Prostitution in Botswana is not illegal, but laws such as public disorder, vagrancy, loitering and state recognised religious provisions are used to prosecute prostitutes.[1] Related activities such as soliciting and brothel keeping are illegal.[1] Botswana has made proposals to make prostitution legal to prevent the spread of AIDS.[2] However, there has been mass opposition to it by the Catholic Church. Prostitution is widespread and takes place on the street, bars, hotels, brothels and the cabs of long-distance trucks.[2][3][4]
Law enforcement is weak, inconsistent and corrupt. Sex workers report routine violence and extortion by the police.[1] Police sometimes demand sex or bribes from foreign prostitutes under threat of deportation.[5] Condoms are issued free from health centres, but are often confiscated from sex workers by the police.[2]
The Gaborone West shopping complex and the streets surrounding it, are the main area of prostitution in the capital, Gaborone.[6] The Itekeng ward of Francistown (locally known as 'Doublers') is the main area of prostitution in the city. The majority of the prostitutes in both cities are from Zimbabwe.[6][5][7] In 2013, the Botswana's Ministry of Health estimated there were more than 1,500 Zimbabwean sex workers in the country, mainly in Gaborone, Francistown and Kasane,[8] out of a total of about 4,000 prostitutes in those three areas.[9][10]
Although homosexuality is stigmatised in the country, male prostitution is on the increase in Botswana, especially in Gaborone, Palapye, Francistown, Maun, Kasane and Kazungula.[11]
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