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Korean Teen Sex
Sex lives of North Koreans exposed: Prostitutes, sleazy favours and business culture which "expects" men to have mistresses
Stephen Jones Senior Assistant Editor
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Rather than be discreet about their extramarital relations, rich and powerful men in the secretive communist country are showing off their mistresses in public as a status symbol of their 'achievements'
North Korea 's top business 'elite' are increasingly being "expected" to keep a mistress, a top expert has claimed.
Moreover, rather than be discreet about their extramarital relations, rich and powerful men are showing off their mistresses in public as a status symbol of their 'achievements'.
The startling revelations - which are somewhat at odds with the traditional view of the communist state's repressed culture - were made by a specialist in Korean Studies.
Andrei Nikolaevich Lankov explained prostitution - still outlawed - was traditionally for goods or favours rather than money but has become easier in recent times.
And, despite a widespread lack of sex education, ‘innocence’ among North Korean girls is still "seen as the natural and desirable state of mind" - and sex before marriage is still frowned upon.
Dr Lankov explained that the nation inherited its traditional values from the former USSR under the reign of its former supreme leader Kim Il Sung who died in 1994.
Attitudes to sex are changing under the rule of their latest dictator Kim Jong-un however.
Writing in NKNews.org he claimed: "In the days of Kim Il Sung’s ‘national Stalinism’, the elite did womanise (like a great many powerful males have done since time immemorial), but discretion was expected.
"An official could sleep with his secretary or some woman who was looking for favours from him, but only as long as proper decorum was maintained.
"Now elite males are quite willing to showcase their young mistresses, and among the top business elite a man is almost required to keep a mistress.
"Foreign diplomats in Pyongyang have noticed recently that some officials have begun to appear in public places with young beauties."
Dr Lankov, who taught Korean history and also writes columns for the English-language daily The Korea Times, explained that prostitution - which wasn't always in exchanged just for money - has become easier in recent years.
He said: "In the North Korea of Kim Il Sung’s era prostitution was almost absent, and strict control over housing, income and lifestyle helped to exterminate commercial sex almost completely.
"Some isolated and rare incidents of selling sexual favours for money might have existed, but in most cases, when more cynical females were ready to disperse sexual favours for practical needs, they did so for non-monetary rewards.
"This was pretty much in the spirit of state socialism, where favours and goods, rather than money, were normally exchanged.
"For example, it was widely believed in some female military units that a girl who wanted to join the party, thus dramatically increasing her further chances of social advancement, should first sleep with a local party secretary.
"In more recent times, in the early 2000s, I know of a merchant who frankly admitted that she seduced a local official and remained his lover, above all, to expedite her frequent business travel overseas (the official was in a position to arrange for passports and exit visas)."
He added that a hostess club at a luxury hotel in Pyongyang which quietly encouraged prostitution in the 1980s closed down due to lack of trade - as North Koreans and visitors from Soviet states were banned.
Dr Lankov explained that divorce is still stigmatised in North Korea - but since the rise of the new market economy in the late 90s it has never been easier to "find a room for money... where dalliances could begin and flourish".
Several women are known to have fled across the border to the South rather than divorce their husband.
A 2014 study revealed 29.8% of all refugee women had enjoyed extramarital sex while in North Korea – a level which might be even higher than in the United States, Dr Lankov explained.
Sex remains a taboo subject within the secretive state - with little or no sex education given in schools.
Dr Lankov added: "Boys sometimes learn the ‘facts of life’ from their peers or older relatives, but girls tend to remain remarkably ignorant.
"Some North Korean females who became young adults in the 1970s and 1980s recall that, until their early 20s, they thought that holding hands with a male for too long could lead to pregnancy.
"In other words, North Korean girls are somewhat similar to the middle-class girls of Victorian England when it comes to such ‘delicate’ matters: as it was in Europe 150 years ago, ‘innocence’ is seen as the natural and desirable state of mind.
"It was (and still largely is) assumed that any decent woman should postpone sex until she is married."
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Published On 12 Nov 2012 12 Nov 2012
An estimated 200,000 youths run away each year because of problems at home with many falling into the sex trade.
A photo published in the original report of a sauna spa was meant to show where runaways often stay. The children in the photo were not runaways involved in prostitution. Al Jazeera apologises for using this image.
Seoul, South Korea – Problems with parents, domestic abuse and academic pressure are driving South Korean children to life on the streets with many teenagers turning to prostitution to survive, a report by the Seoul city government says.
An estimated 200,000 youths run away from home each year, according to the report released by the municipal government in late September, citing South Korean police. A survey of 175 female teen runaways by the municipal government found half had been led into the sex industry. 
The report also shows 40.7 per cent of female runaway teens have experienced sexual violence.
This reporter spent several weeks talking to runaway girls. All were between age 12 and 18, and their names have been changed to protect their identities.
“No one ever told me it was wrong to prostitute myself, including my schoolteachers … Girls should be taught that from an early age in class here in South Korea, but they aren’t. “
Most lived in a “runaway family”, the term they use to describe a group of teenagers who meet in Internet chat rooms and develop relationships based on selling sex.
Such “families” often sleep together in hotel rooms where they’ve sold sex beforehand. Or they’re made up of underage prostitutes who seek shelter in rooms owned by individuals who, in return, expect them to do anything from chores to selling sex.
A recent survey by the Ministry of Gender Equality & Family shows 51.3 per cent of runaways questioned in 2011 left home because of “conflict with parents”. School was also a factor with 18.5 per cent leaving because they “hate school and study”, and 13.3 per cent citing “pressure on academic performance”.
“Intense pressure” on students begins as early as age 12, says an education professor at a South Korean university who requested anonymity because of the issue’s sensitivity in the country.
“High school students are being forced to study every day after school until late at night, often until 1am, by their parents so they can get into a good college, a requisite for obtaining high-paying jobs,” the professor says. 
South Korean students have ranked in the top 10 among Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries annually since 2000, he notes.
Yu-ja, 18, says she first ran away at age 12 from her parent’s home so she wouldn’t have to study and could instead, “play, chat and smoke with her school friends all night at playgrounds”. She left for a few days, sleeping on subway trains.
Yu-ja was 14 the second time she fled home. This time she began selling sex for about $275 through a popular online chatting service among underage runaways. A man in his early 20s picked her up at the Internet café where she had solicited him, and took her to his studio apartment in the capital Seoul, a city of more than 10 million people.
The United Voice for Eradication of Prostitution is a non-governmental organisation that counsels teenage prostitutes, educates them on the pitfalls of selling sex, and administers rehabilitation programmes. 
Technology has also made it easier for buyers of sex and teens who sell it, including a proliferation of sex-trade apps downloaded on to smart phones, the group’s counsellor Shim A-ra says. At least a dozen prostitution websites operate online, she adds.
“There has been an explosion of such sites in the last few years,” says Shim. 
The websites are also difficult to police. After authorities shut them down, many operators simply change names and reemerge. 
“No one ever told me it was wrong to prostitute myself, including my schoolteachers,” Yu-ja says. “I wish someone had told me. Girls should be taught that from an early age in class here in South Korea, but they aren’t.”
The money she earned from her first customer enabled Yu-ja to pay for three weeks of lodging at a jjimjilbang , or public bathhouse. She then, through online chatting, hooked up with a “family” of runaway teen prostitutes.
Yu-ja says the last time she ran away she was 17 and had been kidnapped by her father to his residence from her mother’s home. There, he beat her regularly for refusing to take part in track and field activities in high school, so she could get into college despite poor grades.
Yu-ja now lives with Hyun-ju, a 12-year-old runaway prostitute who was sexually abused when she was in third grade by an uncle who lived at her home. Yu-ja came to the interview with Mi-kyung, a 15-year-old runaway from the southern port city of Busan whom she also resides with.
Mi-kyung says the reason she first fled home was that, like Yu-ja, she wanted to avoid schoolwork and be with friends. Showing up with hair and lips coloured bright red, Mi-kyung insisted she had never sold sex despite living on the streets for years. Her claim, says the centre’s head counselor Cheon Bo-gyeong, may be false since underage runaways are extremely reluctant to talk about sex work.
The total number of prostitutes in South Korea is a highly contentious issue. Women’s rights groups and other NGOs estimate hundreds of thousands of women work in the business.
The government, however, disputes these figures. According to a 2007 government report , 147,000 women sell sex for a living – a figure deemed far too low by rights groups.
“According to the survey, 44,804 establishments are estimated to be involved in mediating sex trade, 147,000 women in providing sex service,” says the 2007 Ministry of Gender Equality & Family report .
An official at the ministry refused to comment on this story.
Cheon says runaway teens are sometimes raped if they refuse to indulge in unorthodox sexual practices.
“One customer even slipped his wallet into a teenage prostitute’s bag after having sex with her at a motel. He refused to pay her for her services after accusing her of stealing his wallet and beating her for the theft,” Cheon recalls.
Shim says the most common way teenage girls become prostitutes is for boys or men in their 20s to trick them into selling themselves.
She cited the case of an 18-year-old runaway prostitute she had counselled. Three weeks after becoming romantically involved with a young man and moving in with him, he and seven friends gang-raped her. 
“About half of the girls we counsel turn away from prostitution, but the other half go back to selling sex. “
– Cheon Bo-gyeong, United Voice for Eradication of Prostitution
“Their intention was to sell her to other men, but she contacted an older woman friend from an Internet café when she was with the eight rapists, who helped her escape to a shelter for underage runaway prostitutes,” says Shim.
It is common for teenage prostitutes to contract syphilis and other sexually transmitted diseases. “The girls more frequently go without condoms, since most of their male customers refuse to wear them,” Shim says.
Once young women get involved in the business, it’s difficult for them to leave, Cheon says. “About half of the girls we counsel turn away from prostitution, but the other half go back to selling sex.”
Even for those who manage to escape the sex trade, their past lives often come back to haunt. Former employers at entertainment venues often track down their former prostitutes and threaten to tell their families unless they pay a fee. Many subsequently are ostracized from their husbands and families after they discover the women are former prostitutes.
As the interview wraps up, Yu-ja confesses she is “now tired of being a prostitute”. Since she is old enough to earn a legitimate living, she says she plans to support herself by “cleaning Internet cafés”.
Runaway teens are taught barista skills as part of a rehab programme [United Voice for Eradication of Prostitution]

South Korean women have been demonstrating against sexual abuse
Police in South Korea have arrested one of the owners of a notorious revenge porn site banned in 2016.
Sora.net had more than a million users and hosted thousands of videos taken and shared without the knowledge or consent of the women featured.
Korean police say the website's owners made money from illegal brothel and gambling ads on the site.
But the suspect, surnamed Song, has denied this, saying the site's users created the illegal content.
Producing and disseminating pornography is illegal in South Korea. Song has been charged under the Children and Juvenile Sex Protection Law.
She is one of four people, including her husband, who ran the site from 1999 to 2016, using overseas servers, the Korea Herald reports. The other three, who have foreign passports, remain at large.
Two suspects have already been arrested in connection with the case in South Korea.
The use of hidden and up-skirt cameras is a huge problem in South Korea
Many of the website's spy-cam videos were taken secretly in toilets and store changing rooms, or posted by ex-partners out for revenge.
The site was shut following a public outcry. Some of the women who had appeared in the videos took their own lives.
South Korea saw its largest women's rights rally in May, when more than 10,000 women gathered in Seoul to demand the authorities do more to investigate digital sex crimes.
Many women have been angered by the arrest of a female model, who is accused of photographing a male colleague naked without his consent and posting the photo online.
"Just because the victim is a man and the suspect is a woman this time, the country is investigating the case differently," wrote one signatory to a petition sent to the president, according to the daily JoongAng.
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