There was a time when Japan's economy grew significantly, bringing in foreign currency and making some Japanese men look for extramarital affairs with women from underdeveloped nations.
But now it's the other way around, The Star claims. tokyo has become a popular sex tourism destination, drawing in overseas guys looking for these kinds of encounters. Poverty is increasing and the yen is depreciating at the same time.
According to Yoshihide Tanaka, secretary general of the japan Liaison Council Protecting Youths (Ciboren). He said, "Japan has become a poor country," in an interview with This Week in Asia.
As soon as travel restrictions were removed after the epidemic, Tanaka's organization saw an increase in international visitors to the park.
However, the number of foreign males we encounter has increased; they come from a variety of nations. "They are Asian, Black, and White, but the majority are Chinese," he stated. According to Tanaka, the number of teens and women in their twenties who are resorting to the sex business as a means of surviving has alarmingly increased as a result of this inflow.
But there are also reasons to be concerned about the increase in violence. Tanaka is disappointed that his organization can't do more to solve the problem than what it is doing now.
Tanaka is accustomed to the circumstances, so his disappointment is not unusual. TokyoHive claims that prostitution has grown significantly in the Kabukicho neighborhood of tokyo in recent years. Tanaka remembers his ten years of fighting to help young Japanese ladies who were lured to the notorious neighborhood. The area's maze of pubs, host clubs, and love motels continue to abuse vulnerable people, he emphasizes.
Young women in Kabukicho who are looking for jobs and a better life frequently turn to sex work as a result of growing financial strains. women encounter several difficulties after being involved in this sector, such as having several abortions, which is a clear sign of the terrible conditions women live in. Notably, foreign nationals make up half of their customers.
Additionally, these women are occasionally the victims of abuse by their customers, which goes mostly undetected. The attitude of government officials and the police, who continuously fail to assist women in the sex trade, makes the problem worse. This produces a vicious loop from which it is difficult to break free. Unsettlingly, it seems that higher authorities are not concerned about this problem. Whether this position will alter significantly in response to an improvement in Japan's economic circumstances is still up in the air.