Chinese girls smoke meth on their webcams


According to a Vice magazine article , some men in China pay to watch girls smoke meth (crystal methamphetamine) on their webcams. The Chinese authorities arrested Jingjing, a “meth cam girl”,when she was paid to have sexual relations with a man who turned out to be an undercover agent.

North Korea has flooded northeast China with methamphetamine, a synthetic drug that has become a phenomenon in China. This drug is often smoked by workers looking for a stimulant to help them work longer hours and to earn overtime.

Some “karaoke” bars in China also offer something called an “ice rink”, which includes meth and an escort girl to go with it. Meth is said to increase sensations and sexual excitement. Some of these brothel managers also make men pay to watch girls smoke methamphetamine. But despite the risks related to both prostitution and the long-term use of methamphetamine, such as heavy physical damage, these “meth girls” are very poorly paid.

Jingjing, a country girl seeking a better life in the city, landed a job in a traditional massage parlour in Shanghai. She wasn’t earning enough to handle her bills so she started working in a karaoke bar.Very quickly the place’s manager made her a meth girl, although she earned less than $60 for each “ice rink” with a customer.

As she fell deeper into dependency, she started to sleep with customers to earn more money to finance her meth consumption. Then the drug started to change her physical appearance, and her manager then fired her as she was losing weight too quickly. “What man would want you in this state?” he told her.

Jingjing didn’t want to go home in her state of dependency, so she started to work as a Live girl or webcam girl, where she accepted money online to smoke meth in front of her cam before she was arrested by the authorities.

Crystal meth has probably found a home in China because education on the danger of drugs is almost non-existent in that country.

Jingjing admitted that she had no idea about what methamphetamine could do to her body, because her questions were always met with answers like: “Don’t ask for bad things”. The Chinese government isn’t known for its compassion towards addicts. The country formerly used addicts as free labourers under “reform through labour”, but has since sent them to forced re-education camps.