![]() |
The landmark ruling comes 34 years after the Supreme Court last upheld Canada's anti-prostitution laws [Reuters] |
Landmark
Supreme Court ruling says bans on solicitation and brothels violated sex
workers' right to safety.
Canada's top court has overturned all
restrictions on prostitution, declaring that existing laws violated sex
workers' right to safety.
The Supreme Court of Canada struck down
bans on brothels, street solicitation, and living on the earnings of
prostitution in a unanimous 9-0 decision on Friday, and gave the Canadian government
one year to re-write the country's prostitution laws.
While prostitution itself is
technically legal in Canada, most prostitution-related activities were
previously considered criminal offences.
In the decision, Chief Justice Beverley
McLachlin said many prostitutes "have no meaningful choice" but
to "engage in the risky economic activity of prostitution," and
that the law should not make such activities more dangerous.
"It makes no difference that the
conduct of pimps and johns is the immediate source of the harms suffered
by prostitutes," McLachlin wrote.
"The impugned laws deprive people
engaged in a risky, but legal, activity of the means to protect themselves
against those risks."
The legal challenge to Canada's
prostitution laws was brought by a group of sex workers who argued that the
now-overturned restrictions put them in danger.
'Important day for human rights'
Katrina Pacey, a lawyer for the
petitioners, called it "an unbelievably important day for the sex
workers but also for human rights."
"The court recognised that sex
workers have the right to protect themselves and their safety," she
said.
However, Justice Minister Peter MacKay
said the government was "concerned" by the decision and was
"exploring all possible options to ensure the criminal law continues to
address the significant harms that flow from prostitution to communities, those
engaged in prostitution, and vulnerable persons".
Don Hutchinson, vice president of the
Evangelical Fellowship of Canada, a religious group that opposes the
decriminalisation of prostitution, warned that the ruling could lead to
increased human trafficking and victimisation of people.
"I think we're going to see an
increase in cross-border traffic for those hoping to access our brothels,''
Hutchinson said.
The safety of prostitutes became a
high-profile issue in Canada following the trial and 2007 conviction of serial
killer Robert Pickton, who preyed on prostitutes and other women in Vancouver's
Downtown Eastside neighbourhood.
Last year, a lower court in the
province of Ontario struck down the ban on brothels on the grounds that it
exposed sex workers to more danger.
Prostitution is legal in much of Europe
and Latin America, and brothels are legal in numerous countries, including
the Netherlands, Germany and Switzerland.
Source: http://www.aljazeera.com

No comments:
Post a Comment