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Pioneering legislation intended to protect women by criminalising the clients is now making prostitutes feel less safe. Steps to tighten the laws on buying sex in Nordic countries are winning adherents around Europe, but feedback from the sex workers they were drawn up to protect suggests that the regulations may be making their work more dangerous.
The jury is still out on the efficacy of the new laws, which depending on the country involved were drawn up to safeguard women deemed to be in vulnerable positions, stop violence against women and strengthen human rights and gender equality.
Finland followed in with a partial ban, making it illegal to buy sex from a person who was trafficked or pimped.
A deal was struck by the ruling coalition parties in December to do the same in Germany. Ireland is considering a Swedish-style law.
The vote was not binding. Some sex workers applaud the laws. But most sex workers interviewed in Finland, Norway and Sweden said the new laws made their working conditions more dangerous. Silvia, a year-old from Bulgaria working as a prostitute on the streets of Norway, agreed the new secrecy posed problems. There is more risk that something bad happens. Police deny that the laws have made prostitution more dangerous.