Sex laws under attack
By DHARM MAKWANA
http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/News/national/2009/10/06/11316566-sun.html
A constitutional challenge before Ontario courts to strike down federal prostitution laws has local advocates wading into the argument.
The case, slated to start today, argues the existing laws puts sex-trade workers at risk of violence.
In response, equality seeking women's groups launched the Abolition Coalition yesterday in downtown Vancouver, calling for the decriminalization of sex-trade workers and the criminalization of purchasing of sex - a model adopted in Sweden.
Prostitution is legal in Canada but most activities surrounding it are not.
"Either we criminalize both the women in prostitution and johns and pimps, and as we do now enforce the law inconsistently, or we decriminalize it entirely," said coalition member and UBC law professor Janine Benedet.
Susan Davis, a Vancouver sex-trade worker in favour of dropping the laws, submitted an affidavit for the case outlining the dangers she faced working on the street.
"We're not looking for special treatment, or carte blanche on brothels," she said.
Instead, Davis wants the sex trade to be subject to standards of transparency and ethical review under government oversight.
A similar charter challenge brought forward by Vancouver-based Pivot Legal Society has stalled in B.C. Supreme Court.
By DHARM MAKWANA
http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/News/national/2009/10/06/11316566-sun.html
A constitutional challenge before Ontario courts to strike down federal prostitution laws has local advocates wading into the argument.
The case, slated to start today, argues the existing laws puts sex-trade workers at risk of violence.
In response, equality seeking women's groups launched the Abolition Coalition yesterday in downtown Vancouver, calling for the decriminalization of sex-trade workers and the criminalization of purchasing of sex - a model adopted in Sweden.
Prostitution is legal in Canada but most activities surrounding it are not.
"Either we criminalize both the women in prostitution and johns and pimps, and as we do now enforce the law inconsistently, or we decriminalize it entirely," said coalition member and UBC law professor Janine Benedet.
Susan Davis, a Vancouver sex-trade worker in favour of dropping the laws, submitted an affidavit for the case outlining the dangers she faced working on the street.
"We're not looking for special treatment, or carte blanche on brothels," she said.
Instead, Davis wants the sex trade to be subject to standards of transparency and ethical review under government oversight.
A similar charter challenge brought forward by Vancouver-based Pivot Legal Society has stalled in B.C. Supreme Court.





