Munich/Strasbourg, July 25, 2024.
Today, on July 25, 2024, the European Court on Human Rights issued its judgement in a case MA
and others vs. France. While the court didn’t find that the French law explicitly violates Article 8
of the European Convention on Human rights, it notes it is fully aware of the difficulties and risks
- undeniable - to which sex workers are exposed in the exercise of their activity. The court
apparently took into account the fact that the criminalisation of the purchase of sexual services
as a tool to combat trafficking in human beings is currently the subject of a lively debate, which
is deeply divisive both at European and international level.
“With this ruling, these judges have their hands stained with the blood of people like Vanessa
Campos and Jessica Sarmiento, Peruvian trans women sex workers murdered at Bois de
Boulogne, and those of around thirty sex workers who have died since 2016, the year in which
the French law was implemented, making our work much more dangerous and criminalised”,
Sabrina Sanchez, the director of European Sex Workers’ Rights Alliance says.
The persistent association of exploitation, violence against women and sex work is very
damaging to the health and safety of those affected. States that criminalise customers under the
pretext of combating exploitation are in fact fighting sex work, regardless of the conditions
under which it is carried out. In doing so, they endanger the health and safety of the persons
concerned and violate their rights to personal autonomy, sexual freedom and freedom to
exercise their profession.
“All human rights apply to sex workers. Sex workers don't have to act in any particular way to
earn their human rights. They already have their human rights. It is specifically the patriarchal
control of women's sexuality, particularly in relation to sex workers, that creates space for people
to think that autonomy can be outside the person so that the state can try to control and
regulate it”. Says Dr.Tlaleng Mofokeng, UN Special Rapporteur on the right of everyone to the
enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, who submitted an
amicus curiae brief to the Court.
Another human rights body that has clearly articulated the human rights implications of
criminalising the purchase of sex is the UN Working Group on Discrimination against Women
and Girls in 2023 or, the Council of Europe Commissioner on Human Rights in February this year.
In December 2019, more than 250 sex workers, many of them migrants and/or gender minorities,
took their case to the European Court of Human Rights to challenge whether the criminalisation
of clients was compatible with their fundamental rights: the freedom to pursue a professional
activity, the right to personal autonomy and sexual freedom, and the rights to physical integrity
and life.
A press conference co-hosted by ESWA at the International AIDS Conference in Munich sparked
a wave of outrage, commitment and solidarity across the sex worker and human rights
movements.