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'Scots sex workers will pay the price if men made criminals'



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Published Date: 05 May 2008
DEMANDS to make buying sex illegal in Scotland have been attacked by a prostitute support worker as "demonising" men.
Ruth Morgan Thomas, a former sex worker who runs the Scot-pep project in Edinburgh, said she was "shocked" by research which claims to discover "dangerous" attitudes among men in Scotland who use prostitutes.

She says the recommendations of the st
udy, based on interviews with 110 men in Scotland who have paid for sex, would drive the industry underground and expose women to more violence.

The report said one in ten of the interviewees for the Women's Support Project study thought it was impossible to rape a prostitute. The researchers also claimed that several punters believed that rape was "inevitable" if men's sexual needs were not met.

Half of those questioned did not believe the women were exploited by pimps.

An estimated 5,000 women have worked as prostitutes in Scotland in the past year – about 3,000 indoors and 2,000 on the street.

The report – Challenging Men's Demand for Prostitution in Scotland – calls for men who buy sex to be placed on the sex offenders register, and calls for "legal sanctions" against using prostitutes.

"To name them as sex offenders would send a strong message and reinforce their already-existing knowledge of the harm they perpetrate, which they struggle to deny," the report says.

But Ms Morgan Thomas told The Scotsman the recommendations, if adopted by government, would drive the industry underground and encourage more violence against sex workers. "As a former academic I was quite shocked by this research. As a former sex worker I was even more shocked," she said.

"Yes, there is violence, but to say that the majority of men are engaging in buying sex to perpetrate violence against women is not the reality.

"It demonises men. The conclusion that we need to criminalise clients because there is violence is flawed."

She said that in Sweden, organised crime had moved into the industry after it was driven underground by laws banning the purchase of sex.

"We know in countries where purchasing sex has been criminalised that it is the sex worker who pays the price.

"It drives it underground to a certain extent and organised crime moves in," she said, citing studies that suggested the trafficking of sex workers in Sweden had doubled since the ban was introduced in 1999.

Sandra White, MSP, has laid a motion in the Scottish Parliament urging politicians to support the controversial findings.

The move has triggered an amendment from Margo MacDonald seeking to discredit the report, which she has branded "claptrap".

"Most people who understand anything at all about prostitution are opposed to this law," said Ms MacDonald, who pledged to fight any attempt to criminalise the purchasing of sex in Scotland.

"In the first year of its existence, prostitutes did disappear from the streets of Swedish cities. Groups working with these women reported concern that they were held behind locked doors out of reach of support agencies, health agencies and the police, with whom they had a very good working arrangement," she added.

RAPE CHARGE THREAT SOUTH OF THE BORDER

A HARD-HITTING new poster campaign to make prostitutes' customers think twice about paying for sex with trafficked women is launched today.

The Home Office initiative warns men that sleeping with a woman who has been forced to work in the sex industry will make them a rapist.

Ads, which will be placed in gents' toilets in pubs and clubs, depict a sleazy brothel with the caption: "Walk in a punter. Walk out a rapist."

Home Office Minister Vernon Coaker said: "These women are being treated as commodities and are sold, controlled and exploited by others for a profit. Trafficking is a vile and evil trade and sex buyers must be made to think twice about the consequences of their actions."



The full article contains 654 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Stu_R_20,

Edinburgh 05/05/2008 06:07:48
I think the passing of this law is an outrage: Why just punish the demand side, start arresting these hookers who stand on street corners waiting. It would surely lead to a bigger reduction in kerb crawling.
If you ask me I think prostitution should be legal, it's quite clear exactly who is driving such legislation........
2

yockel,

05/05/2008 06:54:14
The move to enforce existing law to treat having sex with a trafficed woman as rape is to be welcomed, so long as it is done sensibly. That is probably asking too much in this target driven, poster plastered, PC little crumb of an island.
You have to wonder if it is the poster printers that drive govenment policy to keep themselves in business.
The Labour blame and punish game is a farce, why not bring the punters on board as allies in stamping out the exploiters?
As for making entering into a financial relationship for the purpose of having sex illegal, why?
Make a great line as grounds for divorce though.
3

Pocket Dictionary,

05/05/2008 07:07:30
Prostitution is not going to go away. Demand for it is not going to go away. Legalise it in some form to protect seller and buyer.

Then take the heavy handed approach to those sellers and buyers working outside of a legalised sex industry.
4

Tweedmouth,

Coldstream 05/05/2008 08:18:04
#3 "Prostitution is not going to go away. Demand for it is not going to go away. Legalise it in some form to protect seller and buyer."

Heroin is not going to go away. Demand for it is not going to go away. Legalise it in some form.

Cannabis s not going to go away. Demand for it is not going to go away. Legalise it in some form.

Illegal Immigration is not going to go away. Demand for it is not going to go away. Legalise it in some form.

Child-rape is not going to go away. Demand for it is not going to go away. Legalise it in some form.

Wife beating is not going to go away. Demand for it is not going to go away. Legalise it in some form.

Burglary is not going to go away. Demand for it is not going to go away. Legalise it in some form.

Pornography is not going to go away. Demand for it is not going to go away. Legalise it in some form. (opps they already did)

if you want to live in a violent, drug riddled, crime plagued, ghettoised-immigrant society - hey the answer is simple - make EVERYTHING legal. Then we can all live in a place that will increasingly resemble downtown Baghdad, Columbia or Mogadishu.
5

yockel,

05/05/2008 08:43:09
#4 Tweedmouth; For years the Spanish had legal brothels with requisite regular medical checks on the girls to keep their green card. Didn't turn Madrid in to Baghdad, you need the Yanks for that. Dora Noyce didn't turn Edinburgh into Baghdad even with the help of the American Fleet.
6

weeshooie1,

Wollongong 05/05/2008 08:54:40
How Victorian.
7

Rulesbutnotrulers,

Federation, not separation 05/05/2008 08:59:58
Sweden has just such a law - and it seems to work well.
8

Tatties ower the side,

Johannesburg 05/05/2008 10:37:36
#7 Rules
I you had taken time to read the article you would have noticed that it mentions Sweden's laws and points out that they are not working!

9

Tatties ower the side,

Johannesburg 05/05/2008 10:46:54
You pay your 100quid (as a punter), get in there and the girl says.. "I am being forced to have sex with you!"

So, having read the poster in your pub, you trot off to the Police Station to admit to an offence that is now criminal.

PC plod takes your statement and charges you. (You subsequently lose your reputation, job and family)

Then, since proving that the girl is being forced to have sex would be just too difficult, PC plod goes off to set up his speed trap in Lothian Road.

Somehow, I foresee difficulties in making this work....
10

Urban Guerrilla,

Edinburgh 05/05/2008 11:48:41
What a load of sanctimonious rubbish this debate is.

If someone offers me money to have sex, and I want the money enough to agree, what on earth's wrong with that?
11

Dorian,

Edinburgh 05/05/2008 12:22:57
Legalise prostitution and cut fuel duty.
12

Allan(handofgod137),

05/05/2008 12:44:07
Well Ruth Morgan Thomas seems to know what she's talking about from experience, so perhaps Margo MacDonald should spend a few years gaining sinilar experience before bumping her gums.
13

Proud to have Scots blood,

New York 05/05/2008 12:47:47
Prostitution has been around for as long as there is money.......it will never die........it should be made legal, there ought to be an area for it to conduct
business & I don't mean in the middle of any town's square, medical exams a must and protection from STD
mandatory, & taxes paid....It's a start, other problems
would have to be ironed out & there would be problems............
14

SBW,

Edinburgh 05/05/2008 13:26:01
#12 Margo MacDonald is against the report, as is Ruth Morgan Thomas.
15

Venachar,

05/05/2008 13:28:28
#12 sinilar experience.... did you mean that.

Anyway chaps don't have a fag before or after the act or you really will be a criminal and be locked up for 30 years.

What if a woman pays for sex with another woman? Will she be put on the sex offenders register?

Lola Lo-Lo-Lo Lola, we're living in crazy *ucked up world, Lola Ray Davis got it spot on.

Do those numpties thing a bit of paper will solve anything - it ain't called the oldest profession for nothing. The best thing that could be done is to legalise the business that way Labour could raise lots more tax.
16

John Blackley,

Florida 05/05/2008 15:05:25
One function of a full-time government is to be seen to be constantly doing something. (AKA 'justifying their existence'). Sooner or later, full-time legislators run out of actual, necessary laws to draft and find it necessary to start legislating for public morality (it's good for election campaigns).

Legislating public morality, beyond a certain point, is equivalent to legislating against stupidity. Within certain parameters, it's a waste of resources and is pointless except to polish the politician's reputation. ("I'm for law and order and he/she isn't!")

By all means control the sex trade. Criminalise the importation of sex slaves and punish anyone who forces another into prostitution, assaults or kidnaps anyone and/or illegally takes money from a prostitute. Beyond that, it's only politicians' apple-polishing and another example of why no country needs full-time legislators.
17

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 05/05/2008 16:18:18
There seems to be a enormous amount of confusion over what seems a simple supply and demand situation. If you make the demand side illegal and don't really bother too much about the supply side (admittedly difficult I know) then as night follows day the "trade" will go underground and the supply "victims" (or should I say survivors) will no doubt find that they are subject to more violence. Marginal tolerance may be the answer with a robust approach to organised and overt crime associated with prostitution. Too many people trying to walk on eggs and be all PC about it.

 

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