Tokyo’s ‘embarrassing’ street prostitution prompts demand in Japan for new laws

Foreign media coverage has sparked an urgency in Japan to look into the problem of young women ensnared in Tokyo’s prostitution and the city’s growing reputation as a sex tourism destination, with observers noting the long-overdue spotlight on such issues is “internationally embarrassing”.

The awareness raised has provoked a powerful response locally, including a degree of introspection on social media in a nation that detests losing face on the international stage.

This Week in Asia in a November 17 report quoted a 19-year-old girl named Rua* who said she could provide sexual service to as many as 10 clients a day, of whom around half were foreigners, and spent her earnings in a nearby host club.

Like dozens of other young women, Rua spends her evenings waiting for customers at the notorious Okubo Park in Tokyo’s Kabukicho district.

The Sankei newspaper ran a story two days later lamenting: “The reality of foreign men engaging in ‘sex tours’ in Kabukicho has been reported in some parts of Japan, but it is now spreading overseas as well.”

Kazunori Yamai, a politician with the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, told the Sankei: “This is a serious situation that is internationally embarrassing.