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New sex trade union targets price cutting

Switzerland’s first union for male and female prostitutes launched on Thursday following a founding meeting in Geneva’s red light district.

New sex trade union targets price cutting
Photo: Kuzma

The gathering in the Pâquis, a downtown city neighbourhood known for its active sex trade, attracted 80 people who signed up for the STTS, the only officially recognized labour organization in the country for workers in the sex trade.

The union was spearheaded by Angelina, a Colombian woman who has worked as a prostitute in the Pâquis for several years.

In addition to defending sex trade workers against unfair room rents and on such issues as security, the STTS also aims to prevent price-cutting by prostitutes coming from outside Geneva.

Prostitutes established in Geneva have decried cut-throat competition from prostitutes arriving from elsewhere in Europe.

Earlier this year, an employee of the GgClub, an erotic massage parlour, complained that the city was attracting a harmful new kind of prostitution.

Young women try their luck in big hotels without having to pay taxes, the employee told Le Temps.
 
“Geneva is becoming the brothel of Europe,” she said.

One prostitute told Le Matin that because of the influx of new competition, rates being charged were plummeting.

“My cleaning lady gets paid more than me,” she said.

Cheap competition is just one of many issues the union intends to tackle, Angelina said.

“We have wanted for a long time to become an official body in the eyes of politicians and justice authorities,” she earlier told Le Courrier.

She also hopes to be able to defend the interests of workers in “salons” who often face difficult conditions imposed on them by employers.

The STTS, which hoped to attract 150 members, is open to sex trade workers from across French-speaking Switzerland.

The union plans to work with Aspasie, a group established in Geneva 30 years ago to deal with health issues and discrimination faced by prostitutes.

Switzerland is one of eight European countries where prostitution is legal and regulated by laws.

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PROSTITUTION

Spain’s top court reinstates first sex workers’ union

Spanish sex workers have the right to form their own union, the Supreme Court ruled Wednesday, overturning an earlier court decision ordering the dissolution of Spain's first such labour organisation.

Spain's top court reinstates first sex workers' union
Photo: Oscar del Pozo/AFP

Known as OTRAS (or “the Sex Workers’ Organisation”), the union was discretely set up in August 2018 but was closed three months later by order of the National Court following an appeal by the government of Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.

But following an appeal, the Supreme Court ruled in favour of OTRAS, saying that its statutes, which had triggered the initial legal challenge, were “in line with the law” and that sex workers “have the fundamental right to freedom of association and the right to form a union”.

In its November 2018 ruling, the National Court had argued that allowing the union to exist amounted to “recognising the act of procurement as lawful”.

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Contacted by AFP, the union did not wish to comment.

When it was founded, OTRAS received the green light from the labour ministry and its statutes were publicly registered in the official gazette the day before the government went into a summer recess.

But three weeks later, the government — which portrays itself as “feminist and in favour of the abolition of prostitution” according to Sanchez’s Twitter feed at the time — started legal moves against it.

In Spain, prostitution is neither legal nor illegal but it is tolerated.

Although it is not recognised as employment, there is a large number of licensed brothels throughout the country.

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