Church
leaders mount last effort to halt prostitution bill
23.06.2003
Labour
MP Tim Barnett has accused a group of church leaders of arrogance and ignorance
in their arguments against decriminalising prostitution.
Mr
Barnett has sponsored the Prostitution Reform Bill which he believes has the
numbers to pass into law this week.
There
was a group of 62 or 63 MPs who had consistently voted for the legislation
"and I'm pretty confident we're going to get that support on
Wednesday", Mr Barnett said today.
A
group of bishops and other church leaders is making a last ditch effort to stop
the bill.
They
have written to all MPs saying the bill does not serve the interests of
prostitutes or New Zealand society.
At
the heart of its objections was that the bill normalised prostitution, group
spokesman Bishop Richard Randerson said today.
He
told National Radio that the people who would benefit from the bill were those
who worked in massage parlours, were intelligent, mature, articulate,
self-confident and those who were more than 18 years of age.
Less
than half of all prostitutes worked in massage parlours. Many were young,
vulnerable, unable to speak for themselves and had drug addictions, he said.
Church
leaders were not convinced the bill offered much protection to this group, the
letter said.
"The
normalising of prostitution sends a message that the commercial selling of
one's body is an acceptable function in society and will draw many other young
and vulnerable people into the business."
The
letter was signed by Anglican, Catholic, Presbyterian, Methodist, Salvation
Army, Baptist leaders and Anglican Deans of Cathedrals.
Mr
Barnett told National Radio the legislation was based "on exactly the kind
of values and beliefs that I would have thought the church leaders would share
and I'm astonished by the ignorance of the statement".
"What
we're trying to do is create better law. The fact that many sex workers may
take drugs is utterly nothing to do with creating a fairer legal
environment."
He
said the church leaders' letter was inaccurate, for instance, in saying
"that the law in Sweden, which criminalises every client in the sex
industry, has actually led to a reduction in prostitution". "There's
absolutely no evidence of that and you can't possibly have researched
that."
It
was also wrong for a group of 30 men and two women to say that this bill, which
had been worked on by women's groups and the Prostitutes' Collective for the
past 15 years, did not serve the best interests of prostitutes, Mr Barnett said,
adding that was pretty close to "arrogance".
Prostitution
was a reality and normal activity for the 5000 prostitutes in New Zealand.
Criminalisation
drove sex workers underground "into the most dangerous environments",
Mr Barnett said.
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NZPA