The Scotsman

Women’s groups call for national ban on lap dancing clubs

- By TOM PETERKIN Political Editor tom.peterkin@scotsman.com

Women’s groups have called for a national ban on lap-dancing clubs as Scottish Government plans to introduce a licensing scheme for sexual entertainm­ent venues took a step forward.

Yesterday the government published its summary of responses to consultati­on into regulating strip clubs and lap dancing bars.

Ministers have proposed a licensing scheme that will give individual local authoritie­s the power to set the number of licences at nil. But the Violence Against Women Partnershi­ps (VAWP) say they are disappoint­ed the government has not gone further and introduced a ban across the country.

Yesterday’s document said VAWPS wanted Scotland to follow Iceland’s example in banningsex­ualenterta­inment venues across the board.

VAWPS have been set up as multi-agency mechanism to deliver on Equally Safe, Scotland’s strategy for preventing and eradicatin­g violence against women and girls.

The document said VAWP expressed “disappoint­ment that there was no national decision taken to set the number of sexual entertainm­ent venues at nil (in line with that adopted in Iceland)”.

They also suggested the Scottish Government should work with the Convention of Scottish Local Authoritie­s (Cosla) to ensure each council passed a resolution to ensure there were zero venues.

Cosla said that it supported the new licensing regime but also backed the Sottish Government’s Equally Safe campaign defined violence against women as including lap dancing and stripping as well as prostituti­on and human traffickin­g.

But sexual entertainm­ent operators expressed concern that local authoritie­s could pursue an effective ban in their areas.

They said the legislatio­n, which is part of the Air Weapons and Licensing (Scotland) Act, was a “threat” to livelihood­s.

They were also concerned that the legislatio­n did not provide for “grandfathe­r rights”, whereby old rules can apply to existing cases, so that venues already in operation could continue doing business.

0 Campaigner­s want to see a ban on lap-dancing clubs in Scotland

 ?? PICTURE: ANDREW STUART ??
PICTURE: ANDREW STUART

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