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Sex workers attack Scottish government for ‘harmful moralistic view’ towards prostitution

Prostitutes warn plan to criminalise buying sex could put them in danger

Katrine Bussey
Thursday 03 December 2020 17:16 GMT
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Holyrood is consulting on whether it should criminalise the buying of sex
Holyrood is consulting on whether it should criminalise the buying of sex (PA)

Sex workers have accused the Scottish government of adopting an “outdated ideology” and a “harmful moralistic view” in its approach to prostitution.

Umbrella Lane, a group which supports about 150 sex workers across Scotland, said its members opposed any move to criminalise the buying of sex, warning this could pressure them into seeing “dangerous clients”.

It comes after two women who describe themselves as “survivors of prostitution” addressed Holyrood's Cross-party Group on Sexual Exploitation, calling for buying sex to be made an offence.

But Anastacia Ryan, the founder of Umbrella Lane and a lecturer on sex work and drugs policies, said ministers need to instead “prioritise safety, health and harm reduction”.

She added: “Despite leading the way on progressive measures in other areas of women's rights, the government agenda on prostitution is driven by an outdated ideology and a harmful moralistic view that fails to reflect the realities of sex workers' lives and associated needs from services.

“We have an opportunity in Scotland to create policy and laws in this area that prioritise safety, health and harm reduction, showing sex workers that their lives matter.

“This begins by placing the voices of sex workers at the heart of this consultation and all future policy agendas on prostitution.”

The Scottish government is consulting on whether its approach to tackling prostitution is sufficient to prevent violence against women and girls.

Kate, a sex worker from Glasgow, said the consultation is “pushing a different agenda, one more towards criminalisation”.

She insisted: “It should always be a women's choice what they do with their own body and how to earn a living. Criminalising us will not stop us having to work, it will only make it more dangerous.”

Paul, a gay male sex worker from Edinburgh, added: “If this passes I worry that the pool of good clients will decrease and workers like myself will have to take on clients we would normally never consider.”

Claire, a sex worker from Glasgow, said: “The government's attitude towards sex workers is really unhelpful, treating us all as victims and promoting a support to exit approach amongst support services discourages us to want to access those services.

“I've been in the industry almost six years now, I am choosing to do this job, and I'm not looking for support to exit. I'm looking for the government to help make my work safer, to support a harm reduction approach.

“I'd love to be able to work with a friend for safety, but under current laws, this is illegal.”

Countries such as Sweden, France, Norway, Ireland, Iceland and Israel have already criminalised paying for sex in a bid to reduce demand for prostitution.

But Claire said: “The consultation to end demand only serves to further stigmatise workers and if the Nordic model passes, it would make our work more dangerous.

“It would put workers in situations where they feel pressured into seeing dangerous clients or providing services they're not comfortable with.”

PA Scotland

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