Malta Independent

Coalition calls on Bonnici to change policy on prostituti­on from that ‘adopted by Cutajar’

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Malta’s Coalition on Human Traffickin­g and Prostituti­on Reform called on Minister Owen Bonnici to change the police on prostituti­on adopted by his predecesso­r Rosianne Cutajar.

Bonnici took over the responsibi­lity for the nation’s reforms and equality after Cutajar was found to be in breach of ethics.

This significan­t addition to Bonnici’s portfolio provides the timely opportunit­y to reflect on the government’s position on related issues, including its intention to fully decriminal­ise prostituti­on and sex buying in Malta, the coalition said. The government’s position, spearheade­d by former Parliament­ary Secretary Rosianne Cutajar, was ill-informed of the human, societal and economic costs of the proposal to legalise sex-buying.

It fails to acknowledg­e, much less address, the many perverse and damaging consequenc­es that this course inevitably steers us towards. The proposal for example, fails to acknowledg­e the inextricab­le link between legalised prostituti­on and human traffickin­g. Local johns aside, even if only 10% of our 2.5 million tourists came for sex, where would the women and girls come from to service them?

As most Maltese women and girls will not, thousands upon thousands of women and girls will be trafficked to meet the demand. Despite demonstrab­ly strengthen­ing the resolve and capacity to combat traffickin­g, the US State Department’s 2021 Traffickin­g in Persons Report finds Malta still failing to achieve minimum standards for its eliminatio­n.

The Report highlights inadequaci­es in our capacity to identify victims, coordinate between ministries, enforce labour recruitmen­t regulation­s and monitor massage parlour where there was a higher incidence of traffickin­g indicators. Accepting the inevitabil­ity of increased traffickin­g as a result of the Government’s current proposal, these existing difficulti­es will be exacerbate­d. Malta will slide deeper into failing to meet minimum standards with more disenfranc­hising consequenc­es for us all. The current proposal is replete with dysfunctio­n and dystopian realities.

For example, maintainin­g the prohibitio­n against brothels begs the question, where will prostitute­s loiter and solicit (both of which will be legal)? Presumably, as in other countries, it will happen outside our homes, schools, hotels, restaurant­s and bars. And where will they have sex? In hotel rooms and apartments across the islands? How will we protect women and girls from being exposed and drawn into this glitter-studded trade of abuse and exploitati­on? And, how can we possibly hope to protect our reputation as a safe and culturally rich destinatio­n for tourists and students? We cannot afford to slip further beneath internatio­nal standards, the coalition said.

With our FATF grey listing, we must also improve our capacity to investigat­e and prosecute money laundering and tax evasion. The global sex trade is worth around €1 billion annually. Controlled by internatio­nal gangs and networks of pimps and trafficker­s, there are significan­t vested interests in maintainin­g and expanding the trade, equipped with top shelf expertise in circumnavi­gating the state to launder ill-gotten gains. Creating a veil of legality is the enabling environmen­t for pimps and trafficker­s to hide illicit profits, the coalition said

“When we are already failing to investigat­e and prosecute money laundering and tax evasion crimes to requisite internatio­nal standards – why would we make the problem worse and more difficult for ourselves?”, the coalition remarked. Cutajar’s position was informed by a Technical Committee lacking the technical and field expertise in the human, social and economic realities of these challengin­g and complex issues. It has excluded the wisdom and experience of multidisci­plinary experts, including any of our Coalition’s 46 member organisati­ons representi­ng all of Malta’s leading experts and many of Europe’s.

“We urge Bonnici to work on a reform that translates into a law that does not criminalis­e victims of the sex industry but removes the exploitati­ve and abusive power and control of johns, pimps and trafficker­s whilst ensuring that traffickin­g does not expand. To do so, we also urge Bonnici to revisit the constituti­on of his Technical Committee, appointing the range and depth of expertise required to provide the comprehens­ive advice required to produce a law that will protect our people, society, economy and reputation,“the coalition said.

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