UK expert says new laws to criminalise men who pay for sex with prostitutes unenforceable
December 10th, 2008 - 4:17 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment ) London, Dec.10 (ANI): A police expert on human trafficking has said that the British Governments new laws to criminalise men who pay for sex with prostitutes will be virtually unenforceable.
In a major setback to government’’s plans, Commander Allan Gibson of the Metropolitan Police’’s Human Trafficking Unit has questioned how effective such a crackdown could be.
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith announced last month that men would be committing a crime if they paid for sex with a woman who has been trafficked into the UK or is working for a pimp, even if they did not know she had been forced into prostitution.
The measure - part of a bid to reduce demand for trafficked women by targeting the men who pay for sex - was criticized by prostitutes, who argued it will force the trade even deeper underground.
In evidence to the Commons Home Affairs Select Committee, The Telegraph quoted Gibson as saying: “Speaking personally, I think that is going to be very difficult to enforce.”
Gibson told the committee that it was very difficult even for police to estimate the numbers of women trafficked into the UK for prostitution or precisely which ones were working against their will.
Over the past two years, his unit has dealt with 54 cases, and had a further 157 cases referred to it by other branches of the Met, he said.
Committee chairman Keith Vaz told minister for women Harriet Harman: “(Commander Gibson) says it is very difficult to enforce a situation where a man is expected to ask a prostitute whether or not she has been trafficked and even if he gets a negative answer he is still to be prosecuted. The police themselves… feel that the new proposals are unenforceable.”
Shadow Home Secretary Dominic Grieve said later: “Yet again, the Home Secretary’’s rhetoric is defied by reality. The Government wants to rush through new criminal laws without any consideration as to whether they will work. (ANI)
- UK law to criminalize men having sex with "exploited" women - Mar 08, 2010
- Sex with trafficked prostitutes may soon be an offence in UK - Nov 19, 2008
- US report highlights trafficking in India - Jun 28, 2011
- From Kamathipura to meet Clinton: A Nepali woman's long march (Feature, with image) - Jul 10, 2011
- Women detained for topless protest in Ukraine - Sep 27, 2011
- Sex workers rescued from Goa nightclub - Dec 05, 2011
- 12,000 foreign 'sex slaves' work in British brothels - Aug 19, 2010
- Nepal's growing pornography trade preys on women - Jun 16, 2010
- Super Bowl's 'dark side' - Child sex trafficking - Feb 02, 2011
- Brit leader asks Arnie to "terminate" prostitute-rating website - Oct 01, 2009
- 12,000 foreign 'sex slaves' working in British brothels: Report - Aug 19, 2010
- Men paying for sex with trafficked victims in the UK to be prosecuted - Sep 20, 2008
- Another sex racket busted in Delhi, seven held - Jul 20, 2011
- UK Olympic games should not be magnet for sex trafficking: Home Secretary - Feb 10, 2011
- 'Australia a source and destination for human trafficking for sexual servitude' - Jun 18, 2010
Tags: allan gibson, british governments, committee chairman, crackdown, dominic, harriet harman, home affairs select committee, human trafficking, jacqui smith, keith vaz, major setback, metropolitan police, negative answer, new laws, police expert, prostitutes, prostitution, rhetoric, shadow home secretary, uk expert