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China's law enforcers are having an unusually public debate about whether paid sexual services known as 'happy endings' at massage parlors count as crimes if they don't involve actual sexual intercourse. While prostitution is illegal in China, its boundaries are being discussed with rare candor by courts, police and state media - even the usually stodgy flagship newspaper of the Communist Party.
Hot topic: Chinese lawmakers are debating whether paid sexual services such as so-called 'happy endings' which don't involve intercourse should be counted as crimes file picture. The debate centres on sexual services provided by employees of usually low-end massage parlors or hair salons, advertised to customers with colorful phrases such as 'hitting the airplane' and 'breast massage. While common in Beijing and many other Chinese cities, the services became part of a conspicuous national conversation only this week, following newspaper reports about a crackdown that fizzled in southern Guangdong province.
Police in the city of Foshan arrested hair salon staff for providing sexual services, only to have prostitution charges against them overturned by a local court. A precedent apparently was set last year when the Foshan Intermediate People's Court threw out a verdict against a group of salon staff, including three managers who had been sentenced to five years' imprisonment for 'organizing prostitution.
Now courts, police, prosecutors, lawyers and academics are being quoted discussing oral sex and other types of sexual services facilitated by body parts excluding genitals, typically taboo topics that have captured the public's attention. The question is whether such services can be considered prostitution if there is no intercourse. Sensitive issue: The debate centres on sexual services provided by employees of usually low-end massage parlors like this one in Beijing.
Technically, no - at least according to the highest court in Guangdong province, which says such services fall outside the legal definition of prostitution. On its official microblog, the court pressed the legislature to clear up the matter, saying that although no law bars such services, they 'significantly damage social order and have a certain degree of social harm. The high court in eastern Zhejiang reportedly concurs that if there is no intercourse, there's no prostitution, but police in the capital Beijing, southern Guiyang and elsewhere disagree.