Thursday, December 26, 2024

Rights commission issues alert over home delivery of sexual services

The National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) asked authorities on Wednesday to investigate strip clubs in Tlaxcala that offer home delivery of sexual services, such as table dances, when isolation measures and the suspension of non-essential activities due to the coronavirus pandemic are in force.

In a statement, the agency said that offering the services violates coronavirus health guidelines and women’s rights.

In ads posted on social media (that have since been removed), one Tlaxcala club offered color-coded packages featuring multiple women in various states of undress, from topless to totally nude. The entry-level blue package promised three girls and six dances for 4,000 pesos (US $170), whereas the high-end red package came with 13 women, 26 dances and 10 “surprise gifts” for 14,000 pesos (US $593). 

Reaction on social media ranged from those who criticized the stripper delivery service as irresponsible, to others who called it a “noble gesture.”

The CNDH was not amused. “This situation violates not only the right to health, but constitutes discrimination and possible trafficking in persons for the purpose of sexual exploitation,” it stated in a press release. 

The head of the Tlaxcala Attorney General’s Office (PGJE), José Antonio Aquiahuatl Sánchez, stated that his department has opened an investigation into the strip club for the probable commission of a crime threatening public health and a violation of measures imposed by the state government to prevent the spread of Covid-19. 

Tlaxcala currently has 28 confirmed cases of coronavirus with one death. 

Source: El Sol de Mexico (sp), Sin Embargo (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Mexico City residents in sweaters and warm hats walk through the city amid a cold front

Cold front sweeps across Mexico: Here’s what to expect in your state

0
Mexico is expecting warm days and chilly nights across much of the country as 2024 draws to a close.
Claudia Sheinbaum, who's election was one of Mexico's biggest news stories in 2024

Mexico’s year in review: The 10 biggest news and politics stories of 2024

0
It was a year of great change in Mexico, as López Obrador bowed out of public life and President Claudia Sheinbaum stepped into power.
The project addresses a major cross-border pollution problem by treating the sewage flowing north from the Tijuana River.

Tijuana River cleanup takes major step forward

2
Imperial Beach in San Diego, just north of the Mexico-U.S. border, is one of the country's most polluted beaches due to sewage flow from the Tijuana River.