Overview of the legality and practice of prostitution in Tanzania
Prostitution in Tanzania is illegal but widespread.[1][2][3]UNAIDS estimate there to be 155,450 prostitutes in the country.[4] Many women and young girls are forced into
prostitution due to poverty, lack of job opportunities, culture, and the disintegration of the family unit.[5][6][7] Many university students have to turn to prostitution for economic reasons.[8]
Tanzania is a popular destination for sex tourism, particularly in
Arusha[13]Bagamoyo and the islands of Zanzibar,
Mafia and
Pemba. Many of the tourists are
Italian.[10]
Zanzibar is also a destination for female sex tourism.[14][11] Many of the "beach boys" are not from Zanzibar. There are some agents offering holidays to the island, including an exclusive "guide". Most of the women are from
Europe or
North America.[11]
Child sex tourism is a problem,[12] especially on the coastal resorts and the Kenyan border.[9] Whilst some of the children are trafficked,[9] some turn to prostitution through poverty.[10]
Tanzania faces a mature, generalized HIV epidemic. In 2011, an estimated 1.6 million Tanzanians were living with HIV/AIDS.[15][16] An estimated 1 out of 20 residents in the capital
Dar es Salaam and 1 in 3 sex workers are infected with the
HIV virus.[17] Nationally, 28% of sex workers[18] and 4.7% of all adults are infected.[19]
Reports show that an increase in the number of cases of HIV and
AIDS are growing at an alarming rate in Zanzibar. This is thought to have been added to by large numbers of tourists entering Zanzibar and fueling demand for prostitutes.[20]
Tanzania is a source, transit, and destination country for men, women, and children subjected to sex trafficking. Internal trafficking is more prevalent than transnational trafficking and characteristically facilitated by victims’ family members, friends, or intermediaries offering assistance with education or securing employment in urban areas.[21] Impoverished children from the rural interior remain most vulnerable to trafficking. Girls are exploited in sex trafficking, particularly in tourist hubs and along the border with
Kenya. Previous media reports indicate girls are subjected to
sex trafficking in China. Tanzanian nationals are sometimes subjected sex trafficking in other African countries, the
Middle East, Europe,
Asia, and the
United States. Trafficking victims from other countries, particularly children from
Burundi,
Rwanda, and Kenya, as well as adults from
India,
Nepal, and
Yemen are subjected to sex trafficking. Citizens of neighbouring countries may transit Tanzania before being subjected to sex trafficking in
South Africa, Europe, and the Middle East.[9]
^
abFrancoeur, Robert T.; Reiss, Ira L.; Noonan, Raymond J.; Opiyo-Omolo, Beldina; Perper, Timothy (2006). The Continuum complete international encyclopedia of sexuality (Updated, with more countries. ed.). New York, NY: Continuum.
ISBN978-0826414885.
^Marsland, Rebecca (December 2012). "(Bio)Sociality and HIV in Tanzania: Finding a Living to Support a Life". Medical Anthropology Quarterly. 26 (4): 470–485.
doi:
10.1111/maq.12002.
ISSN0745-5194.
PMID23361880.
^Weiss, Adam (1 February 2016), "The Application of International Legislation: Is the Federalisation of Anti-trafficking Legislation in Europe Working for Trafficking Victims?", Human Trafficking, Edinburgh University Press, pp. 41–62,
doi:
10.3366/edinburgh/9781474401128.003.0003,
ISBN978-1-4744-0112-8