Israel’s Ministerial Committee for Legislation
approved a draft law on Sunday that would impose prison sentences of up to six
months for solicitors of sexual services.
The draft law, which was strongly championed by MK
Orit Zuaretz (Kadima), chairwoman of the Knesset Subcommittee on Trafficking in
Women, would provide for an educational program for first-time offenders, in
order to allow them to avoid jail time. Second-time offenders will face
imprisonment. The law will be brought forth to a vote in the Knesset plenum.
The bill was modeled on similar legislation enacted
in other countries that, she said, has reduced the scale of prostitution in
those nations.
“The international community’s concern over the trade
in women for the purposes of prostitution and their transport to Israel
motivated us to hold concurrent protests in a number of places,” Zuaretz said
last week. “We want to make it clear to the decision makers that decisive
decisions on this matter are necessary.”
The annual turnover of Israel’s sex industry,
according to a number of sources, is at least NIS 2.4 billion. According to
estimates based on accounts by female prostitutes, in 2007 about one million
visits per month were made to organized sex trade establishments, with each
woman seeing an average of 10 customers a day. According to police, in the Tel
Aviv area alone between 250 and 400 apartments are used for prostitution.
A youth advocacy organization says that around a
third of the estimated 15,000 people engaged in prostitution in Israel are
teenagers. In addition, the Social Affairs Ministry estimates that at least 90
percent of Israel’s female sex workers are controlled by pimps, and on average
they begin working as prostitutes between the ages of 12 and 14.
Furthermore, recent studies indicate that 82 percent
of the women or girls involved in prostitution are or were subjected to
physical violence, with 55 percent of the injuries being caused by customers.
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