Author(s): Tessa Martens
2004
This site answers some of the most frequently asked questions about the Dutch government’s policy on prostitution.
What is the official policy on prostitution ? Why are brothels allowed ? And what are the regulations governing them ?
This booklet is also available on the internet
www.minbuza.nl/english (under "Welcome to the Netherlands" > "About the Netherlands"> "Policy on drugs, euthanasia and other ethical issues")
CONTENT
• Is prostitution legal in the Netherlands?
• What are the implications of article 250a of the Criminal Code?
• What forms of prostitution are illegal?
• What does the policy involve?
• Why was the ban on brothels lifted?
• How do prostitutes benefit?
• How do inspections work?
• Can local authorities refuse to allow brothels?
• Are the police allowed to keep a register of prostitutes?
• What is the policy on health care?
• What forms of prostitution are legal?
• How many prostitutes are there in the Netherlands and what countries do they come from?
• How does the new legislation affect labour relations?
• How does the new legislation affect prostitutes’ rights to social security?
• What arrangements are made for the collection of tax and social insurance contributions?
• How does the policy help to combat human trafficking?
• Which foreign nationals are allowed to engage in prostitution?
• Is help available for victims of human trafficking?
• What interest groups exist to assist prostitutes?
Is prostitution legal in the Netherlands ?
Prostitution has never been illegal in the Netherlands. Brothels,
however, were illegal until the ban was lifted on 1 October 2000. It is
now legal to run a business where men or women over the age of consent
are voluntarily employed as prostitutes. The person running the
business must satisfy certain conditions and obtain a licence from the
local authorities. Sex clubs, brothels and escort services may
therefore operate as legal businesses. The Netherlands is one of the
first countries in the world to recognise voluntary adult prostitution
as a normal occupation.
What are the implications of article 250a of the Criminal Code ?
The new legislation repealed articles 250bis and 432 of the Criminal
Code, making it legal to operate a brothel or solicit clients for a
prostitute. A new article has been introduced – article 250a –
prohibiting the exploitation of prostitutes and, as of 1 October 2002,
other forms of sexual exploitation.
What forms of prostitution are illegal ?
Article 250a of the Criminal Code defines the following acts as offences:
• forcing another person to engage in prostitution;
• inducing a minor to engage in prostitution;
•
recruiting, abducting or taking a person to engage in prostitution in
another country (pursuant to the 1933 International Convention for the
Suppression of the Traffic in Women of Full Age);
• receiving income from prostitution involving a minor or a person forced to engage in prostitution;
• forcing another person to surrender income from prostitution.
These offences carry a fine and a custodial sentence of up to six
years, which may be extended to eight or ten years in the event of
aggravating circumstances.
Tougher legislation is expected to be
enacted in mid-2004. It will prohibit certain forms of economic
exploitation, unrelated to prostitution, and raise the penalty to a
maximum of 12 years if the offence involves grievous bodily harm or
danger to life, and to a maximum of 15 years for loss of life.
What does the policy involve ?
Although the ban on brothels was lifted in 2000, no legislation
governing prostitution was introduced. It has been left to local
authorities to formulate and implement policies tailored to the
circumstances prevailing in their area. Hence, the local authorities
lay down the rules for brothels operating within their jurisdiction.
They are also responsible for issuing licences. Brothels must be
licensed and must therefore satisfy the conditions. The Association of
Netherlands Municipalities has published guidelines for the regulation
of brothels, sex shops and streetwalkers.
Policy on the
establishment of brothels enables local authorities to exert influence
on their location, ensuring that they do not disturb or intrude on the
life of a neighbourhood. Their location must conform to zoning and
urban renewal plans and to local by-laws on the living and working
environment.
Regulations on premises specify the minimum size of
working areas and govern safety, fire precautions and hygiene. For
instance, every working area must be equipped with a panic button, and
hot and cold running water. Condoms must be provided.
Regulations on
the operation of brothels govern the position and status of
prostitutes, protecting their physical and mental integrity and
prohibiting forced prostitution, the employment of minors or people
without a valid residence permit. They also include measures to prevent
excessive nuisance in neighbourhoods where brothels are located.
Why was the ban on brothels lifted ?
Brothels were banned in the Netherlands in 1911 to protect
prostitutes from exploitation. However, the ban has not been enforced
for the past 50 years. Action was only taken against brothels and sex
clubs if they engaged in criminal activities or disturbed public order.
To end abuses in the sex industry, the Netherlands decided to
change the law to reflect everyday reality. It is now legal to employ
prostitutes who are over the age of consent, and do the work
voluntarily, but stricter measures have been introduced under criminal
law to prevent exploitation. The legalisation of brothels enables the
government to exercise more control over the sex industry and counter
abuses. The police conduct frequent controls of brothels and are thus
in a position to pick up signs of human trafficking. This approach is
in the interests of prostitutes themselves, and it facilitates action
against sexual violence and abuse and human trafficking.
The new legislation aims to:
- control and regulate the employment of prostitutes through a municipal licensing system;
- protect the position of prostitutes;
- protect people from being coerced into prostitution;
- protect minors against sexual abuse;
- reduce prostitution by foreign nationals residing illegally in the Netherlands;
- sever the links between prostitution and crime.
How do prostitutes benefit ?
The legalisation of brothels has several advantages for prostitutes.
It means that local authorities can publish by-laws governing safety,
hygiene and working conditions in brothels. Brothels may be forbidden
to force prostitutes to consume alcoholic drinks with clients, or
engage in unsafe sex or certain sexual acts. They may also be compelled
to allow health services or interest groups unrestricted access to
their premises.
Prostitution is now considered a legitimate
occupation. So prostitutes now have the same rights and obligations as
other professionals. The owners of brothels operated in a grey area for
many years, in that the legislation against it was not enforced. As a
result, the working relationship between prostitutes and their
employers differs from that in other sectors. It is up to the parties
themselves to define their positions, since this is an area where the
government exercises little influence. Most brothel owners are
unwilling to enter into employment contracts. The rationale is that
they provide support services to self-employed prostitutes, and are
therefore not obliged to pay income tax or social insurance
contributions. The authorities can, however, verify the nature of the
working relationship and take action against anyone operating under
false pretences.
The rights of prostitutes are more explicit, as
the industry now has to comply with labour laws. It has the same
obligations as any other sector, relating to tax and social insurance
contributions. The government publishes booklets for prostitutes and
their employers, containing information on social insurance and related
matters. They examine the comparative advantages of employment and
self-employment, and their respective rights and obligations.
A
study was conducted two years after the ban on brothels had been
lifted, but it was too soon to draw any conclusions about its impact.
Rehabilitating a sector that had been operating illegally for almost a
century requires more than new laws or new policy. Prostitutes and
their employers need to be sufficiently informed about their rights and
obligations, and the social position and status of prostitutes must be
improved. The outcome of the study will be useful in this process.
How do inspections work ?
Monitoring brothels to ensure that they satisfy the conditions for a
licence is an administrative matter. It is up to the local authorities
to decide who is responsible for doing so. In practice, it is usually
the police. Local enforcement policy is coordinated by the mayor, the
public prosecutor and the chief of police. Agreements reached between
them may be set down in enforcement instructions.
Brothels
that fail to observe the regulations are liable to administrative
sanctions such as a penalty payment, withdrawal of their licence and
closure. They can also be prosecuted for the offences covered by
article 250a of the Criminal Code (see 2).
Can local authorities refuse to allow brothels ?
Local authorities formulate their own policies on the establishment
and location of brothels and can therefore decide whether they may be
established and, if so, where they may be located. They may also refuse
to allow certain forms of prostitution, such as window soliciting. They
may for example withdraw a licence or refuse to grant one if:
• the owner of a brothel is unable to produce a police; clearance certificate issued by the local authorities;
• the intended location conflicts with zoning plans;
• the brothel employs a minor or an illegal resident or any person under coercion;
• it is in the interest of public order;
•
it makes the area less desirable to live or work in. Permission to run
a brothel may not be refused on moral or ethical grounds.
Are the police allowed to keep a register of prostitutes ?
No. This would contravene the various laws protecting personal
privacy. However, the police may keep a temporary register for a
specific law enforcement purpose, for example to investigate human
trafficking. They are obliged to report this to the Data Protection
Board.
What is the policy on health care ?
The local authorities are responsible for ensuring that prostitutes
have easy access to health care, with readily available services and no
sanctions, but health and working conditions are primarily the
responsibility of the prostitutes themselves and their employers. The
local authorities' job is to ensure that employers fulfil their
obligations. For instance, they can set conditions for granting
licences and take steps to ensure that those conditions are met.
Employers'
responsibilities include pursuing a safe sex policy, giving their
workers the opportunity to benefit from information activities, and
encouraging them to have regular medical checkups for sexually
transmissible diseases. General practitioners and specialists have been
given special guidelines on STD screening among prostitutes.
Medical
checkups are not compulsory. Obligatory checkups reinforce the idea
that prostitutes transmit infections. Moreover, clients use medical
checkups as an excuse to ask for unsafe sex. As a rule, prostitutes are
asked to have medical checkups four times a year. The majority consider
them useful precautions and are willing to comply. Clinics in the
cities offer free and anonymous checkups. Safe sex and good information
are of paramount importance in protecting prostitutes and their clients
against transmissible diseases.
What forms of prostitution are legal ?
There are different kinds of prostitution. The majority of
prostitutes work in sex clubs or red-light windows; others find clients
in hotels or bars or through escort services. Many local authorities
prohibit streetwalking to prevent nuisance and safeguard public order.
Some have designated official zones where streetwalkers may solicit at
specified times. Each zone has a car park where prostitutes and clients
can make contact. There is also a lounge where prostitutes can shower
and rest. They can obtain coffee and condoms and speak to a counsellor
if they wish. The introduction of these zones has significantly
increased the safety of streetwalkers and reduced or even eradicated
nuisance in residential areas. Window soliciting occurs in most large
towns and cities.
According to a survey conducted in 2000, prostitutes were engaged as follows:
Form |
Percentage |
Window soliciting |
20 |
Streetwalkers |
5 |
Brothels and sex clubs |
45 |
Escort services |
15 |
Service at home |
5 |
Other* |
10 |
Total |
100 |
* Hotels, bars, massage parlours etc.
These figures have changed since the introduction of the new legislation. A fresh survey will be conducted in 2005.
How many prostitutes are there in the Netherlands and what countries do they come from ?
There are estimated to be 25,000 prostitutes in the country, with
12,500 working at any one time at a total of 6,000 locations. Many were
migrants. In the 1970s the majority of foreign prostitutes were from
Thailand and the Philippines, in the 1980s from Latin America and the
Caribbean. After the fall of the Berlin Wall in the late 1980s, many
came from Central and Eastern Europe. In 1999 no more than one third
were Dutch nationals, the remainder representing 44 nationalities. The
majority were from the Dominican Republic, Colombia, the Czech
Republic, Romania and Poland. No figures were available on illegal
residents.
At the time, an estimated five percent of prostitutes were male and
five percent transsexual, the majority being migrants. Ten percent of
all prostitutes were drug addicts, the majority Dutch nationals or
former Dutch nationals.
No recent estimates are available of the number of prostitutes in
the Netherlands. Their numbers are assumed to have declined over the
past few years, as a result of frequent inspections of licensed
brothels by the police and tax authorities.
How does the new legislation affect labour relations ?
The lifting of the ban on brothels means that private law, which
includes labour law, applies to relations between prostitutes and their
employers. The most important points are that individuals can decide
whether they wish to engage in prostitution and, if so, how, and that
they themselves can also choose to terminate the business relationship.
The Working Conditions Act and most other legislation that applies
to the business sector in general applies to prostitution as well. The
Labour Inspectorate has published a booklet containing information on
legislation governing safety, health and welfare. The booklet is
intended for prostitutes and their employers, and for safety, health
and welfare services.
How does the new legislation affect prostitutes’ rights to social security ?
Prostitutes who work for an employer and are obliged to stop working
for reasons beyond their control are eligible for unemployment benefit.
Like any other unemployed person, they must be available for work and
take any jobs that are generally considered acceptable. Obviously
no-one can be obliged to take a job in the sex industry, nor do
employment offices offer such jobs.
Prostitutes who choose to stop working, whether for an employer or
as a self-employed professional, are not eligible for unemployment
benefit, because they have become unemployed voluntarily. Instead, they
are entitled to social assistance. They may register as jobseekers.
Prostitutes who are not self-employed but work for an employer are
eligible for invalidity benefit. They are entitled to benefits only if
they are no longer able to do their own or any other generally
acceptable work.
These rules apply to employees in all sectors.
What arrangements are made for the collection of tax and social insurance contributions ?
Prostitutes and their employers are required to pay tax. The tax
department applies a target group approach which is uniform throughout
the country. Both parties are responsible for paying tax, depending on
the nature of their working relationship. Employers are obliged to
contribute towards employee insurance schemes.
How does the policy help to combat human trafficking ?
An important spin-off of the policy is that it prevents human
trafficking, which is characterised by exploitation, coercion and
violence. The lifting of the ban on brothels makes prostitution a
legitimate occupation and gives prostitutes the same rights and
protection as other professionals. The labour laws offer the most
effective protection against exploitation, violence and coercion. The
policy is based on the conviction that strengthening the position of
women is the best way to combat sexual violence. Moreover, abuses are
easier to detect when prostitutes operate publicly and legally rather
than in a clandestine subculture.
The introduction of a municipal licensing system enables the police
and other law enforcement agencies to conduct inspections of brothels,
subject to the mayor’s consent. Through regular inspections to ensure
that brothels conform to the licensing conditions, the police are in a
position to pick up signs of human trafficking. They obtain invaluable
information that can be used immediately to trace and prosecute
offenders in both the regulated and unregulated sectors.
A special phone line has been opened so that members of the public
can anonymously report suspicious activities. Article 250a of the
Criminal Code, which prohibits traffic in persons and exploitation of
prostitutes, is strictly enforced. The law enforcement authorities in
the Netherlands give priority to combating the traffic in persons, the
exploitation of prostitutes, and the employment of minors in
prostitution.
The Netherlands supports projects both at home and abroad aimed at
preventing human trafficking. It is also tackling the problem in
partnership with other members of the European Union. The European
Union conducts information campaigns in countries in which victims are
recruited, and in 2003 it set up an experts group on the subject.
Europol supports operational and research projects in the member
states, and conducts studies to improve policing methods.
In 2000 the Netherlands commissioned an independent national
rapporteur – one of the few positions of its kind in the European Union
– to publish an annual report on human trafficking and make
recommendations to the Dutch government.
Which foreign nationals are allowed to engage in prostitution ?
Nationals of countries outside the European Union and the European
Economic Area who do not have a valid residence permit are not allowed
to work in the Netherlands. By the same token, they are not allowed to
engage in prostitution. This group includes visitors who are in the
Netherlands on a tourist visa or who do not require a visa for a stay
not exceeding three months.
Nationals of countries that have signed an association agreement
with the European Union, such as Bulgaria and Romania, may establish
themselves as self-employed workers, providing they satisfy the
conditions for doing so (private capital, business plan, commercial
skills) and possess a residence permit that allows them to work for
themselves. They may not work for an employer.
Nationals of Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Denmark, Finland, France,
Germany, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg,
Malta, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom may work
as prostitutes in the Netherlands, either for themselves or for an
employer. Transitional arrangements will apply to nationals of the
countries that joined the European Union in May 2004. Under these
arrangements, nationals of the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary,
Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia will not be permitted
to work for an employer in the Netherlands until at least 1 May 2006.
Strict measures are taken against prostitutes operating in the
Netherlands without a valid residence permit and to unmask anyone
working under false pretences. Any person who is in the Netherlands
illegally is asked to leave or may be deported under the provisions of
the Aliens Act.
Is help available for victims of human trafficking ?
Anyone who is in the Netherlands illegally and is a victim of human
trafficking is entitled to assistance from the government. Anyone who
files a complaint of trafficking is granted a temporary residence
permit pending the outcome of legal proceedings. In some cases they may
be eligible for a permanent residence permit on humanitarian grounds.
At present, a residence permit of this kind does not entitle the holder
to work, but this is expected to change in the near future.
They are given three months to decide whether they wish to file a
complaint. They are allowed to stay in the Netherlands legally during
this period and may use all public facilities and services, such as
counselling, medical care, and financial and legal services.
What interest groups exist to assist prostitutes ?
Many agencies and organisations are working to improve conditions for prostitutes. The following are some examples.
Stichting Aids Fonds–Soa Aids Nederland coordinates
information campaigns on AIDS and sexually transmissible diseases.
These campaigns target specific categories of prostitutes, such as
foreign nationals, drug users and transsexuals.
De Rode Draad campaigns for prostitutes’ rights and
recognition of prostitution as a profession. It collaborates with the
Trade Union Confederation FNV.
The Dutch Foundation against Traffic in Women (STV) assists the victims of trafficking.