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Prostitution in Namibia
In Namibia, prostitution or commercial sex work has been defined as the rendering of sexual services on a regular, indiscriminate and emotionally indifferent basis for payment but not necessarily money. Interpreting the law, the court declared that commercial sex in Namibian illegal per second, but the legislative authority has made the activities around commercial sex work illegal for example, one may not knowingly make a living from the proceeds of commercial sex work or one may not keep a brother.

Commercial sex work is therefore, analogous to hand-cufrang a snooker players` hand behind his\her back but not prohibiting some from playing snooker. It is common knowledge that poverty is the primary spur for sex work in Namibia.

The reasons often submitted in favor of descry malisoiting commercial sex work are, among other, that individuals should be afforded their freedom to engage in any trade, that the commercial sex work industry in its current form allows for the abuse of commercial sex workers and that sexually transmitted diseases(STDs) thrive as the industry is the unregulated.

Proponents of decriminalization have gone as far as stating that a regulated commercial sex work industry would be beneficial in that jobs would be created for the many unemployed Namibians, and further that government would be able to raise revenue in a form of tax.

The argument unfortunately ignores the prevailing socio-economic circumstances in Namibia, as well as the welfare provisions in the Namibian constititution, which government should afford all citizens. We argue that the time is not ripe to decriminalize commercial sex work and that such decscriminalization would in any event fall short of the dictates of the country`s constitution. Instead, the government must be held to its constitutional mandate creating welfare state that Namibia was originally envisaged to be. History does after all record that the vast commercial sex workers population in Havana, Cuba, pn or to the fall of the baptista regime, was significantly reduced after the formulation and adoption of robust agrarian reforms the Namibian government should similarly formulate and adopt policies that would yield tangiable results in terms of poverty and eventual eradication, Poverty, which is the root cause of commercial sex work in Namibia should rather be addressed as opposed to descriminalizing commercial sex work, an exercise that would bear detrimental societal effects.