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Wednesday 15 August 2012

Corruption in Nigeria is worse than prostitution



Acting on a news report credited to a Lagos-based evening newspaper, PM News, agents of the Lagos State Task Force on Environmental and Special Offences Enforcement Unit, arrested 52 alleged prostitutes at Isaac John and Toyin Street in Ikeja, Lagos. This arrest happened sometime this month. But of course, such action by the Lagos State government is not new. In the summer of 2011, for instance, 28 suspected prostitutes were arrested and prosecuted and then sent to the Kirikiri Prison in Lagos, to serve various prison terms for their alleged infractions.
In this and most other instances, it is the women that suffer the consequences. How could this be? Whatever happens to the men to whom sexual goods and services were provided? It is a blatant misuse of executive power to arrest prostitutes but let the male clientele off the hook. If prostitution is a crime, then, all the parties involved, must be made to face the judicial music equally. In other word, there must be equality of sanction and punishment for all concerned. To do otherwise, is to favour one gender over another. And this, we must not tolerate. It is simply not fair.
But my central argument, here, is actually not about equality and fairness, but about the senselessness of prohibiting commercial sex. There is nothing wrong with commercial sex; therefore, prostitutes should not be arrested, nor prostitution prohibited. But to hear some Nigerians tell it, prostitution is a very bad thing. In their minds, exchanging sex for money is an abhorrent act – an act to be condemned by all citizens. And especially for the religious-minded folks, prostitution is against God’s will. Hogwash!
And then there are the conservative and ultra-conservatives who thinks prostitution soils the moral clothing of a society. I do not accept or endorse any of these arguments (because) not only do I think that opponents of prostitution are wrong, they are narrow-minded. But above all else, they are hypocrites. They seem to forget, or conveniently forget that human beings habitually exchange sex for something — be it political or social favour, or for many other wants and needs. Sex, as with many things in life, is not free. It has never been free!
The dishonesty of those who condemn prostitution bothers me. Prostitution is a minor infraction – assuming you want to label it an infraction. Karl Kraus said that “Corruption is worse than prostitution. The latter might endanger the morals of an individual; the former invariably endangers the morals of the entire country.” Absolutely! We arrest prostitutes, yet praise politicians; we prosecute prostitutes, yet honour political bastards who, for the most part, are the same folks who weaken our institutions and corrupt the larger society.
The larger society is even mistaken when it comes to prostitution. This is what I mean: how many of us condemn the sugar-daddy or kept-woman phenomenon? As a society, we also don’t mind it when a 45, 55 or 60-year-old man sleeps with and or impregnates a 16, 18 or 20 year-old-girl. No body arrests the sugar-daddy. Nobody arrests keepers of concubines. Poverty and culture factors allow us to condone the aforementioned acts and relationships. The sugar-daddy phenomenon is not new; but recent economy difficulties have made it more permissible. There was a time when the age difference between a sugar-daddy and his beneficiary was, say, 10-15 years. A 55 or 65-year-old man could have a 25-35-year-old as his sex-pet. No more! Things have changed. Sugar daddies now consider women who are past 35 to be too old and too haggard for their sexual appetite. The ideal age range is now 16-30. And then there are the kept-women!
Most kept-women have no visible source of income – save for the pocket of the moneymen “keeping” them. You will find many of these women in the many highbrow areas that dot many Nigerian cities. These women basically fulfil three roles: provide sex on demand; act as an unofficial or trophy wife; and, in some case, have babies for their benefactors. Many kept-women don’t mind their unofficial status because it frees them from being part of the plural marriage arrangement: they don’t have to deal with the second, third or fourth wife; and they certainly don’t have to compete with and within the monogamous setting.
What’s more, their kept status affords them many options – including the option baby-mamas to two or three different rich men. Their homes are like the brothel where men can come and leave at will. These being the case, in what ways are these women different from your archetypal prostitute? I don’t see the difference just as I can find no discernible variance between your typical prostitute and a sugar-baby. In all of these cases, women get provided for — in exchange for sex and affectionate favours. Do the police, the paragon of social mores, or law enforcement entities, go after these women? Of course not! In all three instances, we see a simple economic concept come to play: demand and supply!
Why then do we arrest and indict prostitutes? Why are we so hung up on prostitution? There is nothing wrong with prostitution because, amongst other factors, it helps the formal and informal economy, and also helps the providers and beneficiaries alike. In a country where about 35 per cent of the youths, and 45 per cent of women are unemployed, underemployed, or unemployable, what do you expect? The Nigerian government does not have the moral authority to censure prostitution; and neither does the Nigerian society. To stem the tide of saleable sex, we must educate and provide for our girls: provide excellent education; and provide a rich and enabling environment where everyone can be happy.
What government should do, as Dr. Josh Beall and Dr. Allison Pattison have said, is to allow for their unionisation so they can have access to medical, dental, and family benefits. And that there should be stringent disease and pregnancy tests. On both counts, I agree. Aside from the apparent hypocrisy, it makes no sense wasting valuable resources chasing after innocent citizens. Prostitution, therefore, should be legalised.

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