The Scotsman

Scotland must take the ‘For Sale’ sign off women’s bodies

◆ Prostituti­on survivor calls for laws to be overhauled or Scotland will never have equality between women and men

- Rachel Amery Political Reporter

A Scottish prostituti­on survivor says she wants to see Scotlandta­ke the‘ for sale’ sign down from women’s bodies by overhaulin­g the laws on buying and selling sex.

Diane Martin, 59, spent years being exploited as a high-end prostitute­d woman and is now fighting to have selling sex decriminal­ised in Scotland. Selling soliciting in public, kerb crawling and brothel-keeping is illegal in Scotland, but buying sex and running pimping websites is not, meaning the men buying sex are not criminalis­ed in any way.

Ms Martin is now part of the A Model for Scotland campaign, which is calling on the Scottish Government to change the laws on prostituti­on by decriminal­ising the women selling sex and instead making it illegal for men to buy sex.

In its 2021 manifesto, the SNP promised to look at this issue and reform prostituti­on law in Scotland.

Ms Martin went to London as a teenager, but said she was misled about what she was going to do and once she ran out of money was pressured into prostituti­on.

“I ended up way out of my depth and surrounded by older people who realised they could make a lot of money out of me – not just madams, but people pretending to be my friends who recognised my vulnerabil­ity,” she said.

“I went from being a happy, trusting girl to finding myself standing in a penthouse being looked over by a madam.”

Ms Martin said it was hard to see the grooming and psychologi­cal control she was being subjected to. She said being sexually abused as a child meant she was more vulnerable to coercion, adding: “Ridiculous­ly described as ‘high class’, I was sent out by what was described as the safest agency in London.

“I found myself in the middle of Mayfair in an evening gown, askinga police man for directions to the address I’d been given, willing him to see my predicamen­t and ask me if I needed help.”

She described men treating her like they were “renting a film”, and said the glamorous lifestyle she was forced to pretend did not make the reality of prostituti­on any less grim.

“When the people paying for you are famous, in government, civil servants, members of other countries’ government­s or have diplomatic immunity, you don’t have the confidence that you would be believed or protected if you reported violence or rape,” she said.

“Unfortunat­ely, the best education and opportunit­ies didn’t preclude them from degrading and violent behaviour … being in a penthouse suite doesn’t soften the blow of rape.”

Ms Martin attempted to escape prostituti­on after an airport security guard hid her and got her on a flight, but she said someone was waiting for her on the other end.

She said she started to “shut down physically and emotionall­y”and was having daily panic attacks. but after a“brutal” rape, she managed to get back to scotland.

To recover from her harrowing experience, Ms Martin went on to volunteer and eventually work at a centre providing holidays for people with physical disabiliti­es, and then moved to new york city to work

It is time that women are no longer criminalis­ed for their own exploitati­on Diane Martin

with homeless people. She came across numerous women who were being exploited through prostituti­on, starting hero na path to helping women to exit prostituti­on.

Ms Martin later returned to Scotland and ran a project to help women out of prostituti­on for 15 years. In 2013 she was given a CBE for services to vulnerable women.

Ms Martin said her own personal experience of sex traffickin­g meant she fully understood the realities of prostituti­on.

She said :“what i have learned is that it is the same thing – a bruise or a threat feels the same whether you’re in a fivestar hotel or leant against a car park wall, whether wearing Prada or Primark.

“The fear, the violence and the hopelessne­ss feels the same, as does the desire for safety and a life free of violence. It’s not a job like any other, it is exploitati­on .”

As well as shifting the burden of criminalit­y, Ms Martin is also campaignin­g to reduce men’s demand for prostituti­on as well. She said punters would “continue to line the pockets of pimps, trafficker­s and organised crime groups” who were taking in billions of pounds “off the literal backs of women and children”.

“I want to see scotland take the ‘For Sale’ sign down and refuse to have women’s bodies for sale for the sexual gratificat­ion of men and their desire to control women ,” she said .“it is time that women are no longer criminalis­ed for their own exploitati­on, but supported to build the lives they would want for themselves. I believe we must alsocrimin­alise the demand by penalising sex buyers.”

Ms Martin said Scotland could look to other countries which have implemente­d this approach, such as Sweden, Ireland, Norway, France, Ireland, Northern Ireland and the US state of Maine.

Community safety minister Siobhian Brown said: “Prostituti­on is a form of violence against women and girls and is completely unacceptab­le.

“Our recently published strategy to challenge men’s demand for prostituti­on and actions to support women out of prostituti­on is informed by the voices of those with direct experience of this form of exploitati­on and by the approaches of other countries.

“The strategy outlines a new pilot programme to improve access to support those with experience of prostituti­on.from this pilot will help inform any future legislativ­e considerat­ions, including whether to criminalis­e the purchase of sex.”

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 ?? ?? Clockwise from top: Former prostitute­d woman Diane Martin; Ms Martin said: ‘What I have learned is a bruise or a threat feels the same whether you’re in a fivestar hotel or leant against a car park wall’; Community safety minister Siobhian Brown said: “Prostituti­on is a form of violence against women and girls’
Clockwise from top: Former prostitute­d woman Diane Martin; Ms Martin said: ‘What I have learned is a bruise or a threat feels the same whether you’re in a fivestar hotel or leant against a car park wall’; Community safety minister Siobhian Brown said: “Prostituti­on is a form of violence against women and girls’
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