[h=1]Germany plans new law to protect prostitutes[/h]The ruling coalition in Berlin has agreed on a new law to protect workers in Germany's sex industry. The planned regulation will include mandatory condoms and counseling for prostitutes.
Representatives of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and its coalition partner, the Social Democratic Party (SPD), reached a compromise on Monday, a necessary step before the new prostitution law can be discussed in the Bundestag.
"Finally, the prostitution industry will be regulated and finally something will be done for the protection of men and women active in the sex trade," a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth, told journalists on Monday.
The proposed law could enter into force on July 1, 2017, the CDU's spokesman for women's affairs, Marcus Weinberg, added. Lawmakers would now discuss transitional arrangements for prostitutes and brothels by the end of 2017, Weinberg added.
The new laws include guidelines for registering prostitutes, health counseling, conditions for brothel operators and mandatory usage of condoms. Operators of brothels, trailers and escort services would also have to commit to a minimum number of personnel and standards on hygiene and security. The regulation would also prohibit practices and "offers often called 'flatrate sex' or 'gang bangs.'"
The SPD and CDU agreed to draft a new law to protect prostitutions during coalition talks in 2013. The older law, passed in 2002, had been criticized for indirectly promoting the forced sex trade.
mg/ng (AFP, dpa, KNA)
http://www.dw.com/en/germany-plans-new-law-to-protect-prostitutes/

Representatives of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and its coalition partner, the Social Democratic Party (SPD), reached a compromise on Monday, a necessary step before the new prostitution law can be discussed in the Bundestag.
"Finally, the prostitution industry will be regulated and finally something will be done for the protection of men and women active in the sex trade," a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth, told journalists on Monday.
The proposed law could enter into force on July 1, 2017, the CDU's spokesman for women's affairs, Marcus Weinberg, added. Lawmakers would now discuss transitional arrangements for prostitutes and brothels by the end of 2017, Weinberg added.
The new laws include guidelines for registering prostitutes, health counseling, conditions for brothel operators and mandatory usage of condoms. Operators of brothels, trailers and escort services would also have to commit to a minimum number of personnel and standards on hygiene and security. The regulation would also prohibit practices and "offers often called 'flatrate sex' or 'gang bangs.'"
The SPD and CDU agreed to draft a new law to protect prostitutions during coalition talks in 2013. The older law, passed in 2002, had been criticized for indirectly promoting the forced sex trade.
mg/ng (AFP, dpa, KNA)
http://www.dw.com/en/germany-plans-new-law-to-protect-prostitutes/