2.2 Clause 11 which, in effect, confirms the existing legal position that persons who solicit the sexual services of persons older than 18 years are also guilty of an offence, as are the persons who sell these services, is intended to address the concerns raised by the Constitutional Court in its judgment in the case of S v Jordan and Others. When deliberating on this clause, the Committee raised the question why in practice only the seller of the services is charged and prosecuted. The Committee expressed concern that, in a constitutional democracy such as ours, there should not be a selective application of the law, where mostly women are prosecuted for selling sexual services while their clients, mostly men, who are equally guilty, go unpunished. The Committee consequently requests the Department to ensure that this very real concern is brought to the attention of the Commissioner of the South African Police Service and the National Director of Public Prosecutions who are requested to revert to the Committee in writing on this aspect, explaining, among others, why the clients who are, by all accounts, mostly men, are not arrested, charged and prosecuted in accordance with the findings of the Constitutional Court. The Committee, however, noted that the matter of adult prostitution is the subject of review by the South African Law Reform Commission.