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South Australia: Upper House Liberal leader Nicola Centofanti proposes ‘Nordic’ sex-work model

canada-man

Well-known member
Jun 16, 2007
32,345
2,805
113
Toronto, Ontario
canadianmale.wordpress.com
A new sex-work model would attack the men who buy sex but protect the women who sell it in a move to push one state away from its legacy of full criminalisation.
The Bill, introduced by South Australian Upper House Liberal leader Nicola Centofanti, would make the purchase of sex illegal but decriminalise the women who sell it, offering a halfway house between full criminalisation or legalisation.

Ms Centofanti, speaking in parliament this week, said attacking the demand side of the sex industry would promote equality for women and help reduce abuse and sex trafficking.

“I bring this Bill to the (Legislative) Council as a pathway to protect those in prostitution,” she said.

“Too often, the sex industry is not a choice. It is by far the case, and not the exception to the rule, that many women who find themselves in the sex trade do not do so by choice and are often vulnerable as a result of childhood sexual abuse, domestic violence, coercion, homelessness, drug and alcohol addiction.”


Sex work, either its sale or solicitation, is illegal in South Australia.

Multiple bills have been proposed to alter the state’s sex-work laws but none have been enacted into law.

Ally-Marie Diamond, founder of the Wahine Toa Rising advocacy group that battles exploitation in New Zealand’s sex industry, called on parliamentarians to back the Bill.

“We know that blanket decriminalisation models do not work but rather leave women exploited and vulnerable and they open a door to human trafficking,” she said.

“I believe that the way elected representatives choose to legislate the sex trade sends out a powerful message about how seriously we take the issue of sexual exploitation, violence against women and gender equality more generally.”

But Sex Industry Network general manager Kat Morrison said she “wholeheartedly opposed” the Bill and warned that it would harm women in the sex industry.

“Regardless of whether you have a criminalised service provider or a criminalised service receiver, any kind of criminalisation within that context creates barriers and creates harm for the people involved in that transaction,” she said.

“I think calling it partial decriminalisation is a smokescreen.”

Ms Morrison supports the full decriminalisation of sex work.


“It’s what sex workers want, it is what has been recommended by the United Nations, by Amnesty International, the World Health Organisation.”

Ms Morrison also said the “Nordic” partial decriminalisation model had failed in Europe.

“It does nothing to decrease or minimise instances of violence, aggression, trafficking, coercion, slavery, all of those horrible things that we oppose,” she said

“The best way to tackle all of those issues is through decriminalisation.”

Greens member Tammy Franks backs full decriminalisation and said the Bill was a “political strategy” to end sex work.

“This Bill says basically a sex worker can do their work but not be paid for it,” she said.

“In what other jurisdiction or area or work would a worker be expected to do their work but not get paid for it?”

Ms Centofanti’s Bill will be put up for a conscience vote and Ms Franks said it was “possible” it could get up.

“The numbers game I think is very tight on these issues,” she said.

SA: Liberal leader Nicola Centofanti introduce new sex-work Bill | news.com.au — Australia’s leading news site




European court agrees to hear appeal against French anti-prostitution law (yahoo.com)

Sex workers will be able to argue their case against a French law that penalises clients paying for sex before the European Court of Human Rights, which has agreed to hear their appeal.

The court said Thursday it had agreed to rule on an appeal against a 2016 law that made it a crime to pay for sex acts in France.

The case was filed at the end of 2019 by 260 male and female sex workers of different nationalities, who say they practice prostitution legally in France.


The sex workers, supported by several advocacy groups, argue that the law has unjustly affected their livelihoods.

They say it goes counter to several articles of the European Convention of Human Rights, including on the protection of life and against inhumane treatment.

'Greater risks'
"According to the applicants, who engage lawfully in prostitution, the possibility of criminal proceedings being brought against clients pushes those engaged in prostitution into operating in a clandestine manner and in isolation, exposes them to greater risks for their physical integrity and lives, and affects their freedom to define how they live their private lives," the court said Thursday.
 

canada-man

Well-known member
Jun 16, 2007
32,345
2,805
113
Toronto, Ontario
canadianmale.wordpress.com
i found the bill after over 30 minutes of searching the South Australia Parliament website


keeping an eye on it


Summary Offences (Prostitution Law Reform) AmendmentBill 2023 (legislation.sa.gov.au)






currently in second reading (started in the upper house of South Australia's bicameral parliament)

salt.parliament.sa.gov.au/SaltROPage.aspx?SaltResultsPerPage=50&SaltPageNumber=1&SaltSessionID=181&SaltHouseID=0&SaltDateFrom=28%2f08%2f2023&SaltDateTo=02%2f09%2f2023&SaltTitle=&SaltBillTypeID=0&SaltMotionTypeID=0&SaltSortExpression=Date&SaltReverseOrder=False&SaltPageIndex=1&SaltMemberID=6706&SaltMinisterTitle=&SaltBillNumber=0&SaltSearchType=1&SaltPageTypeId=2&SaltRecordTypeId=0&SaltRecordId=5193&SaltBillSection=1




Bill - Summary Offences (Prostitution Law Reform) Amendment
Bill Number - 109
Session55th/1stHouseLegislative Council
TypePrivate Members BillBill Number109
TitleSummary Offences (Prostitution Law Reform) Amendment
OriginLegislative Council
Reading(s)1st - 30/08/2023, 2nd Moved - 30/08/2023
Procedural Notes
StatusAdj 2nd ReadingDate30/08/2023
Precis
Money Bill / Money Clause
Money Clause(s) / Bill NoNone
Document LinkClick here to view the Bill.




The Parliament of South Australia is the bicameral legislature of the Australian state of South Australia. It consists of the 47-seat House of Assembly (lower house) and the 22-seat Legislative Council (upper house). General elections are held every 4 years, with all of the lower house and half of the upper house filled at each election. It follows a Westminster system of parliamentary government with the executive branch required to both sit in parliament and hold the confidence of the House of Assembly. The parliament is based at Parliament House on North Terrace in the state capital of Adelaide.

The King is represented in the State by the Governor of South Australia. According to the South Australian Constitution, unlike the federal parliament, and the parliaments of the other states of Australia, neither the Sovereign or the Governor is considered to be a part of the South Australian parliament. However, the same role and powers are granted to them.[1]

The parliament may make laws for any matter within South Australia, subject to the Constitution of South Australia. Its power is further limited by the ability for the federal parliament to override it in some circumstances, subject to the Constitution of Australia. Similarly, the Supreme Court of South Australia, and ultimately the High Court of Australia, provides judicial oversight of parliament. The parliament is also vested with other powers, such as the means to investigate matters, conduct research and summon witnesses.[1]
 

Insidious Von

My head is my home
Sep 12, 2007
40,985
8,051
113
Britain's newest wasp farm opened last week to the general public.

I'm a bit surprised and disappointed that South Australia would go this route. The area is more wopish than waspish, they have bigger problems than Bil C-36. South Australia is the center of the country's successful wine industry. The Murray River is losing water flow, a much more serious problem than pillorying johns.

....si mangia bene in South Australia.

 

bettong

New member
Dec 25, 2023
2
1
3
The bill originated in the upper house with a right wing nutter. As I understand it, it has been sent to committee where many bills wither on the vine. Lower house is solidly Labor; this seems likely to go nowhere (I hope).
 
Ashley Madison
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