostitution. Economic causes include poverty and economic distress. Psychological causes include desire for physical pleasure, greed, and dejection.
Formal education should be made available to those victims who are still within the school going age, while non-formal education should be made accessible to adults. Rehabilitation and reintegration of rescued victims being a long-term recruitment of adequate number of trained counselors and social workers in institutions/homes run by the government independently or in collaboration with non-governmental organizations. Awareness generation and legal literacy on economic rights, particularly for women and adolescent girls should be taken up.

(Author is a student of Law Department at Kashmir University and a freelance writer. His views are personal)

Guest Author

Guest Author

Related Posts

Ameer Ahmad Khan’s Tablighi Jamaat Legacy

GAIS Conference: Transforming Islamic Education Works
by Prof. Hamid Naseem Rafiabadi
July 11, 2026

Introduction: The history of the Tablighi Jamaat in Kashmir represents one of the most significant chapters in the religious revival...

Read moreDetails

World Population Day: Beyond The Numbers

Glaciers Met, Heat wave Induced Water Scarcity In Kashmir
by Dr Bilal A Bhat
July 11, 2026

Mariya Mushtaq, Dr. Bilal A. Bhat Every 11 July, World Population Day invites the world to look beyond headlines about...

Read moreDetails

J&K Police: Amarnath’s Guardian Shield

Unity in Action: The Power of Helping Each Other
by Guest Author
July 11, 2026

Dr Rizwan Rumi The annual Amarnath Yatra is far more than a religious pilgrimage; it is one of the world's...

Read moreDetails

Omega Block: Europe’s Deadly Heatwall

Parenting, Early Rising & Schooling In Kashmir
by Dr Aftab Jan
July 10, 2026

Europe is facing one of its most dangerous heat waves in modern history. Temperatures have crossed 40°C in several regions....

Read moreDetails

Adab (Etiquette): The Heart Of Daily Life

The Openhandedness of Holy Prophet (SAW)
by Dr Aftab Jan
July 10, 2026

Dr. Bilal A. Bhat, Intizar Ahmad Adab, the profound Islamic concept of etiquette, manners, and moral refinement, has always been more...

Read moreDetails

India’s PhD Paradox

Dr. Zamir A Bhat: A Scholar, Educator, Humanist
by Guest Author
July 9, 2026

Prof R.K. Uppal India stands at a crucial moment in its journey towards becoming a global knowledge economy. The country...

Read moreDetails

About

The publication of “Kashmir Horizon” as an English daily was started with a modest attempt on May 19, 2008.It has been a Himalayan attempt for “The Kashmir Horizon” to survive the challenges posed to journalism in the violence fraught place like Jammu & Kashmir.

MORE

Search in Archive

DIGITAL EDITION

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Our Team
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contributors
  • FAQ
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

© The Kashmir Horizon - Designed by Gabfire

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • Region
  • City News
    • Srinagar
    • Jammu
  • News In Focus
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Ideas
    • My Idea
    • Friday Faith
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Business
  • Sports
  • India
  • World
  • Snapshots
  • ePaper

© The Kashmir Horizon - Designed by Gabfire