February 13, 2012

Street prostitution debate before Parliament

Debate on street prostitution is about revive at Parliament.

A bill that will allow Auckland Council to ban street prostitution in specific places is to be considered by the local government select committee.

Other city councils including Christchurch are expected to show interest and may seek to have the same powers applied generally.

An earlier 2005 bill, relating to Manukau City Council, was voted down in 2006 after it emerged from strongly divided select committee hearings.

Former Manurewa MP George Hawkins sponsored the local bill at the request of Manukau to address street prostitution near residential areas.

After its defeat, he introduced another one in 2010 just before the Auckland Super City was formed.
Auckland Council has told the local government select committee it wants to take over the bill, and its jurisdiction is greater Auckland.

National MPs supported Mr Hawkins' original bill.
The local government and environment committee will consider the bill and submissions close on February 29.

Chairwoman Nicky Wagner, who is MP for Christchurch Central, said there had been a lot of interest from other cities "and other people wanting to piggy-back on it".

"What we need to do is think about how we are going to manage the whole thing and we need to decide what the scope of the bill will be."

She said there had been a lot of interest already, particularly from Christchurch where street prostitution in the inner city had moved out to the residential areas.

The committee would have to decide whether it was possible to extend the bill and then whether it wanted to.

Mr Hawkins said he would have preferred to have had a bill amending the Prostitution Reform Act 2003 to outlaw street prostitution nationally.

The select committee report on the first bill that was voted down said that if the bill were passed, "citizens would be subject to conflicting criminal laws, depending on their current geographical locale". It also thought it would simply move the problem.

The committee believed passage of the bill would negate the intentions of the Prostitution Reform Act 2003, which legalised and regulated the sex trade.

Ban it everywhere. Make street prostitution illegal.

The only people that work on the street are junkies that are controlled by gangs - giving every cent they earn to organised crime - and children.

Talk to any Police Officer from Auckland Central and they will tell you about children as young as 12 prostituting themselves on the street because they can't work in brothels. In some cases it is the parents that are pimping out their own children in order to feed their drug habits.

The oldest profession in the world and all that jazz - all the arguments that people can come up with for why this industry is legal in this country does not apply to street prostitution.

Anyone that argues otherwise is morally corrupt, advocating for child abuse and human trafficking, and just plain wrong.

There is not ONE thing safe or positive about street prostitution being legal. It is dangerous and wrong and our government has it's head in the sand if it continues to turn a blind eye to that.

2 comments:

Mr Mister said...

Don't women find street prostitution degrading ? Aren't they bothered with what others think of them ? Standing on a street corner in harm's way with complete strangers stopping by sounds scary.

Jacqueline said...

I think by the time a woman - or child - gets to that point all pride has bled out.

They feel hopeless and no longer care.

May every blessing and grace be yours. May joy, and delight fill your home. May daily problems not vex you unduly, nor desire for earthly possessions dominate your life. May you have true friends to stay by you in joy, and sorrow. May your children return your love many times over. With a wise, and generous heart , may you help all who come to you in need of comfort. May you reach a ripe old age, content for having lived a life of goodness, and worth.
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