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Northern Ireland sex workers tell parliament how they are endangered by the criminalisation of their customers
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| 13th March
2016
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| See
article from westernpeople.ie |
The number of sex workers in Ireland has increased by 80% since the Northern Ireland ban was introduced last year, a former UK sex worker has said. Paying for sex was outlawed in Northern Ireland in June. Mia de Faoite gave evidence to a Home Affairs
Committee at Westminster recently. She said: When Northern Ireland changed its law, of course they moved south and the women for sale, they increased on our side of the border. It was up by 80%. So they moved to where
it is legal to buy.
Sex worker campaigners have argued that the criminalisation of their customers has endangered sex workers by pushing the industry underground. Sex worker Laura Lee, who is leading a court challenge bidding to
overturn the ban, told the committee the prohibition had created problems: The difficulty that we have now, for example in Northern Ireland, after the criminalisation went through on 1 June, is that clients are
refusing to use the online screening process that we have and so it is putting us into greater danger. It is a very, very useful tool to have but in a further criminalised state it can be sadly abandoned, I am afraid.
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Prostitution is rising along with poverty in Britain. To protect women both the criminalisation of sex work and austerity must be reversed. By the English Collective of Prostitutes
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| 11th
March 2016
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| See article from opendemocracy.net
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We welcome Jeremy Corbyn's public statement in support of the decriminalisation of sex work. He, more
than many, will have in mind the austerity cuts, 75% of which have targeted women. These cuts are responsible for massive increase in prostitution that we have seen in the UK as of late. With 3.7 million children living in poverty
in the UK and 176,000 people surviving on food banks, no wonder that women are turning to prostitution. The northern English town of Doncaster
reported a 60% increase in prostitution in 2013, with charities saying, "women are being forced to sell sex for £5 because
of benefit sanctions". Sheffield reported a 166% increase in 2014 while charity workers in
Hull have gone on record saying "we have started to see women who are literally starving
and they are out there to feed themselves". As poverty and prostitution increase so does criminalisation. We are currently fighting legal cases with women imprisoned for brothel-keeping because they worked in a flat with
friends -- obviously much safer than working alone. We are also working with women street workers, who are having their IDs confiscated by police before being told that they can only get them back if they show plane tickets back to Romania. This is
happening despite these women having the right to reside in the UK. We are even helping a woman fired from her public service job because she worked part-time in pornography to supplement her wages. We see daily the injustice of
the prostitution laws which force sex workers to work in isolation and danger. As a woman working in Leeds said recently, "the laws are pointing at us and saying, 'nobody cares about you'". That is the view of every killer who has targeted sex
workers. But perhaps the most compelling reason to abolish the laws is because illegality and stigma hides who sex workers are -- mothers, sisters, daughters, aunties and wives --all women (and men and trans people) trying to
survive in increasingly harsh economic times. Those feminist politicians who claim to speak for us but who misinterpret, lie, distort and disparage our experience take advantage of our illegal status knowing that it is harder for us to speak publicly to
set the record straight. Approximately 85% of sex workers are women and the majority are mothers, mostly single mums. If prostitution policy and law was framed by these facts we'd get support for mothers and anti-austerity
policies not more criminalisation. So thank goodness for Corbyn and his close political ally John McDonnell MP, whose principled support for decriminalisation has meant that groups such as the Safety First Coalition (which includes the Royal College of
Nursing), Hampshire Women's Institute, and Women Against Rape have had a voice in parliament. The evidence of the success of decriminalisation is compelling. At our evidence gathering symposium on prostitution last November,
Catherine Healy, founding member and coordinator of the New Zealand Prostitutes Collective, reported on research from the
Prostitution Law Review Committee that found, five years after the decriminalisation in New
Zealand, that there had been no increase in prostitution or trafficking. In contrast, sex workers are now more able to leave prostitution and secure other work because they aren't registered and convictions have been cleared from their record. The law
decriminalised sex workers on the street and in premises, which has made it easier to report violence and has allowed sex workers to work together, increasing safety. An
independent review by the Christchurch School of Medicine in New Zealand found 64% of sex workers found it easier to refuse clients -- a litmus test of
whether women are being forced or coerced. Yet the Home Affairs Committee is studiously ignoring this compelling evidence. Instead it appears to have a pre-determined outcome to recommend the criminalisation of clients -- a
proposal backed by an " unlikely union of evangelical Christians with feminist campaigners ". As one of the women who
gave evidence to the inquiry said, "politicians who claim to want to save us by banning our work should first of all say how else we are to survive". Corbyn and John McDonnell's support for decriminalisation puts sex
workers of a par with others who have been unjustly criminalised -- young people, people of colour, immigrant people. And that is right. Women picked up for soliciting have long said that the prostitution laws are to women what the sus laws are to young
Black men -- a tool for the police to persecute and harass, with Black and other women of colour as their first targets. Corbyn and McDonnell take their lead from sex workers who, like other workers, are striving to improve our
working conditions. If the Labour party wants an anti-prostitution strategy they should get behind their leader's determined campaign against benefit cuts, sanctions and an end to zero hour contracts ."
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Jeremy Corbyn supports the legalisation of sex work and says that he does not want to automatically criminalise people. Labour PC extremists soon respond saying that they DO want to criminalise everybody, or at least men
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| 8th March 2016
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| 5th March 2016. See article from bbc.com See
article from theguardian.com |
Jeremy Corbyn told students in London he wanted a society where we don't automatically criminalise people , The Guardian reported. He said: I am in favour of decriminalising the sex industry. I don't want people to
be criminalised. I want to be [in] a society where we don't automatically criminalise people. Let's do things a bit differently and in a bit more civilised way.
Of course it did not take long for the nasty wing
of the Labour party to crticise their leader and re-iterate that they would like to see men jailed just for wanting to get laid. Ex-Labour deputy leader Harriet Hatemen claimed prostitution was exploitation and abuse not an industry .
Labour MP Jess Phillips spewed on Twitter: Man says we should decriminalize a known violence against women. Why did it have to be this man,
But the English Collective of Prostitutes, which
campaigns for decriminalisation, voiced its support for Corbyn's comments. Supporters of decriminalisation include Amnesty International, which says it would mean sex workers are no longer forced to live outside the law .
Comment: Right Whinger 6th March 2016. Thanks to Alan
Corbyn's de facto number two, the shadow chancellor John McDonnell, also has a laudable track record of fighting the corner of sex workers. The nonentity Jess Phillips is a right-whinger with form for trying to undermine Corbyn.
As for the bollox spouted by Harridan Hatemen, it mat be worth noting that the International Union of Sex Workers affiliated to the GMB, a TUC-affiliated union, which certainly seems to make them workers. Since HH's old man, Jack Dromey, is a former
union official, I'd love to be a fly on the wall of the Dromey-Hatemen kitchen at breakfast! I never cease to be amazed by the capacity of purported feminists like Hatemen and Phillips to spew crap about prostitution
without ever talking to a few tarts. Update: Corbyn is right -- prostitution must be decriminalised 8th March 2016. See
article from spiked-online.com by Ella Whelan
We shouldn't punish sex work. We shouldn't celebrate it, either. |
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Escortdeck, a search engine to locate UK sex workers
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| 4th March 2016
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| See article from dailyrecord.co.uk See also escortdeck.com |
Feminist campaigners have whinged about website designed to help British men find the best escorts in the UK . The website is called EscortDeck and is a Google-style search engine for sex workers. It lets men find escorts in all major British
cities and invites them to search for sex workers willing to indulge in particular kinks before filtering the women depending on their appearance or ethnicity. The site is not actually doing anything illegal due to the complex laws governing the
buying and selling of sex. Karen Ingala Smith, CEO of an anti sex work campaign group called NIA claimed: Our experience leads us to the view that prostitution is a cause and consequence of women's continued inequality and discrimination
and is a form of violence against women. |
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Feminist campaigners line up to support jailing men for paying for sex just so they can feel good about their own equality
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| 22nd February 2016
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| | Sex Buyer Law See
article from independent.co.uk
A parliamentary group comprised of MPs seeking to criminalise men for buying sex have commissioned a report from a strident campaign group supporting the same cause. The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Prostitution commissioned a report from the
campaign group End Demand. And shock horror, the report is a one sided diatribe of nastiness grasping at the vengeful opportunity to jail men just for wanting to get laid. The extreme proposal from End Demand calls for British men who buy
sex from sex workers while abroad on stag parties should be prosecuted in the UK under new laws that make paying for sex illegal. See proposal from enddemand.uk
Sex tourists and businessmen who pay for prostitutes on expense accounts would also be criminalised under the campaign groups proposals in the Sex Buyer Law report. The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Prostitution chairman, Gavin Shuker,
Labour MP for Luton South spewed: Speaking personally, I think the idea has merit for one simple reason: many people's first experience of buying sex takes place abroad.
Criminalise the sex buyers, not the prostitutes See article from
theguardian.com Catherine Bennett
In its report, Shifting the Burden , the all-party group recommended the introduction, instead, of a sex-buyer offence, of following the Nordic model. It then asked End Demand , a campaign to end commercial sexual exploitation, to find out how this could
be implemented. The resulting report, produced by a commission on the sex buyer law, is to be launched in parliament this week. This concludes -- on the basis of evidence from Nottingham and Suffolk, as well as countries such as Sweden, which criminalise
buyers -- that a similar law is overdue here, to reduce both the human and economic cost of prostitution. Having participated in that commission, along with, among others, Alan Caton and Diane Martin, a survivor of the sex trade
who has helped others to exit, I find it harder than ever to understand how any politician, local or otherwise, would want to perpetuate, by legalising it, a trade so staggeringly unequal and so dependent on the trafficked and marginalised. In Germany,
which did precisely that in 2002, the resulting brothels are warehouses of migrant women, pimped for bargain basement prices. Legalisation has failed, it turns out, both to inspire more gallantry in clients and to convince many German women that
supplying oral and anal sex on demand could make a nice change from waitressing. Comment: Disgraceful article by Catherine Bennett in today's Observer 22nd February 2016. Thanks to Alan
There is an appalling article by Catherine Bennett in today's Observer, pimping the Nordic model . I'm baffled that a purportedly liberal newspaper should print this grotesquely illiberal crap, taking any bullshit spouted by an authoritarian
Swedish pseudo-feminist as gospel. So, for Bennett, the nasty Swedish minister of injustice points out blah, blah, blah.... Err, no, point out is a factive verb, claiming veracity for what follows. The minister actually tendentiously claims
blah, blah, blah.... The Guardian and Observer really seem all over the place where sex is concerned. They seem to have a check list of approved sexual behaviours/persons. Hence they're all for buggery by male homosexuals, whom
only a bigot would prevent from marrying one another, but Bennett has a fit of the vapours at the very idea of a lady of the night letting a bloke up her bum. At least the traditional taboos imposed by religion had a logical secular motive - to encourage
legitimate offspring by condemning sexual practices that couldn't produce kids (buggery, masturbation) or cast doubt on their legitimacy (adultery). The Guardian/Observer system seems to pick its does and don't at random. Needless
to say, totally absent from Bennett's drivel is any input from women who actually work in the industry. When one considers that Max Mosley' lady friends were routinely described as prostitutes (and Lord Justice Eady seemed to acquiesce in that
description), I wonder whether Bennett and the Observer might not more usefully consider why a woman with a Ph.D. in organic chemistry finds it more satisfying and/or remunerative to have her bum spanked than to use her academic qualifications in lecture
theatre or lab.
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| 7th
February 2016
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The criminalisation of men who pay for sex in Northern Ireland was supposed to protect women but does the opposite. Laura Lee, who is preparing to challenge the new law in court, explains how See
article from theguardian.com |
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Birmingham councillor calls for the establishment of a red light zone in the city
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| 30th January 2016
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| See article from birminghammail.co.uk
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A Birmingham councillor is calling for a red light district to be set up within the city to get sex workers away from family homes. Majid Mahmood said it is time the police and council bosses looked into the idea of a designated red light zone, similar
to the one set up in Leeds, to move prostitutes off residential streets. A red light district was established in the Holbeck area of Leeds in October 2014. Sex trade workers can freely ply their trade between the hours of 7pm and 7am within a
specific area and without the fear of police action. The scheme was hailed a success by city and council chiefs following a 12 month trial and has been rolled out indefinitely. Labour councillor Mahmood said there are problems with
prostitution in the Hodge Hill ward and it had often ended up shifting from place to place. He suggested the zone could be set up within an industrial estate. He said: Prostitution is still occurring and I'm thinking
perhaps that the conversation needs to be had that whether we as a city, alongside the approval of the police, may want to look at what's happening in Leeds. If people aren't aware, there are controlled zones there. I have had
many conversations with the superintendent and other officers, if we are successful in moving prostitution away from the Washwood Heath Road, it will just end up on the Coventry Road. Once you move from the Coventry Road, it will probably end up on the
Alum Rock Road, you move it from the Alum Rock Road, it will end up somewhere else in the city and it is always going to be a constant problem. I think it's high time, especially in the current financial climate we are in, that
the police and city council officers have a conversation to see if this is a way forward in order to tackle the issues that we are facing on a continuous basis in this district and across the city.
Back in 2012, mayoral hopeful Ray
Egan, otherwise known as John Bull, advocated a red light zone in the Jewellery Quarter as part of his controversial manifesto. The newspaper also reported that a poll of its online readers showed that 54% backed the idea to establish a red light
zone in Birmingham.
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20th January 2016
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By Frankie Mullin See article from vice.com |
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UK Home Affairs Committee sets up a biased inquiry clearly with the intention of jailing men for seeking the simple pleasures of life from sex workers, just so that mean minded feminists can feel good about their 'equality'
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| 17th January 2016
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| See
article from parliament.uk
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The Home Affairs Committee is launching an inquiry into the way prostitution is treated in legislation. In particular, the inquiry will assess whether the balance in the burden of criminality should shift to those who pay for sex rather than those who
sell it. Saying that, the only discussion points on the agenda are in support of the premise. Inquiry: Prostitution Home Affairs Committee Terms of Reference Written evidence is invited on the
following issues:
- Whether criminal sanction in relation to prostitution should continue to fall more heavily on those who sell sex, rather than those who buy it.
- What the implications are for
prostitution-related offences of the Crown Prosecution Service's recognition of prostitution as violence against women.
- What impact the Modern Slavery Act 2015 has had to date on trafficking for purposes of
prostitution, what further action is planned, and how effectively the impact is being measured.
- Whether further measures are necessary, including legal reforms, to:
- Assist those involved in prostitution to exit
from it - Increase the extent to which exploiters are held to account - Discourage demand which drives commercial sexual exploitation
Written submissions for this inquiry should be submitted online by midday on Thursday 18 February 2016.
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Leeds Council bravely continues with its red light zone
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| 12th January 2016
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| See
article from telegraph.co.uk |
A red-light district in Leeds has now been made a permanent fixture. The street prostitution zone has been allowed to continue indefinitely despite the recent death of sex worker Daria Pionko who was found with fatal injuries inside the managed
area in Leeds. Councillor Mark Dobson, Leeds City Council's executive member for Safer Leeds, called the death of Miss Pionko a tragedy but insisted a managed area was needed to protect sex workers. Under the scheme sex workers
are allowed to ply their zone in the designated part of the Holbeck area of the city between 7pm and 7am, but council chiefs are looking at extending the hours women can work . Cllr Dobson said: I accept that there are
people who will always have a moral objection to the issue of prostitution. I'm of the opinion that it is an industry that's as old as time and it isn't going to stop and, as a city that is responsible and cares about the people
who live here - including the women who work in this industry - we have had to take a pragmatic approach to keep them safe. The managed area isn't a universal cure-all. Sex work remains - as last month proved - an extremely
dangerous and fraught occupation. But it's incumbent on us to make it as safe as possible.
A female police officer has been assigned to specifically interact with sex workers in the managed area. Superintendent Sam Millar said:
Our job is to keep people safe and that applies when people put themselves in risky situations. Sex work is high risk and that is not something that we should ignore. Having gone through years and years of enforcement,
which hasn't achieved the outcomes of breaking the cycle of sex work, we wanted to do something different which might help us better achieve those outcomes, to be brave and take some risks.
According to the council, since the area was
set up, complaints from residents have fallen. Area community safety co-ordinater Zahid Butt said: For 10 to 15 years this issue dominated residents' meetings. It doesn't do that in the same way now. West Yorkshire Police said that sex
workers are much more likely to talk to officers and report crimes committed against them. |
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