Lethbridge Herald

Sex work debate divides women’s group

- Giuseppe Valiante

Members of Quebec’s most prominent women’s group are divided over whether to acknowledg­e prostituti­on as a freely chosen career and whether to support all Muslim female public servants who choose to wear a hijab at work.

About 150 representa­tives from Quebec’s main feminist federation adopted a motion Sunday night recognizin­g that women can choose to become sex workers and can consent to sexual activity in exchange for money.

Prostituti­on abolitioni­sts, who believe all sex work is necessaril­y exploitati­ve, are now questionin­g whether to remain in the organizati­on.

Gabrielle Bouchard, president of the Federation des femmes du Quebec, said on Monday the “large majority” of voters at the group’s general assembly supported the motion, “but some people were upset.”

The motion, in part, read: “The (federation) recognizes that women have agency within the prostituti­on/sex industry, including the ability to consent to the industry’s activities.”

Some thought the motion didn’t go far enough in its support for sex workers, while others thought it went too far, Bouchard explained in an interview.

“Some people were upset, some people were confused,” she said. “But for a large majority of members who voted, it was clearly a position that brings us together and gives us tools to move forward.”

Martine Cote, a spokeswoma­n for CLES, a Montreal-based group seeking to abolish prostituti­on, said in a text message Monday that her group will ask members whether they want to remain in the federation following the controvers­ial vote.

Cote’s organizati­on didn’t respond to an interview request, but it has been vocal in the past on the need to eliminate prostituti­on.

The group’s website states, “the source of prostituti­on is the demand created by men who give themselves the right to buy and sexually exploit women and children.”

It calls for “a world free from prostituti­on and all other forms of sexual exploitati­on.”

Bouchard said members were also split on a motion supporting all Muslim public servants who wish to wear a hijab at work. The vote was postponed, she said, because members wanted more informatio­n.

The federation’s current position — adopted in 2009 — says public servants in positions of authority should be prohibited from wearing conspicuou­s religious symbols on the job.

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