Auckland Cities team up to fight prostitution

MICHAEL FOX AND SAM SACHDEVA
Auckland News
19/01/2012

Relevant offersAuckland and Christchurch officials will today meet to discuss joining forces to combat street prostitution.

Papatoetoe residents have fought for several years to limit the areas where street prostitutes work, complaining of seeing them perform their services in broad daylight, of having to clean up excrement and used condoms and deal with disorder issues.

Otara-Papatoetoe local board chairman John McCracken says he’s found a kindred community in Christchurch where 14 prostitution-related arrests were made at the weekend following a string of complaints to police.

”The issues around street prostitution are local things. For people who aren’t affected by this sort of behaviour it doesn’t sort of rate as a concern.

”To have another community be experiencing exactly the same issues is a huge help to us to show that this is a real problem.”

With the legacy Manukau City Council’s Regulation of Prostitution in Specified Places Bill currently before a select committee and submissions closing at the end of February, the board is trying to drum up support to make the bill effective nationwide.

The board is trying to gather momentum for its plans behind the scenes and was reluctant to discuss exact details, but one representative is in Christchurch today meeting local body officials.

The meeting will precede more formal discussions.

”Christchurch City Council has been asking for somebody to visit to explain Papatoetoe’s position to explain the problems they have with street sex, compare the issues that they’re each finding and to talk about the amendments and how they can help both communities,” McCracken said.

Christchurch City Council’s general manager of regulation and democracy services, Peter Mitchell, said they would discuss a formal visit from an Auckland delegation following today’s visit.

They will also discuss making a submission to the select committee.

Last month they wrote to Auckland Mayor Len Brown and the Government indicating their support for the intent of the bill. They are now hoping it will be sponsored by an MP or picked up by the Government so it becomes applicable nationwide.

”To get something through, you need to show there is great need for it: you need all the affected areas working together,” said councillor Aaron Keown.

Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker said the bill would help address prostitution-related issues which had occurred since the earthquakes.

”We don’t have the powers to make changes, we need them, and this will help.”

The bill has proven contentious with the Prostitutes’ Collective and its supporters claiming it marginalised sex workers who were trying to make a living.

Ad Feedback  McCracken said they don’t want a blanket ban on prostitution, simply to limit their activities to areas where it won’t affect residents, similar to alcohol-free zones.

He said the board’s argument was not a moral one but rather about the effect it had on residents forced to witness their fornicating, swearing and drinking.

If a factory was plonked in the middle of a suburban neighbourhood they would be subject to restrictions limiting their impact on communities and the same should apply to the street sex industry, he said.

McCracken said they would lobby members of parliament from both cities to try and find someone to champion it.

Fairfax NZ News

http://www.stuff.co.nz/auckland/local-news/6278434/Auckland-Christchurch-officials-to-combat-prostitution

 

*Note from NAUWU: Though we often cite NZ as having very successfully decriminilised sex work and that this has had very positive outcomes and we shouldn’t forget there are some problems

First, many local councils have been less than enthusiastic about actually allowing brothels a level playing field with other business (sound familiar)

Second, street based work is seen by many people in New Zealand as still being a “problem” see attached article

Third, there is a very vocal lobby who are actively campaigning to get the legislation reversed and spreads dis-information about the success of decriminalisation

 

Call for change in law to protect prostitutes from violent crime

Brothel attacks prompt debate whether police priority should be prosecuting sex workers or catching dangerous criminals

Prostitute working in Soho

Decriminalising prostitution could mean better safety and improved relations with police for sex workers. Photograph: Alex Segre/Alamy

A series of gang attacks on brothels in east London has triggered calls for changes to the prostitution laws after victims who reported knifepoint robberies said they ended up being threatened with prosecution.

A police investigation has been launched as senior Labour and Conservative members of the London assembly and the English Collective of Prostitutes allege that violent crime is being given a lower priority than less serious sex offences.

The attacks highlight the growing debate over calls for New Zealand’s pioneering decriminalisation of sex work to be considered – an approach recently supported by the Association of Chief Police Officers.

What is said by sex workers to be a spate of robberies – involving cash and jewellery – coincides with an increase in police raids on east London addresses being used as brothels before the 2012 London Olympics.

The first address targeted was in Barking, east London, on 6 December. A video showing five men apparently breaking into another house in the area being used by sex workers is also being studied by officers. The women who made the first complaint allege they recognise some of the gang members from the YouTube clip.

In a third attack, at a different address, a woman who worked as a maid at a brothel is alleged to have been raped by the gang. None of the victims there reported the offence for fear of being charged by officers with living off the proceeds of prostitution; the police say they are so far unaware of this incident.

The ECP said changes to the law, in response to fears over the forcible trafficking of foreign sex workers into Britain, have made it more difficult for women to work together in houses for safety.

A letter of complaint sent by Niki Adams, a leading ECP activist who works with Legal Action for Women, to the borough police commander in Barking last month, said the way the investigation into the first incident had been pursued had discouraged “sex workers from reporting attacks”.

The letter continued: “The 6 December attack was at knifepoint and the women felt they had to try and protect themselves. They think the assailants may well be the same people who have robbed them before, who have got away with it, and so have returned and become more violent as they have got bolder.

“Targeting women for prosecution in this way undermines any attempts to catch those who attack and exploit sex workers … We are receiving reports of incidents where women have been attacked and their attackers have told them brazenly that they know women won’t dare go to the police.” Adams believes there may have been as many as 20 attacks in the area over the past two years.

The Metropolitan police confirmed it was aware of the 6 December attack and the YouTube video and is investigating whether the attacks are linked. “We can confirm that we were called to an alleged incident of aggravated burglary at an address in Victoria Road, Barking,” a statement said.

“Patrolling officers arrived at the scene and were quickly accompanied by scene of crime officers and detectives from Barking and Dagenham CID. Detectives also visited the venue on a further occasion to ascertain the circumstances surrounding the incident.

“Unfortunately, those at the address were unwilling to substantiate the allegation or further assist with the investigation despite a number of attempts for them to do so. The case remains under investigation and should any further information come to light it will of course be vigorously pursued.”

The force said “a notice has been served to the registered owner of the venue in Victoria Road under the auspices of section 33a of the Sexual Offences Act 1956. The notice formally notified the recipient that they were liable to prosecution should the premises in Victoria Road remain in use as a brothel”.

Referring to the YouTube video, the police said: “We are looking to see if the attacks are linked. Officers take any such reports extremely seriously and actively encourage all members of the community, particularly those who may be vulnerable to such incidents, to come forward and contact police.

“Officers at Barking and Dagenham work hard to ensure that the borough remains a safe place for all residents. The welfare of victims remains our primary concern and we acknowledge that some members of the community are more vulnerable and susceptible to crime.

“We strive to encourage and support female victims and to assist us further we are in the process of launching a bespoke multi-agency victim care service. This will see female victims receiving the best possible support and will include fast-track referrals to housing and health professionals as well as Safer Neighbourhood reassurance intervention.”

Prostitution itself is not illegal but associated activities – such as kerb crawling, placing advertising cards in phoneboxes and working in premises with more than one person available for paid sex – are outlawed.

Last November Simon Byrne, Acpo’s lead officer on prostitution and sexual exploitation, suggested there was a need for a fresh look at the legal balance. Then deputy chief constable of Greater Manchester, Byrne is in the process of moving to the Met as assistant commissioner. “There is a great amount of academic research available, much of which supports the view that an alternative approach is needed,” he wrote on his official Acpo blog. “An example would be the decriminalisation and regulation of brothels in Australia and New Zealand, not an answer to all of the related issues but certainly a solution to some.

“More of those involved in sex work in Australia and New Zealand can now access health services with ease, whilst maintaining more personal security in an emotive area for policing.”

Another proponent of reform is Andrew Boff, a Conservative member of the London assembly. “The law is framed so as to put women [sex workers] into the most vulnerable position,” he said. “The changes brought in by the last government seemed to [be derived from] the view that every single worker in the sex trade was trafficked. “People are not willing to come forward over these attacks. When they report them, the women themselves have had action taken against them. I’m compiling a report on the problem for Boris Johnson.”

Len Duvall, the leader of the Labour group at the London assembly, said: “We need to examine in greater detail information and case studies from those countries that have sought to legalise prostitution, including the model put forward by New Zealand, especially if it provides a degree of protection for sex workers and reduces crimes associated with prostitution.

“Where brothels have not posed a problem to the wider community and there has been no evidence of sex trafficking, I have heard evidence that the police have taken an inconsistent and heavy-handed approach in dealing with sex workers. There is also evidence that crimes against sex workers are being ignored.”

Earlier this month, Sheila Farmer, a sex worker who operated with other women out of shared premises, had charges of brothel-keeping against her dismissed at Croydon crown court. The Crown Prosecution Service said there had been no change in enforcement policy; the unexpected failure of a witness to appear led to the charge being withdrawn. Farmer said she had chosen to work with other women for safety because she had been attacked previously when working alone.

Nigel Richardson, the solicitor who represented her, said he was aware of another case in Surrey where women had reported an attack on their flat from a rival operation. “They were visited by two men who threatened the women and were pouring petrol around the place,” he said.

“My client called the police. Officers intially took the attack very seriously but eventually arrested my client. The men were never brought to book for an assault but my client was prosecuted for running a brothel.”

Tim Barnett, the British-born former New Zealand MP who pushed through his adopted country’s decriminalisation legislation in 2003, was in London before Christmas where he briefed Boff and Duvall. “We said let’s make the law the best to minimise harm,” he said at the time. “We set up a review of the legislation. A number of people said the number of sex workers would rise.

“So we reviewed it after five years in 2008. The review didn’t find any increase and there was an improvement in the relationship with the police. Sex workers were using their rights under the legislation to deal with poor-quality brothel owners or clients who had been behaving abusively.”

http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2012/jan/16/change-law-prostitutes-crime-violent?newsfeed=true

 

France says ‘non merci’ to prostitutes

ABC News
December 07, 2011
Meredith Griffiths

The French National Assembly has passed a resolution saying France should seek ‘a society without prostitution’, and that sex work ‘should in no case be designated as a professional activity’. The Assembly is now expected to introduce a bill criminalising payment for sex. Under the new law, clients would be jailed for six months, or fined nearly $4,000.

ELEANOR HALL: Some of the country’s public figures may have a reputation for womanising but in the French National Assembly, politicians are talking about a plan to outlaw prostitution.

And while the sex workers’ union is rallying outside the Parliament against the proposed changes, some of the pressure for abolition is coming from men’s groups.

Meredith Griffiths has our report.

MEREDITH GRIFFITHS: It’s the country that produced the famous prostitutes Belle de Jour and Nana, but France is now making it illegal to pay for sex.

Guy Geoffroy is a member of the right wing government.

GUY GEOFFROY (translated): What we want is for the National Assembly to speak out in a strong and solemn way on the principle of an abolition of prostitution and on everything that should help it in today’s society.

Better help for the prostitutes to get out of prostitution with real, credible alternatives, to be able to regain their dignity in society.

MEREDITH GRIFFITHS: He’s also part of a cross-party commission that moved the resolution saying France should seek “a society without prostitution”.

It adds that sex work “should in no case be designated as a professional activity”.

The French National Assembly is now expected to introduce a bill criminalising payment for sex.

Clients would be jailed for six months or fined nearly $4,000.

Jacques Myard is another right-wing member of the commission.

JACQUES MYARD: It’s good to try to eradicate prostitution in terms of human being exploitation. That means those who force women to prostitute should be punished and that very hard.

MEREDITH GRIFFITHS: The commission says nine prostitutes out of 10 are victims of human trafficking but sex workers protesting outside the National Assembly disagreed

MEREDITH GRIFFITHS: Some sex workers say the law will penalise them but leave pimps and organised crime networks untouched.

SEX WORKER (translated): We’re not all part of those networks. Let them tackle the networks efficiently and to the end but let go of people like me who for years have paid tax, who were recognised as prostitutes and who now have only 417 euros in pension pay.

MEREDITH GRIFFITHS: Bronwyn Winter is an Associate Professor of French at the University of Sydney.

She says the proposed new bill is in line with an existing law in France that makes it illegal to solicit clients or operate brothels.

BRONWYN WINTER: Which has actually been used to penalise women in prostitution rather than the client, so that’s actually been disadvantageous to prostitution. So there’s a bit of a double standard going on.

MEREDITH GRIFFITHS: Does this surprise you? It’s sort of seemed that France had been a country that had very liberal attitudes towards sex.

BRONWYN WINTER: Well I think we need to make a distinction between sex and prostitution, I don’t think we’re talking at all about the same thing. Prostitution is a very specific way of constructing sexuality which is commodifying sex.

BRONWYN WINTER: Professor Winter says abolitionist movements have been pressuring the French government for a long time but she says it’s back on the agenda because of recent news of a prostitution ring running out of a luxury hotel in Lille.

And people have been talking a lot about Dominique Strauss-Kahn since he was accused of raping a chamber maid in New York.

BRONWYN WINTER: Dominique Strauss-Kahn and the actions around Dominique Strauss-Kahn have put violence against women, prostitution, rape back on the agenda and a lot of feminists have been making the links between those things.

MEREDITH GRIFFITHS: The National Assembly is expected to consider the next bill in the coming days. It’s a debate that will be keenly watched by the estimated 20,000 prostitutes in France.

ELEANOR HALL: Meredith Griffiths reporting

 

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-12-07/france-says-non-merci-to-prostitutes/3718072

 

The stigma of ‘sexual assistance’

November 13, 2011
WA Today

Sex
 
Tenderness … sexual assistants help the disabled lead a normal life. Photo: Cathryn Tremain

Helping those who can’t help themselves – sexually – comes at a price.

For several years now, Jacques Arnould has been giving people with a disability in Switzerland the right to a little tenderness and sexual attention.

But for many, his work as a professional “sexual assistant” treads a thin line between a caring profession and prostitution.

Aged 50 and married with three children, Jacques is one of the rare Swiss assistants to openly speak out about the services he provides. Even in Switzerland, where the job of sexual assistant has had a proper legal status for more than eight years, the subject remains taboo.

A qualified physiotherapist, with a speciality in urinary and gynaecological issues, Jacques says there is “still a lot of educating to do on this subject” of sexual assistance for the handicapped, which is often misunderstood.

“Disabled people are still people: they have fantasies, expectations, desires and frustrations,” he said.

The job of the sexual assistant is to respond to these needs and give people who might otherwise have little chance of being sexually active due to their handicap the opportunity to feel like a normal human being.

Some sexual assistants show a disabled client how to touch and be touched, others bring the person to orgasm. There is usually a lengthy assessment of what a person’s needs are and what he can actually physically achieve with his disability before anything physical takes place.

Across town, far away from Zurich’s red light districts, Michelle Gut, an elegant masseuse with long blonde hair, greets clients – many of whom are mentally or physically disabled – at her chic and comfortable Andana massage parlour. A masseuse since the 1990s, Michelle went on to qualify for legal status as a sexual assistant to give disabled clients “the sexual tenderness they are missing”.

“It is not easy to have a normal private life when you are handicapped,” she said. “Some people just use pornography, others don’t know anything about sexuality at all as they have no experience of it.”

Only around a dozen people in Switzerland are trained to give this experience. The training is handled by specialist organisations after a rigorous selection process. One of the requirements stipulates that working as an assistant must not be someone’s main job, but rather a secondary line of work.

“It is not a profession in itself, you even have to prove that you have a main profession,” explained Catherine Agthe Diserens, a sex educator who trains sexual assistants. She is also president of the Swiss Sexuality and Handicap charity SEHP, which encourages people with disabilities to be sexually active.

Sexual assistants can also be found in the Netherlands, Germany and Denmark but in other countries, such as France, the job does not yet have a proper legal status. French disabled rights groups have repeatedly raised the issue in the last year, urging official recognition for sex assistants and, significantly, state funding for their services.

In Switzerland, a sexual assistant has a status similar to that of a prostitute, rather than a carer, since services are paid for and the cost is met entirely by the client.

Michelle charges 162 euro ($A216) an hour for the disabled and 220 euro ($A294) for able-bodied clients, and offers services ranging from classic massage to “erogenous zone massage”, which equates to masturbation, she said.

Penetration is not allowed though, she added adamantly. “I have some good contacts who are prostitutes and I know some sexual assistants who will go further so if a client wants more, I put them in touch.”

Although prostitutes do receive disabled clients, sexual assistants are better viewed by “parents and heads of institutions”, according to Diserens at the charity SEHP.

The reason, she said, is that handicapped clients may need “more time and contact” than they get with prostitutes who can be rather “troubled” by certain disabilities.

Using a recognised sexual assistant removes the awkwardness of the situation for both parties, and often for the family too, noted Arnould.

“Is it acceptable that the mother of a young man with Downs syndrome has to help him masturbate every week?” he asked.

Nevertheless the role continues to be stigmatised as Jacques knows all too well.

“There are some people who disapprove of my work as a sexual assistant and refuse to be treated by me. But others think that the work is good.”

“People who stigmatise us should be honest enough to go and find out more about sexual assistance and have some empathy,” he said.

AFP

Read more: http://www.watoday.com.au/lifestyle/life/the-stigma-of-sexual-assistance-20111111-1nace.html#ixzz1dswljjBu

 

‘King of All Pimps’ won’t get psych evaluation

By LAURA ITALIANO and AMBER SUTHERLAND
The New York Post
Posted: 6:12 PM, October 18, 2011

He’s not crazy, just colorful.

Self-professed “King of All Pimps” Jason Itzler won’t get his head examined, despite prosecutors’ request for a psych evaluation, thanks to his lawyer’s insistence that he’s just a flamboyant fellow.

Itzler is charged with running his company, “Rockstar Models,” as a escort agency despite having served two years prison on promoting prostitution charges for his previous company, NY Confidential.

During past court appearances, Itzler — who is being held in lieu of $500,000 bail — has sobbed, dropped his pants and insisted he saved Billy Ray Cyrus’ life. He showed up in court today wearing a tux-like ensemble, complete with bow tie.

 

 

Donkey excuse raises eyebrows

donkeys

Unlikely story: A Zimbabwe man has come up with an unusual excuse for being caught in an inappropriate situation with a donkey. Picture: Liam Driver Source: Gold Coast Bulletin

A MAN caught having sex with donkey claims she was a prostitute who turned into a donkey in the night.

Sunday Moyo, 28, was found by police officers in ZImbabwe performing a sex act on the donkey, who was lying on the ground tied to a tree, just after 4am local time, a court in Zvishavane, about 300km south of the capital Harare, heard.

He was arrested on Monday in the Mandava township of Zvishavane and charged with bestiality, the New Zimbabwe newspaper reported.

Admitting the crime, Mr Moyo told the court, “Your worship, I only came to know that I was being intimate with a donkey when I got arrested. I had hired a prostitute and paid $US20 ($19) for the service at Down Town night club, and I don’t know how she then became a donkey.”

He also claimed he was in love with the animal, telling the court, “I think I am also a donkey. I do not know what happened when I left the bar, but I am seriously in love with [the] donkey,” The Herald newspaper reported.

Mr Moyo was remanded in custody until October 27 and will be examined by two government psychiatrists.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/donkey-excuse-raises-eyebrows/story-fn6e1m7z-1226177826945

 

Sex workers sue over HIV test

blood test

Bad news: Malawi sex workers say they were forced to take an HIV test by police – and now they want to sue. Picture; AFP Source: AFP

MALAWIAN sex workers have sued the government after they were arrested and forced to undergo HIV tests.

The group of 14 prostitutes, who all tested positive in the tests two years ago, filed for a judicial review of their case in 2009.

The court has given consent to the sex workers to proceed with their action for “unfair action and violating their privacy”, a high court official from the administrative capital Lilongwe said yesterday.

The sex workers were charged for trading in sex while having a sexually transmitted disease. They were fined 1200 Malawian Kwacha ($7.20) and set free.

In the affivadits, the women say they have sued the government because after their arrest for prostitution, a police officer in charge and a district health officer for Mwanza in southern Malawi, “subjected us to a forced HIV test without our informed consent … this decision was illegal.”

They said they wanted the decision to be “declared unlawful on the ground that the said decision is unreasonable and arbitrary and thus constitutes unfair administrative action”.

“This was violation of our constitutional rights to privacy and liberty, non-discrimination, to freedom from cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment and to dignity of the person,” they added.

The sex workers said a magistrate court in Mwanza “publicly disclosed in a court room the results of our mandatory HIV tests, thereby violating our right to privacy and dignity”.

Police said in court it was part of their investigation to have the women tested.

The case will come to a preliminary hearing on December 14 before the high court can fix a date for the main case to begin.

The women are reportedly being helped in the litigation by local and international non-governmental organisations.

Health officials say HIV infection rates among prostitutes in Malawi range between 70 to 80 per cent.

AIDS-ravaged Malawi has 383,000 people on free anti-retrovirals (ARVs), up from 5000 when the program started seven years ago, health authorities say.

About 14 per cent of the country’s 13 million citizens are infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, according to official figures.

Malawi launched the free anti-AIDS drugs scheme in 2004 with 5000 initial beneficiaries.

The poor southern African nation has 90,000 new annual infections, largely among young people and women, according to UNAIDS.

The World Bank gave Malawi a $US30m ($29 million) grant two years ago to prevent HIV infections and speed up the roll-out of free drugs.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sex-workers-sue-over-hiv-test/story-fn6e1m7z-1226194082908

 

Prostitutes and drugs in Mexican jail

roosters

Discovery: Roosters for cock fights were among the items discovered in a Mexican jail. Picture: Rohan Kelly Source: The Daily Telegraph

MEXICAN police have discovered 19 prostitutes, two sacks of marijuana and 100 roosters for cock fighting in a surprise inspection of a jail in the resort city of Acapulco.

The discovery came as 500 federal officers prepared to transfer some 60 inmates to maximum security prisons, said Arturo Martinez, spokesman for federal anti-drug operations in the western state of Guerrero.

Police also found six female prisoners in the men’s section of the jail, as well as sharp weapons, two peacocks, and luxury items such as plasma TVs, he said.

“We’re investigating the probable culprits,” said Martinez, spokesman for the federal operation which is working to stem a wave of violence blamed on organised crime in the region.

Guerrero state, where Acapulco is located, has the third highest rate of murders in Mexico after the northern border states of Chihuahua and Nuevo Leon.

 In the first nine months of 2011 some 1,348 people were murdered in Guerrero, according to an October tally from daily Reforma.

Mexico’s overcrowded jails are rife with corruption and see frequent violence including riots, killings and breakouts.

 

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/prostitutes-and-drugs-in-mexican-jail/story-fn6e0s1g-1226188858145

 

Mayor denies ‘social cleansing’ ahead of games

Friday, October 07 2011 
Duncan Tucker
guadalajarareporter.com

Guadalajara authorities have denied accusations of “social cleansing” after removing prostitutes, homeless people and street vendors from certain central areas of Guadalajara ahead of the Pan American Games, which begin on October 14.

Keen for tourists not to see the seedier side of the city, officials have been relocating “undesirable” persons, particularly from the Parque Morelos — a few blocks from the San Juan de Dios Market — which is currently getting a minor makeover.

Both Guadalajara Mayor Aristoteles Sandoval Diaz and Secretary General Roberto Lopez Lara have denied that any form of social cleansing is taking place.

“From the outset, I reject that term. I think there should be support, opportunities and alternatives for people living on the streets,” said Sandoval.

He said the Family Development Agency (DIF), the Ministry of Social Development and the Department of Public Safety are working on an “integral” project to bring dignity to the lives of those who live on the streets. However, this did not seem to extend to sex workers.

Despite Sandoval promising in May that “nobody will be hidden during the games,” police began telling sex workers to leave the area more than a week ago. Lupe, a Parque Morelos prostitute, told Spanish-language daily Milenio that she was told  to move out “because many children will be coming past here” when the games begin.

Others were allegedly intimidated. Jennifer, a local transexual,  told the paper that the police “threatened me … and even threw drink at me.”

Lopez stated that the withdrawal of sex workers in the park is due to the facelift program taking place, stressing that city police officers had not acted violently against the prostitutes:

He suggested the sex workers  are only being invited to withdraw, as are the mostly indigenous street vendors, who have “alternatives where they can go.” Regarding the homeless, Lopez promised they could be housed in a special shelter, tentatively at Avenida Hidalgo and Chapultepec.

Lopez said the intention was to “beautify” Guadalajara ahead of the Pan American Games, to present tourists with a better impression of the city.

Local authorities have invested 4.5 million pesos in the Parque Morelos face-lift, installing 15 benches, eight sculptures, a skate park, an outdoor gym and a park for the elderly, as well as reforestation and free wifi internet.

“What people are asking for is infrastructure and security in the park. The problem of prostitutes in the area is very old, not a problem created during this administration,” said the city’s Director of Administration Francisco Ayon. “One would have to ask the locals what they think about the issue,”

The Pan American Village was originally planned to be built beside the Parque Morelos in an urban regeneration project, but the plans went unrealized due to substantial political opposition and the unwillingness of a few local residents to sell their properties to the city government.

http://www.guadalajarareporter.com/news-mainmenu-82/guadalajara/29740-mayor-denies-social-cleansing-ahead-of-games.html

 

‘Men visit Philippines for sex’

  • From: AFP
  • The Daily Telegraph
  • September 22, 2011
sex

Blind eye: Forty per cent of male tourists visit the Philippines for sex, the US ambassador has said. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

FORTY per cent of foreign men visiting the Philippines are sex tourists, the US ambassador has said.

US ambassador Harry Thomas told a forum of Filipino judges and officials that corrupt officials were involved in a very visible sex trade, and challenged the legal profession to eliminate the “scourge”.

His comments were quickly disputed by the Philippines government.

“We know that 40 per cent of foreign men who come to the Philippines, including from the US, come for sexual tourism. That is not something I’m proud of. That’s not something you should be proud of,” said Mr Thomas.

He highlighted a high profile string of karaoke bars and clubs along Roxas Boulevard, one of Manila’s main roads on which the US embassy is also located, alleging they were infamous sex establishments.

“Corruption allows these notorious establishments to continue to operate. Local officials will look the other way or accept favours. These officials are doubly guilty,” he said without naming any specific officials.

Mr Thomas praised the Philippines for boosting efforts recently against human trafficking, but stressed more had to be done and pledged US help.

“Any American caught engaged in any of these crimes or cybersex should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law and we will assist (you),” Mr Thomas said he told Justice Secretary Leila de Lima.

Prostitution is illegal in the Philippines, Asia’s Roman Catholic outpost, but the sex trade flourishes openly in many urban areas, including in Manila.

Nevertheless, the government immediately sought to downplay Mr Thomas’s remarks.

“Certainly that is something we would like to dispute. We are not sure where his statistics are coming from,” said Tourism assistant secretary Domingo Enario.

Tourism department spokesman Benito Bengzon also emphasised that sex tourism was not part of the government’s marketing campaign.

The ambassador’s statements come amid Philippine government attempts to revitalise the country’s tourism industry, which for years has lagged behind other Asian countries.

The Philippines recorded an all-time high of 3.52 million visitors last year and the government is aiming for tourist arrivals of six million by 2016.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/us-ambassador-blasts-sex-tourists/story-fn6e1m7z-1226144078650

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