Ex-prostitute ends long march for French bill to penalise clients

A former prostitute who walked 800 kilometres across France to demand that the government make good on its promise to penalise clients ended her protest march in Paris Sunday. Rosen Hicher, 57, an activist who campaigns to abolish prostitution, is protesting that a draft law to fine men up to $1,900 for paying for sex was shelved by a committee of the French upper house Senate in July. Flanked by a dozen current or former prostitutes supporting her, Hicher made a symbolic stop in an upmarket street near the Champs-Elysees where she first prostituted herself, before making her way to the Senate to call on lawmakers “to wake up and finally act.”

[Prostitution] is not a right, no one has the right to buy a woman or sell her.

Rosen Hicher

The draft anti-prostitution law, which is inspired by similar legislation in Sweden that penalises prostitutes’ clients with the aim of eliminating the world’s oldest profession, was initially adopted by the lower house National Assembly in December last year. But critics fear the legislation will simply push prostitution further underground and make the women who earn their living from it more vulnerable to abuse. Paying or accepting payment for sex currently is not, in itself, a crime in France. But soliciting, pimping (which includes running brothels) and the sale of sex by minors are prohibited. The new bill decriminalises soliciting while shifting the focus of policing efforts to the clients.

If we want an end to prostitution, we must penalise clients.

Pascale Boistard