Historically, prostitution in Persia was connected to the history of
slavery in Iran. Since the principle of
concubinage in Islam in
Islamic Law allowed a man to have intercourse with his female slave, prostitution was practiced by a
pimp selling his female slave on the slave market to a client, who was allowed to have intercourse with her as her new owner, and who after intercourse returned his ownership of her to her pimp on the pretext of discontent, which was a legal and accepted method for prostitution in the Islamic world. During the reign of
Nassredin Shah (r. 1848–1896), Vali Khan described female prostitutes, termed
favahesh, and male prostitutes called
amrads. Brothels are mentioned but it was more common for prostitutes to meet clients on an individual basis, and male prostitutes often met their male clients in coffee houses and bath houses, and were sometimes supported in a permanent basis by a client. Brothels were sometimes accepted and taxed by the authorities; brothels for male prostitutes were called
amrad khaneh.
After 1979 revolution The new religious government demolished the prostitution district and punished prostitution with lashing. Establishing brothels is also a criminal act, subject to 1–10 years imprisonment, if not subject to death sentence. From the 1990s,
Dubai became famous in the
United Arab Emirates as a place for the sex trade of Iranian women, but it was from the late 2000s that other countries neighboring Iran, including
Turkey,
Georgia, and
Iraqi Kurdistan, had a high number of Iranian female prostitutes hosted. After this, Iranian women quickly became more popular throughout
the region for prostitution. The income of Iranian prostitutes in neighboring countries is considered high but risky. In 2002, the moderate Iranian newspaper
Entekhab estimated that there were close to 85,000 prostitutes in
Tehran alone. Prostitution is rampant in Tehran; "the streets are full of working girls ... part of the landscape, blending in with everything else." In 2008, General
Reza Zarei, the Tehran police chief, was arrested in a brothel with six prostitutes. His arrest caused embarrassment for the government of
President Ahmadinejad because Zarei was in charge of
vice in Tehran. (Price information is based on currency exchange rates of spring 2016). Another report in 2021, said prostitution in Iran became more widespread using the Internet and some websites listed millions of women from all over Iran. == Leading Causes ==