Sex Workers Protest In Paris Against Penalising Clients

Sex Workers Protest In Paris Against Penalising Clients
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Sex workers protested in central Paris on Saturday, marking the first anniversary of a French law  which made it illegal for their clients to pay for sex.

Sex workers protested in central Paris on Saturday, marking the first anniversary of a French law which made it illegal for their clients to pay for sex.

The protesters, mostly young women but including some men, held up banners saying "Stop the fines, our aggressors, AIDS, repression and hypocrisy not our clients".

The law, which can see fines of up to 3,750 euros imposed, was an attempt to criminalise customers rather than sex workers.

Many of the demonstrators wore white masks or make-up and carried placards which read "Sexwork is work".

The march began in the Place Pigalle, in an area long-known for prostitution, with participants chanting slogans including "clients penalised, whores murdered".

Prostitution is legal in France, though soliciting or running a brothel are not.

The law criminalising the clients of sex workers has led to a reduction in the numbers seeking prostitutes, especially on the streets, Tim Leicester of the Doctors of the World group told AFP.

However "fewer clients say less income, difficulties in choosing clients, which means more unprotected sex and more acts of violence, " he added, dubbing the law ""a failure."

All European countries penalise pimping, but on April 6, 2016 France joined a group of countries, including Britain and Sweden which punish the clients of prostitutes.

Sweden in 1999 became the first country in the world to make it illegal to pay for sex, in a bid to lower demand.

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