Photo via Flickr user Chris Beckett
Toni's story isn't unusual. Recent reports estimate that a sex worker is attacked or raped every day in the UK. Exact numbers are hard to pinpoint, however, given that – like Toni – many don't report crimes to the police.No doubt you already have your own take on prostitution. Maybe you think it's patriarchal oppression at its cock-swinging, woman-objectifying worst. Perhaps you think it's an enviable, glamorous job that might help you blast through your student loan repayments if only you had the guts to do it yourself. Or maybe you think it's just something that people do to get by. Regardless, it's probably safe to say – whatever your opinion – that you don't like the idea of women routinely facing violence.To give everyone the benefit of the doubt, let's assume this was the motivation behind plans taken to Parliament on Tuesday that would have made the buying of sex a criminal offence. Put forward by Labour MP Fiona Mactaggart, the amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill centred on her previously stated belief that "80 percent of women in prostitution are controlled by their drug dealer, their pimp, or their trafficker" (statistics that have been thoroughly debunked).Mactaggart's proposal prompted an outcry and a wave of activism. Sex workers, academics, women's charities, representatives from the NUS, the Women's Institute and several LGBTQ groups battled against the amendment, united on a key issue: safety.
Annoncering

Annoncering
Annoncering
(Illustration by Cei Willis)
Annoncering
Annoncering