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This Week in AsiaPeople

Japan cracks down on vice clubs forcing women customers into sex work

  • Four arrests were made in connection to a website promising women opportunities to ‘earn tens of millions of yen a month’ in the US sex industry
  • Police also raided 729 ‘host clubs’ where women pay to be entertained by men, but often run up sky-high bills they are coerced into sex work to settle

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Women walk past an advertisement for a “host club” in the Shinjuku ward of Tokyo in December. Photo: EPA-EFE
Julian Ryall
Police in Japan have confirmed the arrest of four men on charges of forcibly recruiting victims into the sex industry abroad, following raids on 729 “host clubs” accused of preying on women customers, charging them exorbitant amounts and coercing them into prostitution to pay off their debts.

Activists applauded the police action, but said authorities could have acted much sooner to crack down on the problem – and cautioned that much more needs to be done to halt the international trafficking of women.

“It is good that the police are finally taking notice of this problem, but it really should have been addressed a long time ago,” Yoshihide Tanaka, secretary general of the Liaison Council of Parents Protecting Youths (Seiboren), told This Week in Asia.

“The sex industry has for many years had close connections with the police, who have too often been reluctant to intervene, but now because of the actions of groups such as ours and the media coverage, that is changing.”

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On Thursday, the Tokyo Metropolitan Police confirmed the arrest of the four men for allegedly recruiting women via the “Dekasegi Charme” website to work in the sex industry in the United States. The site promised opportunities to “earn tens of millions of yen a month” for women over the age of 18.

Yoshihiko Usui, a 53-year-old broker, is accused of introducing two women to sex industry contacts in the US last year. The women worked in brothels, with one reportedly being paid 900,000 yen (US$6,000) for the work over 10 days and the other 2.5 million yen in the space of a month.

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How Japanese women are driven into debt and sex work by host clubs

How Japanese women are driven into debt and sex work by host clubs
Ryosuke Imamura, 37, is accused of creating the website. Authorities believe Usui and Imamura, along with two other men, arranged for as many as 300 women to travel abroad to work in the sex industry in the US, Canada and Australia over three years.
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