That's what I'm saying. I'm not saying that it's OK to take passports from sex workers because they take them from other workers. I'm saying some people do that to migrants, and many of them will be getting away with it.
Look its still not clear what point you're trying to make. Holding passports is clearly illegal under several pieces of legislation, including the Gangmaster regulations. Anyone caught doing it will get prosecuted
Sandys Superstars didn't employ illegals. Cuddles employed some. A factory that was raided where they found 6 out of 19 workers were illegals would not be closed down.
As a rule employers found employing illegals gets prosecuted. Prosecution may result in closure depending on the size of the fine and what other health & safety regulations were broken
The police will raid brothels whether they suspect illegals are there or not. They will deport illegals of course but they shouldn't pretend that they are rescuing them. They will jail men like Viner of course but they shouldn't pretend that they are helping to stop women from being raped and robbed. Just the opposite, by closing down well-run brothels and stopping women from working together they are helping to create the conditions where women get raped and
Police policy is defined regionally, but most forces are so short staffed that an established brothel will only get raided if some kind of illegal activity gets reported there.
In the Hankin case the money laundering got too big to ignore.
In the Viner case a lot of the information discovered was never revealed in the TV program. That may have been done to protect witnesses or sources, or it may have been done to protect the court case. Whatever, details of Viner's relationship with the women, how he tricked them into believing they were in relationships with them, then how once they were brought to the UK and redirected to sex work
were all suppressed in the program.
There's a debate about what is the best way to respond to trafficking. For example, on Tuesday there was a Radio 4 documentary called A Long Way From Vietnam. The Vietnamese illegal migrants work on cannabis farms, nail bars and in the service industry. No mention of prostitution in the documentary except once when a police officer said profits from cannabis farms etc could be used to set up prostitution. That's why I find it difficult to believe what you said about in Manchester there are a couple of hundred or more hidden women in Asian brothels and parlours.
The Vietnamese cases are difficult. Many of the "children" on the dope farms prove to be men in their 20's and often, while here illegally, are here willingly in the hope of claiming asylum. Getting to the truth in each case is damned difficult and some mistakes will inevitably be made.
The couple of hundred hidden Asians is a fairly accurate estimate based on what we know of the Chinese operating methods
The Channel 4 documentary isn't helping this debate. The police are not winning the war against trafficking - however you define trafficking - just as they aren't winning the war against drugs. There needs to be a change of policy.
That's what you keep saying. You have nothing to back up your assertion. Unlike me. I have quoted Laura Agustin and the English Collective of Prostitutes. It is illegal if that person is being paid or is getting any kind of reward, which could be living rent free or having a reduced rent. We haven't even touched on living off immoral earnings and money laundering. Who would be in a flat with a sex worker and their client if they weren't getting some kind of reward?
Something we can partially agree on. The TV series seriously downplayed many aspects of the case. As I said above, many aspects including Viner's personal relationships with the women were suppressed.
To be truthful it was a very benign case. If a TV program had been made of some of the Romanian or Hungarian gangs jailed over the last few years then the details would have been eye opening
Trafficking for sexual exploitation is a serious problem in this country, and while you'll never eliminate it, you can suppress it. People with your denial mindset only serve to undermine the prevention work that is done
I also don't like the way you wrote "Awful lot of speculation and falsity over a working girl's day" when I said that most of the time they will be watching TV, looking at her smart phone or ironing. This web page shows that what I am saying is true.
External Link/Members Only
Then you speculated that I might be a pimp or a crook, or that what I have said is 'total fabrication'. You don't know how to conduct a discussion.
You don't like what I say or how I say it? Well that's just tough shit. I stand by every comment