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The prostitution solution: Debate rages over who's got it right in Europe

  • Thread starter Thread starter Art Mann
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Art Mann

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Europeans debate
which works better:
criminalization or legalization



france-anti-prostitution-rally.jpg


People demonstrate against prostitution outside the French parliament in Paris on Dec. 4.
On the same day, France’s lower house of parliament voted for tougher prostitution laws,
making it a crime to pay for sex. (Francois Mori/Associated Press)


Swedish model of criminalizing prostitutes' clients
may prevail over Germany's legalization


By Laura Lynch, CBC News


As Canada’s top court stands poised to rule on whether the country’s sex trade laws are unconstitutional, debate rages in Europe on whether criminalization or legalization is a better prostitution solution.

The Supreme Court of Canada is to rule Friday morning on whether Canada’s prostitution laws violate the Charter of Rights.

The judgment will be scrutinized in Canada, but it is also likely be watched closely abroad, especially in other countries that are confronting their own challenges with what is often called the world’s oldest profession.

France to crack down on prostitutes' clients

Earlier in December, amid bitter public debate, France’s lower house of parliament voted to make it a crime to pay for sex, in effect punishing the johns instead of the prostitutes.

These sex workers, protesting in November, oppose France's plan to penalize clients caught in the act of soliciting a prostitute. The board reads: 'Repression is not prevention.' (Christophe Ena/Associated Press)

After the vote, the minister for women, Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, said the new law would aid in the fight against pimping and human trafficking.

“I thank you for looking at prostitution as it is and not as we dream it of being,” she told fellow lawmakers after the vote. “Thank you for giving us the means to effectively fight against the networks that control the sex trade.”

The new law means that anyone caught paying for sexual services will face a fine of 1,500 euros ($2,200) increasing to 3,750 euros (about $5,500) for repeat offenders.

Why Swedes believe they got it right

France was following the lead set by Sweden in 1999 in an effort to abolish prostitution.

Kajsa Wahlberg, Swedish National Police detective-superintendent, said the law’s moral underpinning is based on promoting gender equality and ending violence against women. In that context, buying sex is seen as victimizing prostitutes.

The trade has not disappeared in Sweden since the law was introduced, said Wahlberg, but street soliciting is down significantly.

“It does not solve every problem, but it does have a deterrent effect on many people and most of the people in the society want to stay on the right side of the law,” she said.

From those who know Sweden’s sex trade from the inside, there is a very different view.

Pye Jakobsson was a prostitute in Sweden for 24 years and now works to better the lives of those still in the trade through the organization Rose Alliance. Jakobsson said she is hoping Canada’s Supreme Court will strike down the prostitution laws.

She also urged Canada not to follow Sweden’s example, arguing it has driven sex workers deeper into the shadows, making a risky line of work even more dangerous.

“Criminalizing sex work and things around sex work is not the solution. It makes us more marginalized and vulnerable,” Jakobsson said.

She said only the “bad” johns are willing to risk arrest by buying sex on street corners.

Germany's sex trade booms after
Jakobsson points to Germany as an example of how to do it Since 2002, prostitution there has been treated as a legal industry — allowing sex workers to get social insurance and to sue customers who don’t pay.

It has resulted in booming business. There are tens of thousands of prostitutes working in Germany, perhaps upwards of 200,000 in total.

Chantal Louis, editor of the German feminist magazineEmma, said that there is a downside: Germany has become a lucrative market for pimps and people traffickers.

“Many of the women working here come from the poorest countries in Europe: Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary,” Louis said.

“We have laws against pimping and trafficking but it is difficult for the police to prove a case because you need the testimony of the victim. And that is not easy to get from these vulnerable women.”

In fact, the newly elected German government is looking at revising the law to make it illegal to buy sex from women who have been forced into prostitution

Louis said that is only a “symbolic gesture” that falls far short of what is needed: an outright ban on prostitution.

Wahlberg agrees trafficking has grown in Germany over the last decade.

She believes the sheer number of countries following Sweden’s example suggest it has found the best alternative.

The list includes Finland, Norway and Iceland.

Ireland is considering new laws as well and Wahlberg says she’ll be meeting with a delegation from Australia in the new year.

Wahlberg said she has not had any inquiries from anyone in the Canadian government.
 
Why don't they focus on their political corruptions instead?

Yeah wishful thinking.
 
Thanks for posting Art. I'm following industry related political and legal events across the country and around the world with great interest.
 
If this causes the Swedish model to come here they will have pushed the industry further underground and effectively punish the women they are claiming to be looking out for. I wish the do gooders would mind their own business and stop trying to shove their morals down our throats!
 
Why don't they just tax them and make it a legal business. A win win situation for all.
 
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