Claire Finch had been operating from her home with friends who wanted to work together. There were always two women in the house for safety. Neighbours said they knew about her work and considered her a loved member of the community.
She was charged with brothel-keeping and went through 16 months of distress fearing a criminal conviction and possible prison sentence.
After a legal fight, she was found not guilty, but many women don’t have such an outcome and are convicted of brothel keeping. They face a criminal record, up to seven years in prison, the relinquishing of money under the Proceeds of Crime Act and, for migrant women, deportation.
Under the Sexual Offences Act 2003, a person can be convicted for trafficking under UK law for helping a sex worker come into the UK or move around within the UK – again, no evidence of force or coercion is needed.
“All migrant sex workers immediately got labelled as victims of trafficking regardless of what they said about their situations,” recalled Adams.
“Police started getting masses of money for anti-trafficking operations, and the way they justified that money was by raiding sex worker premises if migrant women (were present) and prosecuting anybody they could for brothel keeping. Even the migrant sex workers they were meant to be saving.”
Raids in London’s Soho district in 2013 demonstrated this as 200 police officers, dressed in full riot gear with dogs, stormed into women’s flats in Soho, dragging some out in their underwear.
Police claimed the raids were to “close brothels where we have evidence of very serious crimes happening, including rape and human trafficking”. But no victims of trafficking were found. Instead, migrant sex workers were traumatised and some were deported.
‘Persecutory raids’
The Modern Slavery Act 2015 was a pivotal piece of legislation that was headed in the right direction, but since it was passed, it has left those in the sector with mixed feelings due to its lack of victim provision protection.
For sex workers, the act gave the police justification for going into premises. Several raids have found no trafficking victims, but women were prosecuted for controlling prostitution for gain and brothel keeping.
“It provides a cover for really repressive and persecutory raids,” said Adams.
In December 2020, Diana Johnson, a Labour Party member of parliament, introduced the Sexual Exploitation Bill to “bust the business model of sex trafficking.”
Although the second reading of the bill has been delayed, it is expected to come back on the agenda at some point.
It’s been likened to the Nordic Model, an approach to prostitution law in which buyers of sex are criminalised while sex workers are decriminalised.
Sex worker advocacy groups, though, said the model has been a failure internationally, and Adams is concerned its introduction will only add to a long list of prostitution laws that hurt sex workers.
“The claimed intention is the protection of women,” she said. “But it was never about this. It was always about control and giving the police massive discretionary power which they were then free to abuse. And outrageously, the anti-trafficking laws have primarily been used to increase powers to deport migrant workers.”
Though laws are meant to protect society, sex workers in the UK say past and present legislation is doing the exact opposite for their community. They say they are determined to continue to fight for full decriminalisation of sex work, arguing it would reduce stigma and violence towards them as they attempt to provide for themselves and their families.
Any views expressed in this opinion piece are those of the author and not of Context or the Thomson Reuters Foundation.