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40s, sat in the passenger seat of her second-hand Ford Transit van
wearing only black underwear. It was 7:30pm on a Friday night. She lit a
pink lantern on the dashboard. Soon, a steady flow of cars was circling
the car park – Mercedes, jeeps, old bangers — their drivers slowing to
peer at the women in corsets sitting alone in a dozen parked, white vans,
arms folded, candlelight flickering across their faces. "Some men drive
round for hours just staring," she said. "Then they'll stop, ask the price,
and demand a discount. I'll say, 'What, for all that petrol you've wasted?'"
A silver car slowed. "20 euros for a blow job, 40 euros for 'love'," she
smiled. "Too expensive," said the man, accelerating. A 60-year-old
agreed to sex for 40 euros. Karen climbed into the back of the van, which
she had decorated with a bed, a heater, purple curtains and a chest of
drawers. Three minutes later the man walked out into the night. Karen
laid out a clean sheet of paper-towel on the bed, spruced her blond hair.
"See, it's all very quick," she said. Most of the evening was spent sitting
waiting. Then in 15 minutes, three clients paid for sex, including a
Spanish man in his 20s in designer clothes. Each took less than five
minutes. She had made her daily quota of cash needed to pay her bills.
A former secretary from the southern naval city of Toulon, three times
married, with two daughters, Karen first started selling sex in the 1980s: a
brief stint on the street near a Lyon station, working mainly in clients' cars,
"which is very uncomfortable". She quit and got married, but in 1992,
divorced and with a young child she suddenly needed to "put food on the
table". She returned to sex-work, first in a hostess bar, then meeting
clients at her home via a newspaper small-ad. For seven years, she has
worked on the street in her van, Monday to Saturday from 7pm to around
1am, paying tax as self-employed. "'No pimp, no boss' is my motto. I'd
rather do this than an office job, getting shouted at by a boss for a
pittance." Her strict rules include condoms for everything and no kissing
clients. "You have to hit rock bottom to do this," she said. "It's not an easy
job, but it's a job where you can make money quickly. People try to say
we're victims, say that we're alienated, that there's a sex attack in our
childhood history, but I've never been raped by anyone. This is my free
choice." She never looks into a client's eyes in the moment of a sexual
exchange – "I look anywhere but" – and they rarely tell her their names.
But in her top drawer beside the condom supplies is a petition signed by
several of them: in neat writing, stating their profession: such as "public
works" or "driver". It's a protest against the new French government's war
on prostitution.
Sex work was hardly a priority in the French election campaign, yet it has
become one of the defining social issues of Francois Hollande's new
Socialist government. In June, the women's minister, Najat Vallaud-
Belkacem, made the bold announcement that she wanted to "abolish
prostitution" in France and Europe. "My objective, like that of the Socialist
party, is to see prostitution disappear," she said. The previous French
parliament had already adopted a resolution aiming for a "society without
prostitution". But can a government rid society of paid sex? The debate is
raging among French intellectuals. Sex workers have taken to the streets,
accusing the government of moralistic paternalism, saying Socialists are
using the issue to distance themselves from the pariah Dominique
Strauss-Kahn. DSK, once the Socialist hope for president, is under official
investigation in France over complicity in a pimping operation after sex
workers were allegedly procured for his orgies. He said he didn't pay and
didn't know the women were sex workers. "I challenge you to distinguish
a naked prostitute from any other naked woman," his lawyer told the
press. The inquiry has been extended to examine alleged group rape
over the question of whether one sex worker was forced. Strauss-Kahn
denies any violence.
The "white van women" selling sex on Lyon's industrial estate in Gerland
embody the French state's difficult attitudes to prostitution. As in the UK,
prostitution itself – receiving money for sex, or paying for sex – is not a
crime. But activities around it are. Laws prohibit pimping, human
trafficking, buying sex from a minor and soliciting sex in public. Brothels
were outlawed in 1946.
Lyon, France's third biggest city, which has around 600 street prostitutes,
has always been at the heart of sex worker protests. In 1975, more than
100 prostitutes occupied a church in the city complaining about police
harassment, sparking similar protests across France until riot police
evicted them. Now the Lyon Transit vans are the new frontline. In 2003,
Nicolas Sarkozy, then interior minister, introduced a controversial law
against soliciting, making it illegal to stand in a public place known for
prostitution dressed in revealing clothes. To get round this, women
started working in private vans. Selling sex inside a vehicle was not
breaking the law. But police are now using any means to crack down on
the growing number of sex-work vans, namely parking tickets and tow-
trucks. In Lyon, sex workers complain of constant parking fines and being
towed to the pound. Some on the industrial estate owe thousands of
euros in parking tickets and pound-release fines accrued each month.
"You can get two parking tickets in 20 minutes, or be towed away on
Tuesday, pay a fine, and be towed again on Thursday," said one. The
women stand their ground. One drives 500km from Bordeaux each week,
works and sleeps in her van for four days and nights, before going home.
Others travel to the area from Burgundy or Paris.
In a cafe near Place de Clichy, in northern Paris, Elizabeth, 49, and seven
Algerian transgender sex workers were having coffee before going to
work on the streets in the west of Paris. Elizabeth, originally from Cali in
Colombia, had arrived in her blue Citroën people carrier, which with a
mattress in the boot doubled as her workspace in Paris's Bois de
Boulogne park, where she sells sex from 11am to 6pm each weekday, for
¤40. The Bois de Boulogne, a favorite daytime jogging spot of Sarkozy's,
is a centre of the crackdown on prostitutes' vans. Elizabeth has had more
than 60 parking tickets this year. "I'm considering a hunger strike against
the idea of criminalizing clients," she said. "If clients risk prison, sex work
will be forced underground and into apartments, pimps will benefit, sex
workers' security will be compromised. Already the mere talk of clients
being criminalized means there are less customers on the street."
There is fierce debate in France over whether all sex workers should be
considered victims, or whether "independents", without pimps and
beginning to be unionized, should be viewed as separate. Pro-abolition
feminists say the act of paying for sex is always an act of violence, forcing
the sex worker to anaesthetize themselves and cut themselves off from
their own body to endure it. "Slavery hasn't been eradicated, but it has
been abolished. The same choice for prostitution would be an advance
for civilization," said the feminist Sylviane Agacinski. Another high-profile
feminist, Elisabeth Badinter, co-wrote a counter-argument saying talk of
abolishing prostitution was based on "two debatable assumptions: that
charging for sex is an affront to women's dignity and that all prostitutes
are victims of their bastard clients". She said a woman selling sex was
"not necessarily a victim of male oppression". And not all clients were
"horrible predators or sexual obsessives who treat the woman as
disposable objects".
Cloé Navarro, 27, spokeswoman for the Strass, the French sex workers'
union, studied as a nurse and now sells sex on the street in the west of
Paris to pay for her postgraduate studies for work with autistic children.
She says she feels safer on the street, working in clients' cars or hotels,
rather than on the internet, where she can't see the man before accepting
an encounter. "This is not a job everyone can do, but it's a real job. You
need a lot of empathy. People come to us with problems. Sometimes I
think I've got the word 'nurse' stamped on my forehead," she said. She
described clients as "everyone", from 20s to 70s, widowers, men with
disabilities, "a high percentage" of new fathers with babies and toddlers.
"This government is stigmatizing sex workers. I work one street away
from a police station. The abolitionist approach would push sex work into
a no-man's land where we are more likely be attacked," she said.
The new face of the union is its leader, Morgane Merteuil, 25, a
postgraduate literature student. She started sex work as a student in a
hostess bar in Grenoble, but now works exclusively on the internet as a
self-employed escort. A one-time anarchist activist and rebel from a
conservative provincial family, she has just published what she calls a
feminist sex workers' manifesto. She balks at "media cliches" that sex
work divides between low-class work on the street or high-class five-star
luxury: "I don't think I've ever met a client in anything more than a cheap
hotel costing ¤60 a night," she said. She rails at the new left-wing
government for "morality politics" and "paternalism", describes sex-work
as a job – "a necessity, like any other job" and demands the immediate
scrapping of the law against soliciting.
In Lyon, Karen was preparing to lock up her van and go home to her
boyfriend. "It's not possible to abolish prostitution," she said. "Look at the
death penalty, did that stop murder?"
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