Italy's
capital may soon have a red light district. Authorities in Rome have approved a
plan to allow prostitution in a business center to the south of the city. The
move has been met by fierce opposition.
Deutsche Welle, 7 Feb 2015
Officials
on Saturday said they expected the red light zone slated for the southern
suburb of Eur to be open for business in April.
The plan's
architects in the local council hope to bring the district's unregulated sex
trade under control by making it possible for customers to visit prostitutes in
a designated non-residential area.
"Eur
is already the city's red light district with more than 20 streets under siege
day and night," local campaigner Cristina Lattanzi told La Repubblica
newspaper. "There are streets for transvestites, streets for very young
girls, streets for male prostitution. Us residents need a bit of peace."
Police will
be able to impose fines of 500 euros ($565) on prostitutes caught working
outside the red light zone, and a task force of health and social workers will
be deployed to help tackle exploitation, pimping, and trafficking. The group
will also be responsible for distributing condoms and promoting safer sex.
Rome's
center-left mayor, Ignazio Marino, gave his approval for the plan late on
Friday.
If the
experiment proves successful, the local council aims to establish other red
light zones in the Eur area - a business district that was originally built at
the behest of dictator Benito Mussolini in the 1930s.
'Bizarre
idea'
Plans to
establish what would be Rome's first red light district have drawn strong
criticism from the Catholic Church, from the center-right opposition on Rome's
municipal council, and from members of Marino's own Democratic Party (PD).
PD councillor
Gianluca Santilli argued the scheme would likely lead to unacceptable
prostitute "ghettoes."
"I
hope it is just a bizarre idea dreamed up to draw attention to the
problem," he said.
Enrico
Feroci, the Rome director of Catholic charity Caritas, said the initiative was
morally wrong. "Prostitution always involves human exploitation: trying to
regularize it or tolerate it is therefore always mistaken."
However,
Andrea Catarci, the council leader in a neighboring district, threw his support
behind the scheme, saying many parts of the capital faced similar problems with
street prostitution.
"It is
a courageous move and one the whole city - institutions and associations -
needs to get behind," he said.
While
Italian law does not ban the sale of sex, soliciting, pimping, and operating a
brothel are illegal. According to government estimates, Italy has 70,000 -
100,000 prostitutes, and 2.5 million men who regularly use their services.
nm/rc (AFP, dpa)
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