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Sex in saunas: 'Street girls have been driven into less safe areas'

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Published Date: 03 November 2008
Evening News Comment
THE campaign to amend the Sexual Offences Scotland Bill to include a clause making it illegal to pay for sex is well intended, but on closer examination misguided.
While it may reek of double standards that a blind eye is effectively turned to those who seek sex in saunas, while kerb crawlers are prosecuted, such a move threatens to drive underground what is a relatively well-controlled sector of the sex trade
.

Introducing Draconian laws to curb the supply and use of drugs has done nothing to stem the flow. In fact, Class A drugs like cocaine and heroin are more readily available today than ever despite record seizures and high-profile police operations against dealers.

And the industry is controlled by ever-more vicious criminals who make vast profits out of human misery.

Through areas like human trafficking, criminal elements are already involved in the seedier side of the sex industry, but by and large in Scotland few are forced into the industry by anything other than the need to earn a living.

It may be unsavoury to most but is it not better to at least let them ply their trade behind closed doors in saunas where both the girls and customers can engage in relative safety, rather than driving both out of sight?

There is no evidence that the introduction of the kerb-crawling laws has done anything to curb the trade in Edinburgh. While 30 men have been arrested in the past year, it has merely driven girls from their traditional haunts into less safe areas and into flats.

It would be naive to think these figures give a true reflection of the level of activity which still goes on and those caught surely only represent the tip of what is still a sizeable iceberg.

Since the kerb-crawling law was introduced last year, the mobile phone rather than the car has become the point of contact and the absence of a safety-in-numbers strategy has led to an increase in violence against the girls.

Since the trade was driven into the shadows, attacks reported to Scotpep have almost doubled from 66 in June 2006 to 126 last year. There have been 55 assaults and 17 rapes and sexual assaults.

Prostitution is accorded the accolade of being the world's oldest profession. It has always been part of society and always will be. For as long as there are customers willing to pay for sex, the girls will be in business. Any attempt to pass a law making it illegal to pay for sex, however well intentioned, would only create more problems than it could ever be expected to solve.





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  • Last Updated: 03 November 2008 9:49 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Edinburgh's sex industry
 
1

AbandonAllHope,

03/11/2008 13:38:45
There is trade in Edinburgh purely because it is known a sex tourist destination,the vast majority of sex workers are foreign. Legalising it will not help the junkie, it will however play with your conscience that you ,indirectly as a tax payer, are a pimp along with the state.
2

James (1),

03/11/2008 14:33:46
Amsterdam has legalised it and STILL has a pimp and drug problem.
Why would Edinburgh be any different?
Just wanting to experiment is not helping these women.
Stop treating these women as victims? They have a choice and there is ample help for them to get away from it. Ask the chocolate fireguard self interest group Scotpep. They will help them but only if the person wants to be helped.
3

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 03/11/2008 17:05:30
Draconian laws and rod-of-iron enforcement do NOT work. They create more problems than they solve---even assuming they actually solve the problem they are designed to address.

Are the law makers really to blind to see what the effects of 10 years of increasingly restrictive laws, and increasingly strict enforcement have actually brought us? They certainly haven't brought us solutions to problems, that's for certain.

Over-zealous enforcement of pub age limits has given us kids drinking in parks. Turning the speed limit laws into a collective cash cow has resulted in more drivers failing to think and a general decline in driver skill. Endless "clamp-downs" on drugs have worsened the problem.

Prostitution is the oldest trade in the world. It will NEVER be eradicated no matter how hard the fascists try. If countries some of the most opressive regimes in the world suffer from prostitution, do the powers that be here actually believe that they are going to put a stop to it? If so, they are mad.

It is about time that we backed off on the draconian laws. If we did that, a lot of these problems would slowly dissappear.
4

Logie Almond,

03/11/2008 20:43:06
The Evening News's opposition to this proposal wouldn't have anything to do with the fact that the paper has a nice little earner in the classified advertising revenue it gets from saunas now, would it?
5

punterpride,

uk 04/11/2008 19:05:00
what happens between consenting adults in private where money is exchanged is no business of govt,those moralising bigots must have such cushy,confortable lifestyles if all their worried about is people having sex.
6

Lucy H,

07/11/2008 15:55:27
One thing that many people seem to forget is that legislation has a further aim: to communicate society's will, attitude, opinion to those who would seek to go against the grain.

We can see several examples of legislation leading public opinion. I would argue that drink driving and domestic violence are areas in which legislation and government policy have lead the way. Admittedly, people might argue that drink driving and domestic violence will NEVER be eradicated. Does that mean they should still be legal?!

Until the 1990s it was legal for a man to rape his wife - was it wrong to change that law simply because some men will ALWAYS choose to rape their wives? I would say no, it was correct to make marital rape, drink driving and domestic violence illegal because they are undesirable in our society and legislation helps to prevent them and to influence public opinion (albeit slowly).

For the same reason I would also say we should make the purchase of sexual services illegal - I find it impossible to justify, and therefore would wish legislation to reflect my opinion and influence others. If people disagree they should vote for parties/politicians who reflect their own opinions.
7

blackley,

Edinburgh 10/11/2008 11:29:43
What a disgusting bunch!

 

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