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Nurses vote for licensed brothels to protect sex workers

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Published Date: 14 May 2009
PROSTITUTES should be allowed to work in mini-brothels to help protect them from violence, nurses said yesterday.
Such a move would see up to four prostitutes being allowed to work together without fear of prosecution, they claimed

The Home Office backed such a plan in 2006 but it was dropped after opposition from local communities, who feared it would lead t
o more brothels springing up.

The Home Office also found little evidence that such brothels would be safe.

Yesterday, nurses at the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) conference in Harrogate voted by 93 per cent to 7 per cent in favour of allowing such mini-brothels.

On Monday, The Scotsman revealed that nurses wanted local authorities to license brothels in efforts to improve safety.

Introducing the motion, Carol Watts, a nurse from Cambridgeshire, said other countries, including New Zealand, had successful schemes.

She said: "This is not a debate about whether prostitution is right or wrong – it is about whether this legislation will protect sex workers.

"The simple truth is there will always be people who want to pay for sex without commitment, and there will always be women who will do it.

"We should acknowledge that this is part of life and make sure that there are no marginalised women in this country.

"Allowing these workers to have the same standards of safety as others in the community is surely what we should all be responsible for."

She said that if brothels were legalised, it would be easier to give sex advice, condoms and screening for sexually-transmitted diseases to prostitutes.

And she said it would enable health workers to target issues like drug and alcohol dependency.

She said: "Perhaps the stigma of working women will reduce over time, and we will remove our morality goggles."





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  • Last Updated: 13 May 2009 9:49 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Prostitution
 
1

FLUB,

a rocky outcrop in eastern central Scotland 14/05/2009 10:26:41
Moonlighting?
2

me150,

14/05/2009 10:45:07
Protect sex workers?

Here is a novel idea, chuck them in a special prison, with no sleazy men, where they should be. They will be protected there.
3

SandyBottoms,

Edinburgh 14/05/2009 12:09:02
Protitutes get a bum rap -- everyone thinks they're drug addicts, help spread STDs, re-enforce negative sterotypes of women, and are responsible for the general downfall of society. Can't these "problems" be helped by giving more counseling to identify and help prostitutes who are addicts/victims, giving out more condoms/contraceptives and providing/requiring regular health checks, and by giving prostitutes some measure of self-respect back so that they are allowed to go to rape crisis centres? By making a common pasttime illegal, you only create criminals where there were none before and endanger the lives of those who are vulnerable.

 

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