Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement

 
 
Thursday, 21st August 2008 Change Date

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the Edinburgh Evening News site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Sex slaves, not street girls, are real problem



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 16 January 2008
MONDAY'S Evening News reported, accurately of course, on what Chief Inspector Brian Plastow said about the effect on street prostitution in Leith of the new law on kerb-crawling.
The officer in charge of policing north Edinburgh said there hadn't been a single report to suggest that women are working elsewhere in the city, or that more of them are working indoors.

I believe him, but I don't necessarily draw the same conclusions as the Chief Inspector, on the behavioural change achieved by the new law. It's true that fewer women are to be seen on the street in Leith. This trend was established some years ago, and has continued, not because many fewer women turn to prostitution either regularly or intermittently, but because more of them work from flats or houses, making use of mobile phones and the internet.

The kerb-crawling law on its own won't end prostitution, even though it may appear to have discouraged some drivers from frequenting a known red light area. But I wonder how many members of the public expect anything more from the kerb-crawling law other than that it should end the nuisance, alarm and embarrassment caused by sex being offered for sale in residential or business streets?

In Aberdeen, street prostitution was confined to a docks area with a handful of residential properties adjacent to warehouses and depots that close around tea-time. As a result, kerb-crawling has not been an issue, unlike the area in Glasgow's East End in which residents were inconvenienced and annoyed by kerb-crawlers, as were residents around, and adjacent to Leith Links, when prostitutes moved there on the discontinuation of the managed zone centred on Salamander Yard business development.

Having spoken to many, many members of the public on their attitudes to prostitution itself, to kerb-crawling and their expectations of laws relating to both, I believe that, while there's practically no approval of the oldest profession as a career, this is matched by the almost universal belief that it's part of the human condition and will continue in some form.

So if you notice that a woman living near you has an exceedingly wide circle of men friends who drop in for a visit with great regularity, will you report your suspicions to the police? Or, if your neighbour's visitors don't alarm or annoy you, and if she herself behaves in a quite unremarkable fashion, how likely are you to live and let live, since your neighbour's activities don't invade your privacy or property?

There are, of course, some people, like the MSPs who pushed this law through, whose personal morality is so offended by prostitution that they're blind to the unexpected consequences of getting tough on street prostitution, even when it isn't invasive of the privacy of home-owners etc.

This kerb-crawling law may deter some drivers from using street workers (although experience elsewhere shows a reduction, not an elimination), but there's nothing to prove they stop buying sex .

And if clients do continue to find ways, in what circumstances and at what risk to their safety are former street prostitutes working?

Experience after Edinburgh's managed area was dropped shows the difficulty experienced by Scotpep, for example, in contacting women with the health, safety, financial and information services they require.

It's also impossible to build the trust required to help them get out of prostitution when they're ready to try.

Instead of tying up police and court resources in pursuing an activity that can fairly be described as marginal in three out of four of Scotland's big cities, I believe the attention should focus on the women working indoors who're not exercising free choice, and who may have been trafficked here.

These women are out of sight, and for most of us, out of mind. They're no better than slaves and they're forced to make money for organised crime networks from punters who've deserted the outdoors red light districts.

These women are victims. Is it not ironic that their much less victimised sisters under the skin who work in hotels, casinos and nice restaurants as escorts, should be able to go about their business as usual?


Middle East grinds to halt for George

GEORGE BUSH has been out in the Middle East trying to win friends and influence people against Iran.

My husband has also been visiting the Emirates, with a somewhat different intention. From what he told me on his mobile, the George Dubya style is unlikely to have charmed too many Arabs and their visiting business colleagues from all over the world.

Jim phoned me from a taxi. He was stuck for an hour in a cab, on a normally ten-minute journey, in a traffic jam that paralysed Abu Dhabi. To get him to the airport, all roads were closed for the President who thinks he's done a grand job in the Middle East.

In Dubai, his destination, the authorities just surrendered, shut all the roads, declared a holiday and told people to stay indoors.

Don't ya just love Dubya?


Carelessness is the only scandal here

THERE isn't a close parallel between the £10K-plus levered into Peter Hain's Labour Party deputy leadership campaign via a think-tank without too many thoughts, and the £1K-minus donated to Wendy Alexander's Scottish leadership campaign by a donor based in Jersey.

Wendy's lot may have been careless . . . but didn't plan to break the law.

The full article contains 913 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

,

16/01/2008 13:55:57
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

a proud doonhamer,

Dumfries 16/01/2008 14:21:43
THERE isn't a close parallel between the £10K-plus levered into Peter Hain's Labour Party deputy leadership campaign via a think-tank without too many thoughts, and the £1K-minus donated to Wendy Alexander's Scottish leadership campaign by a donor based in Jersey.

Wendy's lot may have been careless . . . but didn't plan to break the law...Margo MacDonald

Margo, is it your opinion that concealing a donation, and filing a fasle statement to the Election Commission is just carelessness?

Are looking for an appointment? Perhaps to the Electoral Commission?

It is so sad that again you have let personal views colour your responsibilities as a MSP.
3

tomias,

Edinburgh 16/01/2008 15:03:22
I agree with scotch tape- three in a bedroom !!!!!!!!!!
4

Mercutio,

FALKIRK 16/01/2008 15:47:56
Margo may not be on message for the whingeing drone at #2 but her heart is in the right place.
5

Mercutio,

FALKIRK 16/01/2008 15:57:40
Margo re your man stuck in the Traffic in Abu Dhabi. Don't blame DUBYA the Ruler Sheikh Khalifa would do this for any head of state and is expected by anyone who is a regular vistor to the U.A.E.I hope Mr Sillars has not let this colour his views on the Emirates.
6

leithlink,

16/01/2008 17:38:37
Usual diatribe from Margo full of misinformation desgned to mislead.
And inspite of one of the lead stories in this edition being about male prostitution in the Calton Hill area, Margo resolutely refuses to make comment about that issue. The law has never differentiated between male and female prostitution and yet Margo, despite being challenged constantly to give her view, has said nothing for years about the problem being caused in that area.
Whether she likes it or not, the unlawful "tolerance" zone she supported along with the former police chief Tom Wood and Scotpep, had no support in law and no support in the community of Leith. For the first time in many years, women who live in Leith and in the Leith Links/Salamander Street area can walk home without being accosted, propositioned and harassed both by punters and pimps - oh, yes, Margo, there were plenty of pimps associated with your plan - and at long last the gardens and areas are beginning to be free of the detritus left behind by them. How would you like used needles and FLs discarded in your front garden, Margo? No, I thought not.
7

COLINTON.MAINS,

Oakville Ontario 14/02/2008 02:07:52
somebody told me they turned all the old graveyards in to gay parks i do not believe them

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 

Today's Vote

Are spy cameras a good way to deter kerb crawlers and prostitution?
No, people will just move elsewhere
Yes, punters don’t want their car numbers recorded
Just let people get on with it in peace

Featured Advertising



Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.