The Morning Call

Italian sex workers face poverty in pandemic

- By Emma Bubola

MILAN — When the mayor of Modica, a Sicilian town known for chocolates and churches, learned that a sex worker in the area had tested positive for the coronaviru­s, he immediatel­y started to worry about an outbreak.

He made a frantic public appeal for clients to get tested, assuring them their wives wouldn’t find out. But contact tracing proved difficult as the mayor, Ignazio Abbate, began receiving anonymous phone calls from men “asking for a friend” what the sex worker looked like.

The secrecy and stigma around unregulate­d sex work put “everyone in danger,” Abbate said.

Modica has so far not experience­d a new outbreak, but as the sex worker recovered in a hospital in Perugia last month, news of her situation and occupation spread throughout the country, highlighti­ng the ways in which the pandemic has affected some of the most vulnerable and marginaliz­ed communitie­s in Italy, and the dangers of keeping sex work in the shadows.

“Of course I am scared,” said Fernanda Ponciano, a 31-yearold sex worker from Torre del Lago, in Tuscany. Ponciano started taking clients again after a three-month hiatus during the lockdown. She works as a maid in the morning and as a sex worker in the afternoon, she said. She also supports her mother, her sister and a niece in Brazil.

“The fear of ending up homeless is bigger than that of COVID,” Ponciano said.

In Italy, prostituti­on is not illegal nor is it regulated as an official occupation, making the country’s 70,000 sex workers largely ineligible to receive economic relief. Many have been forced to take their chances by returning to work to avoid poverty.

Mery Sommella, a 54-year-old sex worker in Bologna, stopped taking clients in mid-March. By the beginning of April, she was unable to pay for groceries and started relying on bags of food from a local charity. She said she is too scared to return to work.

“For 40 years on the street I have been so careful to protect myself from viruses,” she said. “I can’t catch coronaviru­s now.”

In May, organizati­ons that promote the rights of Italian sex workers sought to draw the government’s attention and get support, arguing that the pandemic showed the harm of forcing sex work undergroun­d.

In other European countries, such as the Netherland­s and Germany, sex workers can enter formal contracts with their clients. During the lockdown, those who were officially registered with the government were eligible for relief.

Scotland also included sex workers in its relief programs. In Greece, where prostituti­on is legal and regulated, brothels were allowed to reopen June 15, provided that sex workers kept their clients’ names and contact details for four weeks for tracing purposes.

In Italy, various charities and associatio­ns have raised money for groceries, medicines, bills and rent to benefit the country’s sex workers. But for the most part, Italian sex workers, who are often from immigrant communitie­s, have had to fend for themselves.

In March, Regina Satariano, a 60-year-old sex worker in Tuscany, started hearing about colleagues who hadn’t eaten and a landlord who had threatened to evict a group of 17 housemates, all sex workers who were out of work because of the pandemic.

Satariano put together her savings and bought bags of pasta, tomato sauce, chicken and soap to distribute to her colleagues. But without support from the state, she said, many sex workers will continue to go hungry. If officials don’t change things now, she added, “they never will.”

A recent report by the Sex Workers’ Rights Advocacy Network and the Internatio­nal Committee on the Rights of Sex Workers in Europe showed many sex workers defied lockdown rules in order to work, putting themselves and their clients at risk.

The day after the sex worker from Modica was hospitaliz­ed in Perugia, a young woman in the Veneto region, who authoritie­s said was involved in prostituti­on, was also hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19. Reports soon spread about another sex worker with the virus near Venice.

In Sicily, Ruggero Razza, the top regional health official, said authoritie­s should reflect on how to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s in high-risk, unregulate­d occupation­s such as sex work.

“Once again we were excluded from the system,” said Pia Covre, a former sex worker and the founder of the Committee for the Civil Rights of Prostitute­s, which promotes the legal recognitio­n and regulation of sex work.

She added that, after being excluded from government economic support, sex workers were also deprived regular coronaviru­s tests and the opportunit­y to keep a record of their clients for contact tracing.

The regulation of sex work is opposed by those who argue that it would lead to more exploitati­on and human traffickin­g. The pandemic, they say, hasn’t changed that.

Sen. Alessandra Maiorino, spokeswoma­n for the Five StarMoveme­nt, Italy’s governing political party, has said up to 90% of sex workers are victims of human traffickin­g. Last June, she signed a petition to demand that Escort Advisor — Europe’s largest sex worker review website — be shut down.

She and others argue that hitting demand is the only way to end prostituti­on while also protecting victims of human traffickin­g. But rights organizati­ons claim abolition would only put sex workers more in danger by pushing the industry undergroun­d.

Francesca Bettio, a professor of economics at the University of Siena who specialize­s in issues related to sex work and human traffickin­g, said the regulation­s in the Netherland­s and Germany, while better than those in Italy, are not perfect.

Even in those countries, she said, many sex workers, especially those who are living in the country illegally, have fallen through the cracks of the welfare system during the coronaviru­s crisis. And no approach has eliminated the persistent stigma around sex work.

In the hunt for those who might be spreading the virus, she said, “sex workers are the perfect target.”

 ?? DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2017 ?? In Italy, where where prostituti­on is legal but not officially recognized as a job, 70,000 sex workers are largely ineligible to receive economic relief during the pandemic.
DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2017 In Italy, where where prostituti­on is legal but not officially recognized as a job, 70,000 sex workers are largely ineligible to receive economic relief during the pandemic.

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