Amsterdam’s first woman mayor plans red light district overhaul

FAN Editor
Mayor of Amsterdam Femke Halsema poses for a portrait in Amsterdam
Mayor of Amsterdam Femke Halsema poses for a portrait in Amsterdam, Netherlands June 26, 2019. REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw

July 3, 2019

By Anthony Deutsch and Toby Sterling

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – Amsterdam’s first female mayor launched plans on Wednesday to overhaul the city’s red light district and its window displays, in a bid to protect sex workers from gawping tourists.

In what would be the most radical revamp of the sex trade there since the Dutch legalized prostitution nearly two decades ago, Femke Halsema suggested stopping the practice of sex workers standing in window-fronted rooms, among other options.

Changes were needed because of social shifts, she told Reuters, including the rise of human trafficking and an increase in the number of tourists visiting the district and using their phones to take and post pictures of the women.

“We’re forced by circumstances because Amsterdam changes,” Halsema said in an interview before the launch.

“I think a lot of the women who work there feel humiliated, laughed at and that’s one of the reasons we are thinking about changing,” she added.

The plans included four main scenarios: ending street window displays, closing down city center brothels and moving them elsewhere, reducing the number of city center brothels and stepping up the licensing of window workers.

The scenarios, drawn up in a report titled “The Future of Window Prostitution in Amsterdam”, also included a broader proposal for an “erotic city zone” that would have a clear entrance gate, similar to a system used in Hamburg, she added.

Those options will be presented to residents and businesses at town hall meetings this month before one chosen and put to a vote in the city council later this year, Halsema said.

Past efforts to control the red light district have faced opposition from sex workers and businesses involved in the lucrative trade.

The mayor said there were no plans to outlaw prostitution outright.

“We legalized prostitution because we thought and still think that legal prostitution give a woman a chance to be autonomous, independent. Criminalizing prostitution has been done in the United States, I think, makes women extra vulnerable.”

The changes had three main aims, she said, to protect women from degrading work conditions, to cut crime and to revive the 500-year-old neighborhood which, along with Amsterdam’s canals, is part of a UNESCO world heritage site.

One sex worker and member of PROUD, a union defending the prostitutes’ interests, told Reuters the women there were facing increasingly disrespectful behavior.

“The tourists don’t know how to behave themselves in this area,” said the women who declined to give her name.

(Editing by Andrew Heavens)

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