Prostitution in the Czech Republic
is not illegal, but organized prostitution
(brothels, prostitution rings, pimping etc) is prohibited. The enforcement
of these laws, however, can be lax.
Ever since the Czechoslovakian
Velvet Revolution
(1989) led to the creation of the two independent states Czech Republic
and Slovakia
, prostitution has been flourishing, and has
contributed its share to the region's booming tourist
economy. It is widespread in Prague
and areas
near the Republic's western borders with Germany
and Austria
. In
2002, the Czech Statistical Bureau estimated
the trade to be worth six billion crowns ($217 million) a year.
Current estimates indicate there are 10,000 to 25,000 prostitutes
in the country. In Prague, the city's third district (Praha 3),
immediately east of the center, is home to much of the city's sex
industry. , prostitutes could be found in the local Czech
classifieds newspapers for approximately 1,000 crowns per
hour.
Current situation
According to the Czech Ministry of the Interior, there are over 860
brothels in the Czech Republic, of which 200 are in Prague. Most of
the country's prostitution centers in the Northern Bohemia and
Western Bohemia regions and in the capital city. Brothels line the
country's roads to Austria and Germany, the source of many
customers. Weekend trips to Prague for some tourists also include
visits to erotic clubs. There are almost 200 websites for
prostitution services in the Czech Republic, up from 45 in 1997,
which enable sex tourists to book their travel and appointments to
buy sex acts before they leave home.
Prague has the world's
first online brothel, Big Sister
, where customers get free sex with the sex acts
being broadcast on the internet.
An analysis of hospitalization records reveals that
syphilis rates have steadily risen from 1.6 cases
per 100,000 inhabitants in
1990 to 13.7 per
100,000 in
2001, an eight-fold increase.
Human trafficking
The Czech Republic is a source, transit, and destination country
for women and children trafficked from Ukraine, Russia, Belarus,
Moldova, Lithuania, Romania, Bulgaria, Slovakia, China, and Vietnam
into and through the Czech Republic mainly for the purpose of
sexual exploitation. Czech victims and those transiting the country
are trafficked to Western Europe and the United States, sometimes
via third countries. Internal trafficking occurs from low
employment areas to Prague and regions bordering Germany and
Austria. Ethnic Roma women are at the highest risk for internal
trafficking, and almost always are trafficked by a relative or
someone known to them previously.
The Government of the Czech Republic fully complies with the
minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking. In 2004, the
Czech Government strengthened its anti-trafficking legislation and
turned its pilot victim assistance program into a nationwide
government-funded program. While enforcement statistics improved
during the reporting period, sentences imposed on traffickers
remained low.
Prosecution
The Czech police increased its capacity to investigate and convict
traffickers over the reporting period, although the overall numbers
of cases prosecuted pursuant to anti-trafficking legislation
remained low and sentences imposed remained weak. Amendments to the
Czech Penal Code went into effect in November 2004 making all forms
of trafficking illegal, including labor exploitation and internal
trafficking. Maximum trafficking penalties were increased from 12
to 15 years, with a minimum penalty of two years. In 2004, Czech
authorities investigated 30 individuals and prosecuted 19 under the
trafficking statutes. The courts convicted 12 traffickers under
those statutes, an increase from five in 2003. Of the 12 convicted,
three received unconditional prison sentences of three to five
years, and nine received conditional or suspended sentences. Police
training curricula included segments on trafficking, and a new
internal website for police provided trafficking awareness
information. While no government officials were indicted or
convicted for complicity in trafficking, allegations continued
about the involvement of individual border police officers
facilitating illegal border crossings. Czech law enforcement
conducted joint anti-trafficking investigations with Germany,
Slovakia, Austria, Poland, and Ukraine in 2004.
Protection
The Czech Government continued to improve trafficking protection
and assistance over the last year. In November 2004, the Model of
Support and Protection of Victims of Trafficking in Persons was
expanded to a permanent, government-funded program that is open to
all foreign and Czech victims. This program involves close
cooperation between the government and NGOs, and allows the victims
a 30day reflection period to receive assistance and consider
whether to assist in prosecuting their traffickers. From January
2004 to January 2005, 14 trafficking victims — including one forced
labor victim — took part in the program. Many victims chose to
apply for asylum, which allows them legal status in the Czech
Republic until their cases are decided — a process involving months
to years. The government houses victims and potential victims
applying for asylum with other at-risk groups in guarded asylum
centers to prevent unwanted contact with traffickers. The
government funded several NGOs and international organizations for
sheltering and care of victims; two of the Czech Republic’s
principal organizations provided shelter to 68 trafficking victims
in 2004.
Prevention
The Ministry of Interior is currently collaborating with IOM to
produce a demand-reduction campaign targeting clients of commercial
sex outlets along the Czech-German border area. A
government-fund-ed NGO conducted awareness campaigns among
potential trafficking victims at schools and asylum centers. The
Ministry of Foreign Affairs continued to provide trafficking
information to applicants for Czech visas from identified
trafficking source countries. The Crime Prevention Department
continued awareness programs at schools. In addition to the Czech
National Action Plan on trafficking adopted in 2003, the government
in July 2004 adopted a plan to combat commercial sexual abuse of
children.
Failed legalization attempt
Prostitutes in the Czech Republic work in a legal gray area,
neither explicitly legal nor illegal, which makes it tough for the
state to control disease, the sex-slave trade and underage
prostitution.
The Czech government has attempted to legalize and regulate
prostitution, but these efforts have failed.
In
2005, the Czech government approved a law to
license prostitutes and confine the trade to certain areas as part
of an effort to curb prostitution and reduce organized crime..
However, the law needed the approval of the parliament and the
parliament failed to approve it.
"The assumption is that it is unrealistic to effectively ban
prostitution," the ministry proposal said. "It is only possible ...
to set rules so the public does not perceive prostitution as a
serious public order problem or health risk."
The plan called for prostitutes to buy licenses, undergo monthly
health checks, pay taxes and have health insurance. Annual licenses
would have only be issued to Czechs and other
European Union nationals older than 18 who
had no criminal record. It would have been illegal to operate
without a license, and those who refused to register would have
been prosecuted and would have faced fines. Soliciting sex would
have been banned near schools, playgrounds, churches and
cemeteries.
The general opinion is that while prostitution should be legal and
sex workers registered, politicians seem unwilling to take a stand
and many doubt that workers would register in the first place. UK
police superintendent John Mottram, working as an advisor to the
Czech government on organised crime, said that the interior
ministry in Prague does not see prostitution as a priority.
"Unfortunately, they are not devoting the kind of attention to it
which I think they should."
Opposition to the Czech government's plan to legalize prostitution
came from a group of international human-rights activists
representing diverse political and philosophical positions. 110
signatories for organizations representing millions of members sent
a letter to Czech President
Václav
Klaus and other government officials, urging them to
reconsider.
We are writing to express our profound concern over the
prospect that the Czech Republic may be planning to legalize
prostitution ...
We believe that such action would be a terrible mistake
for the country as a whole and, in particular, for the women and
children of the Eastern Europe region who will be victims of the
Czech Republic sex trade ...
We are certain that legalizing prostitution within the
Czech Republic will not curb abuses such as child prostitution and
enslaving sex trafficking.
Organized crime controls the "industry" and, in a
legalized regime, it will have an enhanced capacity to do so
...
Brothels are sexual gulags for women and girls
...
A decision to accommodate traffickers, pimps, and
organized crime's slave trade in girls and women [is] an act
unworthy of Czechs' traditions of fighting for their own
freedom.
It is an act we will resist with every democratic means
available to us, and will fight in Congress and our legislatures,
through our organized women's movements and from tens of thousands
of church and synagogue pulpits.
At a minimum, we are determined that our efforts will
in financial terms alone, be more costly to the Republic — and not
in terms of tourism alone — than any hypothetical financial gains
claimed.
We close by urging you to reject the calls for
legalization that sully the reputation of the Czech Republic and
dishonor its history.
Please take a leadership role in resisting the trade in
women and children and please, in a manner consistent with your
traditions, maintain the Republic as a model for human rights and
democracy.
Organisations helping the prostitutes
- "Rozkoš bez rizika" ([R-R, Bliss Without Risk) is a
small non-governmental
organization, founded in 1992 and funded mainly by the state
and municipalities. It is dedicated to HIV/AIDS and STD diagnosis and prevention
among female sex-workers by educating prostitutes on safer sex
techniques, health and self-defense. R-R operates help
centres in Prague and Brno
.
- "La Strada" is a small civic association active in area of
combating human trafficking, founded in 1995. It operates a center
in Prague and a phone helpline.
- "Projekt šance" (Project Chance) is a small
organisation helping mainly young homosexual prostitutes. Founded
in 1995 by László Sümegh it concentrates on streetwork activity and
operates a center in Prague.
- Other
organisations providing these services are "Katolická charita"
(Catholic charity, countrywide), "PREV Centrum" in
Cheb
(prevention among children), " Time for Life in the
Streets" in Cheb (help for prostitutes), "KARO / Marita P" in Cheb
(help for prostitutes) and specialised institutions in civil
service and police.
Literature
- Milena Lenderová: "Chytila patrola...aneb prostituce za
Rakouska i republiky" [''Caught by the police patrol, or
prostitution at the time of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the
First Czechoslovak Republic''], 2002, ISBN 80-246-0379-9. A study
about prostitution in Czech lands during the monarchy and early
years of the republic. * Eva Vaníčková: "Dětská prostituce"
[''Children prostitution''], 2005, ISBN 80-247-1138-9. Includes
chapter about current situation in the Czech Republic.
- Trafficking in Women: The Czech Republic
Perspective, 2004, (research document by United Nations
Office on Drugs and Crime and United Nations Interregional
Crime and Justice Research Institute), .
References