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6 Jul, 2018 13:43

Sex workers protest proposed prostitution websites’ ban (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

Sex workers protest proposed prostitution websites’ ban (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

Scores of British sex workers and rights activists have staged a protest outside Parliament against what they say is a “Trump-inspired law” as the MPs debated a new proposal calling to ban sex worker’s advertising platforms.

The demonstration, held by sex workers’ rights organizations the ECP (English Collective of Prostitutes), SWARM (the Sex Worker Advocacy and Resistance Movement), and migrant sex worker organization X:talk, was held in Parliament Square on Wednesday. The participants demanded to decriminalize sex work instead of adopting new law that bans prostitution advertising websites.

The measure on tackling the demand for commercial sexual exploitation was debated by British lawmakers on the same day, with Labour politician and MP for Rotherham Sarah Champion leading the discussion. Lawmakers insist that sex work advertising platforms, and Vivastreet or Adultwork in particular, contribute to sexual exploitation.

Champion argues that “prostitution is a form of violence against women and girls” and calls to extend the Nordic Model or Sex Buyer Law to the whole UK territory. The approach aims to make paying people for sex a criminal offence and was already adopted in Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Northern Ireland, Canada, France, and Ireland.

READ MORE: 'Pop-up' brothels report argues for Nordic model to curb trade

However, the critics of the proposal argue that criminalization of the sex industry would only jeopardize them and “empower exploiters” and make“it much harder for sex workers to survive.” At the same time activists stressed that the proposal is simply mirroring US President Donald Trump’s Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act (SESTA) and Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA) designed to fight sex trafficking by reducing legal protections for online platforms.

“These proposals would make it more difficult for sex workers to screen clients, and share information about dangerous clients among themselves, or to connect with each other for support,” the ECP statement read

The lawmaker’s debate came shortly after a cross-part parliamentary group issued report titled 'Behind Closed Doors'. It revealed that classified sites such as Vivastreet and AdultWork are used by traffickers to control the profiles of sex workers and generally enable sexual exploitation in the UK.

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