| 20th July |
Charity Tits... |
|
| |
Model's donation to breast cancer charities turned down for fear of offending supporters
Permalink |
See
article
from
timesonline.co.uk
by Brenda Power
|
The
very suggestion that something, be it a mildly tasteless advert, a
nativity scene in a hospital foyer or a trenchant newspaper column,
might conceivably offend somebody is now enough to justify censorship of
legitimate expression. Worryingly, this now includes self-censorship.
Advertisers, companies, politicians, even charities must anticipate the
most extreme sensitivities or riskcondemnation, controversy or ruin.
Take, for example, the case of the topless model and the breast cancer
charities. Claire Tully is a beautiful, intelligent young woman who has
the distinction of being the first Irish girl to appear on The Sun
newspaper's iconic page 3 slot. She has been invited to take part in a
reality television programme that will raise funds for a charity of her
choice.
Because her mother and grandmother both suffered from breast cancer,
which means she is also at risk, she wanted to give her money to one of
the charities that provide support for patients and research.
She approached the Marie Keating Foundation and offered the proceeds of
her efforts, with a guaranteed minimum of ¤5,000. She was turned down. A
second breast cancer charity also said no. A third said yes, and then
rang her on Thursday evening to say they had changed their minds.
The chances are that if they had accepted this charity offer, the
Foundation and the other charities would have been criticised and
suffered a loss of support.
...Read
full article
from
timesonline.co.uk
|
| 31st March |
Pixellated Thinking... |
|
|
Censor indicted for not censoring enough
Permalink |
See
full article from X
Biz
|
Head
of the screening department of the Nihon Ethics of Video Association
(NEVA) Katsumi Ono was indicted last week on charges involving
failure to screen two DVDs that did not comply with obscenity
standards.
NEVA’s panel of scholars, former journalists and film experts
screens adult videos produced by 90 Japanese production companies to
determine if they comply with standards and regulations.
Ono was arrested, in the beginning of March, on suspicion of
assisting the sale of the explicit DVDs after approving the videos.
The movies, which were released in June 2006, were allegedly
approved for sale without proper screening for potentially obscene
content.
The two videos contained scenes showing genitalia which were
pixellated, but according to authorities, viewers could still make
out body parts.
Reportedly, three other men have also been indicted in the incident.
|
| 31st March |
Shameful Blemish... |
|
|
Report reveals Britain's shameful treatment of asylum seekers
Permalink |
See
full article
from the
BBC
|
The
UK's treatment of asylum seekers falls seriously below the standards
of a civilised society, a report says.
The Independent Asylum Commission, led by a ex-senior judge, said the
system denied sanctuary to some in need and failed to remove others who
should go.
It said the treatment of some asylum seekers was a shameful blemish on
the UK's international reputation.
It spent a year researching the report and spoke to former home
secretaries, policy makers and asylum seekers.
The commission was established after calls from community organisations
and charities for an authoritative examination of asylum after a decade
of political battles over immigration.
The report praised immigration officials for recent reforms to how they
manage asylum applications - but it warned that a culture of
disbelief was leading to perverse and unjust decisions.
The commissioners said policymakers were at times using "indefensible"
threats of destitution to try to force some asylum seekers to leave the
UK.
See
full article
from the Scotsman
Meanwhile
pressure is mounting on the UK Government to reverse its decision to
deport a gay Syrian teenager from Scotland to his homeland, where he
faces almost certain imprisonment and torture.
Scotland on Sunday revealed last week that 19-year-old Jojo Jako Yakob
was being held in Polmont Young Offenders' Institution awaiting
deportation, despite evidence he had been tortured almost to death in
Syria, where homosexuality is illegal.
Shirley-Anne Somerville, a Nationalist MSP for the Lothians, has lodged
a parliamentary motion in support of our campaign to let Yakob stay in
the country. It has already been supported by several MSPs.
Pete Wishart MP, the SNP's home affairs spokesman, has taken up the case
at Westminster and has vowed to make representations to the Home Office.
He said: After Mr Yakob's terrible ordeal in Syria, it is
unacceptable that the Home Office would consider sending him back. There
is a very real risk that he would suffer further ill treatment or even
possibly death. He has sought asylum in Scotland and I will make an
immediate representation to the Home Office in an effort to overturn
their ruling before his final hearing in May.
Yakob has appealed against the Home Office deportation order and has
instructed top Scottish QC Mungo Bovey to fight his case. Yakob will
appear before a full immigration hearing in Glasgow on May 7, when his
fate will be determined.
Jojo fled his homeland two years ago after surviving a harrowing ordeal
at the hands of Syrian police and prison guards, when he was arrested
for distributing anti-government leaflets. Following his transfer from
police interrogation, prison guards soon discovered that Jojo, a member
of the repressed Kurdish minority in the Arab state, was homosexual. He
then suffered horrific beatings and was assaulted so badly that he fell
into a coma.
|
| 30th March |
Alistair Darkling... |
|
|
UK minister for taxes barred from British pubs
Permalink |
See
full article
from
Google News
|
An
Internet campaign to ban Britain's treasury chief from the
country's pubs seems to be striking a chord.
Earlier this month, treasury chief Alistair Darling raised taxes
on cars and cigarettes.
But it is his new alcohol duties - which raised the price of a
pint of beer - that have Britons' backs up.
So when a pub landlord in Darling's home town of Edinburgh
barred the chancellor from his establishment, drinking holes
across the country followed suit.
Many are posting pictures of the white-haired, bespectacled
treasurer above the big red word "barred."
Bar manger Andrew Little at the Utopia pub, which kicked off the
campaign, says the poster is "tongue-in-cheek." But, he says, it
seems to have "touched a nerve."
Hundreds have joined Internet groups devoted to running Darling
out of every pub in the country, and establishments from the Tap
And Spile in the north England town of Lincoln to the Plough Inn
in Finstock, near Oxford, said Darling would not allowed to
partake of their booze.
The government has raised taxes on alcohol by 6% above the rate
of inflation, which translates to an extra 4p for a pint of
beer, 13p for a bottle of wine and 55p a bottle for spirits such
as whisky.
The duties are scheduled to rise by another 2% above inflation
in each of the next four years.
|
| 30th March |
Australia Shows the Way... |
|
|
Safety benefits of in a legalised sexual services industry
Permalink |
See
full article
from
The West
|
A
detailed manual overseeing the world's oldest profession is to be
introduced in Western Australia soon and will explain how to run a
brothel and the safest way to work as a prostitute.
The 50-page draft policy, titled Code of Practice: Occupational
Health and Safety in the Sexual Services Industry, will be completed
soon after long-awaited prostitution laws pass through Parliament,
expected to be early next month.
The code of practice, the first of its kind for WA's sex industry,
covers issues that prostitutes, brothels and escort workers encounter on
a regular basis, including regular health checks and safe sex practices.
The guidelines recommend prostitutes not be on duty for more than 12
hours, have three-monthly health checks for sexually transmitted
infections and be vaccinated against hepatitis A and B.
New sex workers should be given induction training on how to handle
difficult clients, how to refuse services, deal with workplace violence,
sexism and harassment, how to put on a condom properly and what to do if
a condom breaks during sex.
Unclean or faulty equipment such as spas and sex toys, condom breakage,
escort work to unknown or unsafe locations and unchanged linen are
identified as industry hazards.
Industry insiders have welcomed the imminent introduction of the code,
saying it is long overdue.
The draft code was developed last year by a group consisting of sex
workers, medical experts, local government and Health Department
representatives. Ms Forrester said the group would meet again soon after
the laws were passed to finalise the code.
|
| 29th March |
Waisting Away... |
|
|
Japan's fat police set maximum waistline at 85cm (34in)
Permalink |
See
full article from the
Independent
|
 |
|
Push kid...
I've got to get it into 34inches |
The sight of men sucking in their bellies to hide expanding waistlines
just got a lot more serious in Japan, where the government has
introduced mandatory "fat checks" for the over-40s.
Aimed at trimming bulging annual health costs of more than $3bn, the
Health Ministry says from next month 56 million people must start
keeping waistlines tucked in or be asked to change diet, see a doctor
and possibly pay higher insurance costs.
But critics say the plan for the potbelly police, which sets a waist
limit of 85cm (34in) for men and 90cm for women, will do more harm than
good. It's a comedy, Professor Yoichi Ogushi told The Japan
Times. If you follow the government's logic, you can do whatever you
want as long as you have a slim waist.
The fight-the-flab campaign has already claimed at least one victim.
Last year, a 74-year-old local government official in rural Mie
Prefecture collapsed while jogging in an effort to cut his 100cm waist.
He was in the government's weight-loss programme.
We have to bring medical costs down, said Toshi-yuki Sato, a
spokesman for the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, who denied the
plan would encourage crash-dieting and pill-popping. Dieting badly
will eventually cause medical costs to rise even more, so we hope the
metabolic tests will be properly supervised.
|
| 27th March |
Thumbs Down to Terminal 5... |
|
|
Fingerprint plans suspended on fears of illegality
Permalink |
See
full article from the
Telegraph
|
Plans
to fingerprint millions of passengers a year at Heathrow's new fifth
terminal have been put on hold hours before it opens for business.
BAA, the airport operator, took the decision after being warned by the
Government's Information Commissioner that the move could breach the
Data Protection Act.
It has left BAA is facing huge embarrassment at a time when it was
hoping that public attention would be fixed on the long-awaited £4.3
billion terminal when it handles its first passengers tomorrow.
The controversial scheme meant that, for the first time ever, travellers
would be fingerprinted before being allowed to board a plane. It would
have affected about four million domestic passengers a year who use the
terminal, which will become the British Airways base at the airport.
A BAA spokesman said that it will hold further talks with both the
Information Commissioner and the Border and Immigration Agency before
deciding its next move.
For the time being instead of leaving a fingerprint before passing
through security - which is verified at the departure gate - passengers
will be photographed.
Although BAA is keen to press ahead with the plans, no date has been
fixed for when it will be able to do so. The decision to fingerprint all
domestic passengers at the terminal was triggered by the demands for
heightened security by the Home Office. With domestic and international
passengers sharing the departure lounge at the terminal, it was feared
that this would make it possible to bypass border controls.
The scheme hit the buffers late last week when David Smith, the Deputy
Information Commissioner, questioned its necessity. He said
photographing – the option now being adopted – would be far less
intrusive.
Even the Home Office, which had put pressure on BAA to tighten security,
distanced itself from the move. This was despite officials previously
demanding some form of biometric tests in addition to photographs – and
having approved the fingerprint scheme during months of negotiations.
|
| 27th March |
Watching the TV Watching You... |
|
|
Cable TV company experiments with watching who's viewing
Permalink |
See
full article
from
New Tee Vee
|
At
the Digital Living Room conference, Gerard Kunkel, Comcast’s senior VP
of user experience, told me the cable company is experimenting with
different camera technologies built into devices so it can know who’s in
your living room.
The idea being that if you turn on your cable box, it recognizes you and
pulls up shows already in your profile or makes recommendations. If
parents are watching TV with their children, for example, parental
controls could appear to block certain content from appearing on the
screen. Kunkel also said this type of monitoring is the “holy grail”
because it could help serve up specifically tailored ads.
Kunkel said the system wouldn’t be based on facial recognition, so there
wouldn’t be a picture of you on file (we hope). Instead, it would
distinguish between different members of your household by recognizing
body forms. He stressed that the system is still in the experimental
phase, that there hasn’t been consumer testing, and that any rollout
“must add value” to the viewing experience beyond serving ads.
I can’t trust Comcast with BitTorrent, so why should I trust them with
my must-be-kept-secrets...
|
| 26th March |
Scotland Goes Sharia... |
|
|
Adults to face alcohol ban?
Permalink |
See
full article from the Scotsman
|
The
legal age for buying alcohol could be raised to 21 under proposals being
examined by the Scottish Government.
Ministers are considering raising the minimum age from 18.
Shona Robison, the public health minister, is due to present a number of
proposals later in the year. Robison yesterday said nothing had
yet been ruled in or out: The Scottish Government is currently in the
process of developing a long-term alcohol strategy and as part of this
we have been looking at a range of issues including availability,
accessibility and age of purchase.
People in Scotland are twice as likely to die from alcohol-related
deaths than elsewhere in the UK.
|
| 26th March |
Customary Abuse... |
|
|
You don't have any privacy rights at the border anyway, so what's the problem?
Permalink |
See
full article from
The Register
|
It
is clear that people traveling into and out of the US have a lower
expectation of privacy at the border. Perhaps more accurately, a
governmental search at the border is more likely to be considered
"reasonable."
The agents get to do things they can't do if, for example, they simply
stop you on the street. They can question you, they can rifle through
your unmentionables, and even examine documents you are bringing with
you. The agents can even disassemble your gas tank, looking for hidden
compartments that you could be using to smuggle things. In the Arnold
case, the government argued that its search authority at the border is
"plenary" or unrestricted, except that to do an invasive body cavity
search, it would have to have some kind of suspicion.
But searches of things? Well, they can do whatever they want it would
seem.
The customs agents' job is to protect the nation from "anything
harmful," to gather intelligence, prevent terrorism, and to enforce all
of the laws, including child pornography and copyright laws. The
computer is no different from any other "closed container" that the
agent may search. Just as the agent needs no probable cause to search
your underwear, they need no probable cause to rummage through your
laptop. And besides, they are doing it to protect the country and
enforce the laws and prevent terrorist attacks. You don't have any
privacy rights at the border anyway, so what's the problem?
...Read
full article
|
| 23rd March |
Licensing a Miserable Life... |
|
|
Labour look to more powers for councils to ban lap dancing
Permalink |
Based on an
article
from
The Argus
|
|
 |
|
If ever you
hear of British people
enjoying themselves,
let us know, and we will put a stop to it |
The politician in charge of Britain's licensing regime has announced
he will review legislation which has opened the door to a string of
fully nude lap-dancing clubs in Brighton and Hove.
Gerry Sutcliffe, the Minister responsible for licensing, told parliament
he was concerned about the situation in the city and promised to consult
with ministerial colleagues over a permanent change to the law.
He made the comments following a meeting with Hove MP Celia Barlow and
city councillor Gill Mitchell to discuss supposed problems with the
licensing act which has left nutters of Brighton and Hove City Council
virtually powerless to stop clubs opening.
He said: We continue to review what can be done. We have made the
right move in delegating the matter to local government, because it is
right that local councillors and local government have the right to
determine what goes on in their area. It is important that we look at
the planning process and its objectives, and I am particularly concerned
to hear that in Brighton, six lap-dancing clubs have been established in
a very short time.
That problem will start to spread throughout the country, so I
appreciate my honourable friend raising the matter. I will be happy to
meet colleagues again to consider what can be done to ensure that
[SOME!] local
people get what they want in their local area.
Since the new licensing regime was introduced in November 2005, six
clubs have been granted licenses for fully-nude dancing, although only
four currently put on lap-dancing. Until that point only two operated in
the city and nudity was not allowed.
Spearmint Rhino added to its international empire by opening the first
fully nude club on East Street last year. The licence was approved by
magistrates on appeal, overturning the council's initial rejection.
Magistrates ruled that police could not establish the link between strip
clubs and disorder and threw out the council's decision not to grant the
East Street venue a licence.
Ms Barlow and the mean minded David Lepper, MP for Brighton Pavilion,
both raised the supposed problem during a parliamentary debate on
Wednesday.
She said: I am extremely encouraged by the minister's announcement.
The current licensing act is wholly ineffective when it comes to
regulating lap dancing clubs. These clubs have sprung up in the hearts
of our communities, and I also welcome the announcement to contact local
authorities over what more can be done under the current law to prevent
these clubs from opening.
|
| 20th March |
Moral Turpitude... |
|
|
US invaders and torturers deny entry to British author on the grounds of immorality
Permalink |
See
full article from
Reuters
The book is available at
UK Amazon
|
Controversial
British author Sebastian Horsley was denied entrance into the United
States as he arrived to promote his memoir of drug addiction, sex and
his dysfunctional family, his publisher has said.
Seale Ballenger, spokesman for HarperCollins Publishers, said Horsley
was stopped by immigration officials at New York's Newark airport after
flying in from London to promote his latest book Dandy in the
Underworld.
He said the flamboyant writer was accused of "moral turpitude" in
connection with his former drug use, pro-prostitution stance, and
controversial self-crucifixion in the Philippines in 2000.
Horsley claims to have slept with more than 1,000 prostitutes, worked as
a male escort, and been in and out of rehab to treat drug addiction,
with video interviews of him talking about his drug use and sex life
posted on the Internet.
Ballenger said after several hours of questioning by immigration
officials, Horsley was put on a plane and returned to London.
The New York Times quoted a customs spokeswoman, Lucille Cirillo, saying
she could not comment on individual cases. But in an e-mail to the
newspaper she explained that under a waiver program that allows British
citizens to enter the United States without a visa, travellers who
have been convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude (which includes
controlled-substance violations) or admit to previously having a drug
addiction are not admissible.
Publisher Carrie Kania, from the HarperCollins' unit Harper Perennial
that published the book in the United States, said she found it hard to
understand why Horsley would be denied entrance into the U.S. for "his
notoriety."
Horsley's memoir was published last September in Britain with reviewers
calling it both amusing and revolting.
|
| 20th March |
State Oppression... |
|
|
Labour look well set to criminalise men for getting laid
Permalink |
Thanks to Donald
See the Solicitor General's
Prostitution Policy: New Directions
|
|
 |
|
If British men
persist in enjoying life...
we're gonna cut off their bollocks |
On the 7th March all the usual Fem Nazis got together in a
conference to finalise their plans to criminalise the purchase of
sex
It was a radical feminist only cast list with many of the usual
suspects:
- Vera Baird QC, MP, Solicitor General
- Professor Jalna Hanmer - Professor of Women’s Studies, University
of Sunderland Conference Chair
- Professor
Liz Kelly - Director of CWASU, Roddick Chair in Violence
Against Women
- Julie Bindel - POPPY Project Consultant and Guardian Journalist
- Marianne Eriksson - Swedish MEP
- Ann Hamilton - General Manager, Policy & Development, Glasgow
Community & Safety Services
- Professor
Roger Matthews - Professor of Criminology, London South Bank
University
- Hannah-Jo Besley - Community Safety Officer, Ipswich CDRP
The Government were represented by Solicitor General, Vera Baird and
she certainly spoke giving the impression that the criminalisation of
buying sex is a done deal. From her
presentation:
Tackling The Demand For Prostitution And
Trafficking For Sexual Exploitation
To understand the government’s developing approach to prostitution we
have to look, largely, through the prism of people trafficking. I don’t
call it developing because it is new, recently the Home Office held a
consultation under the direction of then Minister Fiona Mactaggart,
which produced “Paying the Price” – a forward policy document.
Since then we have decided to look again at some aspects only largely
because of the advent of trafficking and, for me, because of new
research from Liz Kelly and others causing a refocus onto the issue of
demand for prostitution.
...
Our measures on trafficking will be futile if
we do not tackle the demand for sexually exploited women and children.
Otherwise in reality once we have closed one trafficking network,
another may move in and take its place; once we have rescued one victim
another one is put in her place.
I know that some may argue that there is an element of choice, where
those that have worked in the sex industry in their home countries come
here to make more money. Though personally I have reservations about
accepting the concept of choosing to be a prostitute at all. No doubt
this may occur.
However let me be clear; for trafficked women there is no real informed
choice. How many of them have a realistic impression of the situation
they will end up in? How many are told just how many men they will have
to have sex with? Or that they will be sold from one exploiter to
another; moved around the country; be subject to never-ending debt
bondage or that they will be kept isolated and forced to live in squalid
conditions?
This cannot continue to happen. So what are we doing about it?
At the end of 2007 we announced a six month review to explore what more
we can do to tackle the demand for prostitution. The review began
earlier this year with a visit to Sweden and will include a review of
the approach taken by a range of other countries, including the
Netherlands.
On 10 January, I visited Sweden with Home Office Minister, Vernon Coaker,
and the Deputy Minister for Women and Equality, Barbara Follett, and a
small team of officials.
The trip was set up so we could talk to the Swedish authorities
specifically about their legislation which criminalises those who pay
for sexual services – including the debate in Sweden that led up to the
change in their legislation in 1999 and its implementation.
...
We are also intending to visit the Netherlands soon to meet with their
Ministers and law enforcement agencies. The Dutch legislation is in
direct contrast to Sweden - prostitution was legalised in the
Netherlands in 2000. Controlled “tolerance zones” have been set up away
from residential areas and there are licensed brothels.
However, it is increasingly clear that prostitution has not been
restricted to the policed areas and rendered safe but these arrangements
have, if anything, increased demand and there is a “twilight” sex
industry too. The Dutch Government has recently announced that they are
to review their legislation this year and we are very interested in
talking to the Dutch authorities about their experiences and the issues
they are facing.
As part of our Tackling Demand Review, we will research the legislation
in other jurisdictions, particularly those with contrasting approaches
to prostitution, including New Zealand. In New Zealand, the Prostitution
Reform Act 2003 decriminalised prostitution. The Act requires every
operator of a prostitution business to hold a certificate and removed
the requirement for massage parlours to be licensed. It is not illegal
for a person under the age of 18 to be a prostitute but it is illegal
for anyone to have sex with them.
...
So, as you can see, there is a diverse approach
to prostitution from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, and it is right that
on behalf of the public we consider these various approaches, and the
impact they have had, very carefully, so that we can learn from them and
use their experience to inform our own policy.
In particular, we are looking at how our current policy can be
strengthened to ensure we robustly tackle the demand for prostitution –
and this includes considering the impact that it will have on sex
trafficking.
We will consult with stakeholders as part of the review. We also intend
to conduct an audit of enforcement, prosecution, and sentencing
practice, and in particular we will be interested in identifying any
regional variations. We will also be looking at the options for using
existing legislation to tackle those who pay for sex.
...
As many of you will be aware the clauses concerned with prostitution in
the Criminal Justice and Immigration Bill have just been removed from
the Bill. They were firstly to end use of the term “common prostitute”
and secondly to introduce a sentence for someone convicted of
soliciting, which required her to attend three sessions with a
counsellor or crisis worker to seek to assist her to exit prostitution.
This is unfortunate but was necessary in order to help the passage of
the Bill through the House in the available Parliamentary time. However,
the removal of these clauses from the Bill in no way indicates a lack of
commitment from the Government to tackle prostitution.
As soon as parliamentary time allows, we will look to reintroduce the
legislative changes that have now been withdrawn, along with any new
proposals for legislative change we feel to be necessary following the
review into tackling demand.
...
I can see the argument that it is unpleasant to criminalise people we
see, generally, as victims. However, there is something to be said for
the leverage that retaining the offence can offer, in the context of
these policies and the availability of diversion and so I would suggest
that this is not entirely oppression by the state.
Further, we also have a responsibility to local communities and the
wider public, and I believe that decriminalising prostitution altogether
would send out the wrong message. It would imply that street
prostitution is acceptable and in doing so remove an important
safeguard.
So our overall aim must be to reduce street prostitution and all forms
of commercial sexual exploitation, including trafficking.
Tackling demand is one of the areas where we think we can have the
greatest impact. However, experience in Sweden appears to show that it
is not just legislation that can tackle the demand for prostitution. It
is also about challenging social attitudes and raising awareness about
the realities of prostitution and trafficking. And specifically it is
about changing the attitudes of men.
In the context of the review, we are considering a small scale targeted
marketing campaign to raise awareness among sex buyers about the levels
of exploitation in prostitution, including trafficking, violence, and
the involvement of people under 18. The aim will be better to understand
how to change attitudes towards buying sexual services.
By penalising those who organise prostitutes and make a living from
their earnings and by targeting those who are persistent kerb crawlers,
with the aim of preventing repeat offending, we are already deterring
those who create the demand for prostitution. The penalties being
applied in some parts of the country to persistent kerb crawlers include
disqualification from driving, kerb crawler re-education schemes and
fines, and the naming and shaming of those convicted in the local media.
We will be examining the effectiveness of these approaches, and seeking
to share “best practice”.
As part of the wider set of actions to tackle demand and trafficking, we
felt it was important to address the issue of small advertisements in
the back of newspapers which can fuel the demand for trafficked women.
In November, with other ministerial colleagues, I met with
representatives from the newspaper and advertising industry and
discussed with them how they could support our work to tackle the demand
side of the problem of human trafficking for sexual exploitation. As a
result, the Newspaper Society are updating their guidance to editors of
local papers, which can help them avoid accepting personal
advertisements which are, in effect, advertising this despicable trade
in women.
Work is also under way on call-barring schemes aimed at eradicating
prostitute carding. This will involve negotiations with the Mobile
Broadband Group, British Telecom and OFCOM.
...
Returning to demand, I want to stress the importance of ensuring we
drive home to the users and potential users of those exploited in the
sex industry the real consequences of their actions. If they are
knowingly buying sex from a trafficked woman, someone who they know has
been forced to do something against their will - they should be under no
illusions that they are committing rape.
And even if they do not know that the woman is trafficked, just by
paying for sex they are contributing to organised criminality and their
actions are keeping particularly vulnerable women trapped in
exploitation.
And, of course, the pursuit of an end to the evils of trafficking is
raising the issue whether in the 21st century a government, totally
committed to gender equality with all the concomitant mutual respect and
dignity that connotes, ought in any way to be permitting or sanctioning
women being bought and sold for sex.
We look forward to working with some of the people present at this
conference on our stakeholder group as we continue our review into
demand and it is cheering to see that this event on prostitution is a
sell out. I am sure that if we work together we can come to clear
conclusions and start to make a difference.
Comment:
Wimmin
Thanks to Alan, 21st March 2008
Interesting to see that Julie Bindel was among those consulted by the
government for the punter-bashing proposal. I have often been tempted to
think (hope?) that "Julie Bindel" was the invention of a comic genius,
since the column appearing in the Grauniad under that name was so
reminiscent of the lamented "Wimmin" column in Private Eye.
Her lack of self-awareness is extraordinary: she is happy to accept
the benefits of society's current positive attitude towards her own
lesbianism, but takes the attitude of a Victorian prude towards the
sexual peccadilloes of men.
|
| 19th March |
Safety Kerbed... |
|
|
More dangerous for working girls in Scotland
Permalink |
Thanks to Donald
From
SCOT-PEP
|
Since
the kerb-crawling legislation came in, nobody’s drug dependency or rent
arrears or benefit delays have magically cleared up overnight.
Women are still working on the streets, but with many of their regular
clients avoiding the scene for fear of legal repercussions, they are
seeing a greater proportion of unpleasant and violent clients, with a
rise in requests for sex without a condom and services at insultingly
low prices.
Some are resigned to being out all night, since business is slow, they
still need to make money, and in some cases they haven’t a hope of
meeting their curfews in homeless accommodation.
Clients want them to leave their traditional areas and meet them
elsewhere, so that the clients won’t be targeted by police; as a
consequence sex workers are working in greater isolation with a
significant threat to their personal safety.
|
| 19th March |
Chile Warms to the Dollar... |
|
|
Night club accepts US dollars at pre-slump rate
Permalink |
Thanks to Phil. Perhaps a good idea for any country currently suffering
a lack of US visitors
See
full article
from
Bloomberg
|
Bikini-clad
pole dancers, mini-skirted hostesses and a deal on foreign exchange
await customers at Passapoga, a Santiago nightclub, who pay with U.S.
dollars.
At banks and foreign-exchange bureaus, $1 fetches less than 430 pesos.
Passapoga pays 600 pesos.
This campaign has had considerable success, said Jaime Retamal
the club's manager: Customers come from all over, but a lot from the
U.S.
The dollar has lost a quarter of its value against the peso in the past
three years. Passapoga is discounting the exchange rate to discourage
Americans from cutting back on nightclub visits.
Drinks and exotic dances cost customers the same price in dollars as in
2004, when the demand for copper, Chile's biggest export, surged.
Passapoga's special exchange rate means a 14,000-peso drink with one of
the club's 50 hostesses costs $23, instead of $32 at the market rate.
Patricia Kart, a Passapoga hostess for 2 1/2 years, said workers agreed
to the plan even though it reduces their commissions. The promotion is
bringing in more customers, she said.
We have to take what the house gives us, and our job is to do what it
takes to make the clients happy, Kart, 28, said in a telephone
interview from the club: They are very content.
|
| 19th March |
Reeperbahn in Decline... |
|
|
Long established brothel to close in Hamburg
Permalink |
See
full article from the
Guardian
See
also background article from Spiegel
|
Internet
pornography, foreign prostitutes and a growing number of cheap dance
clubs have been blamed for the closure of the oldest brothel in one of
the world's most famous red-light districts.
Hotel Luxor, a family-run establishment set up in 1948 in the port-side
district of St Pauli, will shut next month, its owner, Waltraud Mehrer,
told the German press yesterday.
It's no longer possible to make much money from real sex here in St
Pauli, said Mehrer, who has run the business for 21 years. The
table-dance clubs are still in operation, but otherwise there's not much
business to be done here any more. I blame it on the rise of internet
porn, the popularity of call-girl services and the noisy discos and
dance clubs, she said.
Customers were no longer willing to pay high prices for sex, and an
influx of eastern European prostitutes had also caused prices to fall,
she said.
n the 1970s demand was so high that Hotel Luxor stayed open 24 hours a
day, seven days a week and employed 12 prostitutes. Now it has four
prostitutes and is open four nights a week.
|
| 18th March |
Fun in the Park... |
|
|
Amsterdam to allow public sex in Vondelpark
Permalink |
See
full article from the
Telegraph
|
Dutch
council officials will permit gay sex in public areas but fine dog
owners who let their pets off the leash in Amsterdam's Vondelpark.
Paul van Grieken, an Alderman in the Oud-Zuid district of the city, has
startled many Amsterdammers, despite their famously liberal attitudes,
with plans to allow public sex as part of this summer's new rules of
conduct for the country's best-known park.
Why should we try to impose something that is actually impossible to
impose, which also causes little bother for others and for a certain
group actually means much pleasure?, he said.
The park's rose garden has become famous as a trysting spot for gay men
looking for uncomplicated sexual encounters. Mr van Grieken stresses
that tolerance to "cruising" gays, aimed at protecting homosexuals from
violence, will have "strict rules attached".
Thus, condoms must always be cleared away, it must never take place
in the neighbourhood of children's playgrounds and the sex must be
restricted to the evening and night-time, he said.
The new park rules have the blessing of the Dutch police, who have urged
all Dutch parks to follow Amsterdam's lead.
|
| 17th March |
Glasgow Council... |
|
|
Ensuring that Scots who enjoy life are securely imprisoned
Permalink |
Based on an article from
Evening Times
|
Glasgow
city leaders want Scotland to introduce some of the world's strictest
prostitution laws. Council nutters have launched a campaign urging the
Scottish Government to turn the spotlight on punters by introducing
legislation banning the "purchase of sex".
Street prostitution is already illegal and new laws introduced last year
targeted men by making kerb crawling and loitering for prostitution a
crime. But Glasgow City Council says brothels are still not adequately
covered by legislation as it's not illegal to visit a prostitute and pay
for sex.
Deputy council leader Jim Coleman says the solution is to bring in an
across-the-board ban on paying for sex. A similar system has been in
place in Sweden since 1999 and is said to have led to huge falls in
prostitution. This approach has also now being adopted by neighbouring
Norway.
A delegation of Swedish law enforcement officials visited Glasgow to
explain how similarly nasty legislation might work here. They met with
nutter Coleman and officials and volunteers who work in support services
for prostitution, trafficking and addiction.
Coleman says the council will now try to pull in support from as many
different bodies as possible and lobby the Scottish Government. He said:
A new law would send a clear message to men that it is wrong to buy
sex. It would also directly target brothels.
Coleman said the laws which came into force last October and outlawed
kerb crawlers, was a step in the right direction: For the first time
we have a law that targets the men who fuel the demand for prostitution.
There can be no question that prostitution is exploitative and abusive
of the women involved
|
| 16th March |
Thrown Off a Plane... |
|
|
Cabin crews re-branding themselves as cabin screws?
Permalink |
See
full article
from the
Times
|
Do
you mind answering a few questions? Splendid. Are you dressed
revealingly? Is there a large toy crocodile in your hand luggage? While
on this flight, do you intend to read pornography, emit offensive body
odour or perhaps sing a topical football-based ditty?
If so, the chances are you’re going to get slung off. All the above
offences have recently resulted in passengers being escorted from the
plane by stony-faced airport-security bods. In fact, over the past few
years, cabin crew have taken to turfing us out of planes in
unprecedented numbers.
Only a few days ago, the otherwise blameless Dr Paolo Tomasi from London
was unceremoniously dumped off a Ryanair flight for the heinous crime of
talking to his eight-year-old son during the safety briefing.
Here is our guide to involuntary deplaning, all based on real and recent
episodes.
- SING ABOUT FOOTBALLERS’ UNDERWEAR
After a fine win over Cardiff last year, fans of Sunderland AFC
boarded an EasyJet flight in buoyant mood and sang the praises of
their chairman in time-honoured terrace fashion. In case you’re not a
regular at the Stadium of Light, the lyrics, to the tune of ’Ere We
Go, ’Ere We Go, ’Ere We Go, are as follows: “Niall Quinn’s disco pants
are the best.
They go up from his arse to his chest. They’re better than Adam and
the Ants, Niall Quinn’s disco pants.” EasyJet staff, unused to
Wearside poetry, called the police and had all 100 fans thrown off.
Quinn himself shelled out £8,000 for taxis to get them home.
- PAY INSUFFICIENT ATTENTION TO PERSONAL HYGIENE
A German man was chucked off a plane in Honolulu in 2006 for being
excessively whiffy. After two hours’ chasing around a hot airport with
heavy luggage, he took his seat, only to be asked to leave it when
fellow passengers complained. He tried to sue the airline in a
Düsseldorf court, and lost.
- BLOCK THE EMERGENCY EXIT WITH A HUGE STUFFED CROCODILE
Last November, a woman on a Ryanair flight from Rome to Milan refused
to move her metre-long cuddly toy crocodile, which the crew said was
blocking the emergency exit. Both were removed.
- WEAR THE WRONG CLOTHES
American Lorrie Heasley took her seat sporting a T-shirt that featured
pictures of George Bush and friends, with a slogan based on the hit
film Meet the Fockers – but with one crucial vowel altered. Airline
staff were not amused, and she was dumped halfway through her journey
at Reno, Nevada.
- DON’T WEAR ENOUGH CLOTHES
That was the crime of Kyla Ebbert, a 23-year-old waitress at the
subtly named Hooters chain of restaurants. She was removed from a
Southwest Airlines plane in San Diego for being dressed too
provocatively, in micro miniskirt and tight T-shirt – though she was
let back on when she rearranged them to cover as much as possible. (It
took a while. She’s a big girl.) “I was embarrassed and humiliated,”
she said. To regain her dignity, she took everything off again for
Playboy.
- ATTEMPT SEX
A flight made an unplanned landing last November to eject a couple who
were intent on joining the mile-high club. After “fooling around” in
front of other passengers in their economy seats, the pair made for
the lavatories. Instead of ending up in Las Vegas, as planned, they
were dumped in Portland, Oregon. It is not known whether their love
was consummated.
- SAY ‘BYE-BYE, PLANE’
Last July, 19-month-old Garren Penland – who’d just endured an 11-hour
delay at Houston airport – said those words repeatedly (as children
will) during the safety briefing on a Continental flight. “The flight
attendant said, ‘Okay, it’s not funny any more. You need to shut your
baby up,’ ” claimed his mum, Kate. Unfazed, Garren kept going, and
mother and son soon ended up on the tarmac.
- READ PORN
In 2005, South African carrier Nationwide Airlines called a taxiing
flight back to the terminal to eject AC Hoffman, a Cape Town
businessman. He’d been perusing Loslyf, a local publication of
liberated bent. “The air hostess snatched it off me, I told her she
was f ***in’ rude, and they chucked me off,” he said. “This will not
be the end of the matter. My hand luggage has not even been returned.”
We think he meant the periodical. The airline’s chief executive,
Vernon Bricknell, commented helpfully: “If you want to look at this
kind of stuff, go and do so in the toilet.”
|
| 12th March |
Britishness is... |
|
|
Destroying liberty, banning fun, then expecting people to pledge allegiance to Britain
Permalink |
Me?...I'm out of here
Based on an article from the
Telegraph
See also
Citizenship: a British farce
from the
Times
|
 |
|
Britishness
is...
Emigrating to somewhere
better |
Young people leaving school would take part in ceremonies to mark their
move from students of citizenship to active citizenship, says a
Government review by Lord Goldsmith.
The former attorney general said the events would involve swearing an
oath either to the Queen as head of state, or to the nation: The
ceremony should be seen as a key stage in engaging a young person in the
life of the community and the responsibilities of citizenship.
As an incentive to making this transition, students would be encouraged
to join a National Citizens' Corps and take part in civil activity.
There is also a suggestion to add an additional public holiday to
celebrate Britishness.
Although the United Kingdom's constituent nations each has a saint's
day, only St Patrick's Day (March 17) is a public holiday, in Northern
Ireland.
But Lord Goldsmith does not want a date laden with historical
significance. His preferred model is Australia Day, which is used to
celebrate what it means to be an Australian, the achievements of the
country and…to identify the improvements that can be made.
|
| 11th March |
Come in No 9, Your Time is Up... |
|
|
Even state governors just want to get laid
Permalink |
See
full article
from the
Times
|
Eliot
Spitzer, the crusading New York Governor often tipped as a future
American president, suffered a spectacular fall from grace yesterday
when he was implicated in a prostitution ring.
Mr Spitzer, whose eight years as New York State’s Attorney-General
earned him a reputation as “the sheriff of Wall Street”, reportedly told
senior aides that he was a client of an international escort service
that charged up to $5,500 (£2,750) an hour. Court papers hinted at risky
sexual practices. He cancelled all his public appearances and met
officials in his Fifth Avenue apartment before making a public apology
to his family and the public.
I have acted in a way that violates my obligations to my family and
in a way that violates my or any sense of right and wrong, he said,
with his wife Silda at his side. I apologise first and most
importantly to my family. I apologise to the public, whom I have
promised better. I am disappointed I have not lived up to the standards
I have set for myself.
He did not immediately step down, but said that he needed to dedicate
some time to regaining the trust of his family.
A source told The New York Times that Spitzer was one of the men
identified in court papers as a client of the prostitution ring. Court
papers say that the man identified as Client 9 had arranged to meet a
prostitute in Washington on the night of February 13. An affidavit lists
six conversations between Client 9 and a booking agent for the Emperors
Club.
Client 9 was captured by a telephone tap setting up an appointment with
a prostitute called “Kristen”, who travelled by train from New York to
Washington to meet him.
In 2004 Spitzer voiced revulsion as he announced the arrests of 16
people for running a prostitution ring out of Staten Island.
See
full article
from Game Politics
Update:
Resigned
13th March 2008
Eliot Spitzer, confirmed what had seemed all but inevitable since the
news exploded of his illicit dalliances with high-price prostitutes: he
is resigning his post and leaving politics.
I am deeply sorry that I did not live up to what was expected of me.
To every New Yorker and to all those who believed in what I tried to
stand for, I deeply apologise, he said in a brief statement. He
added: The remorse I feel will always be with me... For those to whom
much is given, much is expected.
|
| 11th March |
Environmental Impact... |
|
|
UK bans all fun and then whinges when people travel abroad to get laid
Permalink |
I wonder if it is the Government's 'Environmental Impact Report' that
when people are not allowed to pay for sex in the UK, that many will
simply travel abroad for fun.
See
full article from the
Independent
|
Holidaymakers
are ignoring environmentalists' calls to limit their air travel and are
taking more "indulgent" long-haul mini-breaks than ever before.
Despite recommendations that they holiday closer to home, the number of
Britons flying thousands of miles to spend less than a week in far-flung
destinations was 3.7 million last year, according to a survey by
Halifax.
The travel insurer is predicting that the number of what it has dubbed
"breakneck breaks" will increase by more than a third this year, and
expects 4.9 million British tourists to travel in 2008 to destinations
including Thailand, Hong Kong, New York, and Rio de Janeiro for just a
few days.
The Far East was the second-most popular destination, followed by the
Indian subcontinent. Biggest takers of breakneck breaks last year were
those living in South-east England, while those in Wales and South-west
England were least likely to go off on such a trip.
However, Friends of the Earth was quick to criticise what it believes is
an "indulgent" trend. Its aviation campaigner, Richard Dyer, said:
These kinds of habits are going in exactly the wrong direction from what
we need.
Exotic locations for stag and hen parties were cited as one factor for
increasing travel.
|
| 10th March |
Sexual Chemistry... |
|
|
Swedish chemists to sell sex toys
Permalink |
See
full article from Fox News
|
Sweden's
state-owned pharmacy chain Apoteket said it plans to help satisfy Swedes
by adding sex toys to its shelves.
The one-year sales trial will start in June at 50 selected Apoteket
stores around the country. It was not clear what type of products would
be available.
Apoteket said customer surveys had showed that many Swedes found
Apoteket a natural vendor for sex-related products. We want to
de-dramatize the use of sex help tools, and help people to a better sex
life, with or without a partner, Apoteket spokeswoman Eva Fernvall
said in a statement.
The selection of sex toys has been developed in cooperation with the
Swedish Association for Sexuality Education.
|
| 10th March |
Thumbs Down... |
|
|
Heathrow to fingerprint domestic travellers for little apparent reason
Permalink |
See
full article from the
Telegraph
|
Millions
of British airline passengers face mandatory fingerprinting before being
allowed to board domestic flights when Heathrow’s Terminal 5 opens later
this month. For the first time at any airport, the biometric checks will
apply to all domestic passengers leaving the terminal, which will handle
all British Airways flights to and from Heathrow.
The controversial security measure is also set to be introduced at
Gatwick, Manchester and Heathrow’s Terminal 1, and many airline industry
insiders believe fingerprinting could become universal at all UK
airports within a few years.
All four million domestic passengers who will pass through Terminal 5
annually after it opens on March 27 will have four fingerprints taken,
as well as being photographed, when they check in.
To ensure the passenger boarding the aircraft is the same person, the
fingerprinting process will be repeated just before they board the
aircraft and the photograph will be compared with their face.
BAA, the company which owns Heathrow, insists the biometric information
will be destroyed after 24 hours and will not be passed on to the
police. It says the move is necessary to prevent criminals, terrorists
and illegal immigrants trying to bypass border controls. The company
said the move had been necessitated by the design of Terminal 5, where
international and domestic passengers share the same lounges and public
areas after they have checked in.
Without the biometric checks, the company says, potential criminals and
illegal immigrants arriving on international flights or in transit to
another country could bypass border controls by swapping boarding passes
with a domestic passenger who has already checked in.
They could then board the domestic flight, where proof of identity is
not currently required, fly on to another UK airport and leave without
having to go through passport control.
Most other airports avoid the problem by keeping international and
domestic passengers separate at all times, but the mixed lounges exist
at Gatwick, Manchester and Heathrow’s Terminal 1.
Civil liberties campaigners have raised concerns about the possibility
of security agencies trying to access the treasure trove of personal
data in the future.
There are also fears that fingerprinting will add to the infamous
"Heathrow hassle" which has led to some business travellers holding
meetings in other countries because they want to avoid the sprawling,
scruffy airport at any cost.
Dr Gus Hosein, of the London School of Economics, an expert on the
impact on technology on civil liberties, is one of the scheme’s
strongest critics. He said: There is no other country in the world
that requires passengers travelling on internal flights to be
fingerprinted. BAA says the fingerprint data will be destroyed, but the
records of who has travelled within the country will not be, and it will
provide a rich source of data for the police and intelligence agencies.
Simon Davies, of campaign group Privacy International, suggested the
photograph alone would be a perfectly adequate - and much cheaper - way
of identifying passengers.
|
| 9th March |
Blue Laws... |
|
|
Massachusetts to repeal blasphemy laws
Permalink |
Based on an article
from
Boston.com
|
Massachusetts
residents could spit on the sidewalk, give a tattoo, even commit
blasphemy or adultery without fear of a fine or jail time under a bill
being considered.
The bill would repeal nearly two dozen so-called "blue laws", laws that
often deal with moral or religious issues. The laws are often considered
outdated or even unconstitutional, but have remained on the books.
One of the laws mandates a $300 fine or year in jail for anyone who
wilfully blasphemes the holy name of God by denying, cursing or
contumeliously reproaching God, his creation, government or final
judging of the world.
Another sets a $20 fine for spitting. And even though tattooing is now
legal in Massachusetts, there's still a law on the books mandating a
$300 fine for anyone giving a tattoo who's not a doctor.
The bill also would eliminate laws declaring the Communist Party a
subversive organization, making adultery a criminal offense punishable
by three years in jail or a $500 fine, and barring anyone from acting
in a suspicious manner around any steamboat landing, railroad depot, or
any electric railway station.
The bill's sponsor, state Representative Byron Rushing, said there's
more than just legal house-cleaning behind the legislation: There was
a feeling that we shouldn't have laws that we never use. And there were
a few laws that could be used and shouldn't.
Kris Mineau, a nutter of the Massachusetts Family Institute, said his
group opposes removing the laws banning adultery and fornication, saying
it sends the wrong message: If we remove these laws we are telling
young people that adultery and fornication are acceptable.
|
| 9th March |
Promoting Extreme Liberalisation... |
|
|
Philippines authorities raid sex gadget shop
Permalink |
Based on an article
from
Visayan Daily Star
|
Four
days after a sex gadget shop that promised “guaranteed satisfaction”
opened at a new Bacolod City mall, Philippines authorities raided the
establishment.
Vibrators, condoms, sex dolls, and other paraphernalia were seized by
police and City Legal Office personnel.
Police commander, Senior Inspector Luisito Acebuche, said they
coordinated with the CLO to stop the sale of the sex gadgets after
receiving complaints.
The police bought a gadget for P500 from Luigi Tan before they moved in
and confiscated the shop’s merchandise, Acebuche said.
The display and sale of the sex gadgets are in violation of the Article
201 of the Revised Penal Code, prohibiting the show, sale, and
distribution of pornographic materials, Acebuche said. Penalty for the
offense ranges from a prison term of six years or a fine of P6,000 to
P12,000, or both, he added.
Lawyer Vicente Petierre of the CLO said that aside from violating
national laws, the shop was also operating without the necessary permits
from the city’s permits and licensing division. Petierre said the mall
management could not be held liable for the offense because it did not
know of the actual products that the shop owners would sell when they
rented them space since they did not declare them in their application.
Father Aniceto Buenafe, head of the Social Action Center of the Diocese
of Bacolod, said business proprietors must be sensitive enough
and respect the highly conservative and religious culture of most
Filipinos.
Such commercial ventures promote extreme liberalization and they
could send the wrong message to consumers, especially the youth, and
contribute to moral degradation, he spouted.
Buenafe also called on parents to inculcate the right and correct
moral values in their children.
|
| 9th March |
Touched by Repression... |
|
|
Ludicrous fine for a sexy lap dance in Blackpool
Permalink |
Based on an article
from Blackpool Gazette
|
A
Blackpool lap-dancing club has been fined £14,000 after admitting
breaching its licence by allowing supposedly indecent acts between
performers.
One dancer who performed at Wildcats on Clifton Street told a police
officer that there were "no limits" to what went on.
Blackpool Magistrates Court was told that when police visited the club
they saw extensive physical touching between two female dancers, one of
whom they later talked to.
Vicki Cartmell, prosecuting on behalf of Blackpool Council, said the
dancer told an officer: No, there are no limits about what we can do,
we can do what we want.
The club's owner Provocative Leisure of King Street, Leeds, admitted the
offence. It was fined £14,000 and ordered to pay £415 costs.
Solicitor Tracy Langfield said: The club faces the suspension of its
licence for four weeks and that could lose £40,000 in revenue and affect
the jobs of 40 dancers and 13 door and bar staff. This club has a new
manager and the police and council say there are no problems now.
A council licensing panel suspended the venue's licence for four weeks
last month but it has appealed meaning it can remain open until the
appeal is decided.
|
| 8th March |
Light Touch Policing?... |
|
|
Man arrested for simulating sex with a lamp-post
Permalink |
See
full article from the
Telegraph
|
A
32-year-old man has been arrested in Wiltshire for allegedly simulating
a sex act with a lamp-post.
A police spokesman said officers were called to a road in the town of
Westbury on February 16 after they received a report of a man acting
indecently outside a block of flats "occupied by several young women".
When they arrived they arrested him on suspicion of outraging public
decency.
The man was released on bail, but following an investigation into the
incident and several interviews with witnesses - including children - he
was recalled for questioning. He has since been re-released pending
further inquiries.
The Wiltshire police spokesman said: We are awaiting a decision as to
whether there should be a prosecution.
Comment:
Social Engineering?
Thanks to Steve
Note that the Boys in Blue questioned children about the event, no doubt
concerned that the lamppost may have been under 16 years old.
I seem to have missed the sex with a Henry Hoover vacuum cleaner
incident also mentioned in the article. This is probably a result of the
government policy to stop people using prostitutes. Perhaps regular sex
with domestic appliances will soon become the norm for men.
They are putting something in the bread, and it isn't folic acid.
|
| 8th March |
Advertising the Mean Minded... |
|
|
Israeli proposal to ban all forms of advertising for prostitution
Permalink |
See
full article
from Jerusalem Post
|
Meretz
MK Zehava Gal-On is set to unveil legislation that will potentially ban
all media - including promotional pamphlets and "business cards" - from
advertising prostitution services and providing possible clients with
access to the sex industry.
Gal-On's introduction of the bill coincides with International Women's
Day on March 8th.
The current law [on prostitution] gives legitimization to the
advertising of sex clubs and prostitution in all variety of media,
commented Gal-On, who heads the Knesset subcommittee on Trafficking in
Women. Her bill has the backing of more than 20 other lawmakers from
across the political spectrum: Such promotion in newspapers or with
pamphlets and business cards are an inseparable part of the trafficking
in women chain.
She continued: Allowing potential clients to receive information
about the sex industry only increases women's suffering and generates
millions of shekels a year for criminals.
Drafted by the Hotline for Migrant Workers legal adviser Nomi Levenkron,
the legislation is intended to widen the existing scope of punishment
for those who advertise and promote prostitution; increase jail time
from six months to three years for those fo |