Prostitution in Spain
Prostitution in Spain is not addressed by any specific law, but a number of activities related to it, such as pimping, are illegal. In 2016, UNAIDS estimated there to be 70,268 prostitutes in the country, although other estimates put the number in the 300,000 - 400,000 region. The sex industry in Spain is estimated to be worth €3.7 billion.
Legal status
was decriminalized in 1995. Prostitution itself is not directly addressed in the Criminal Code of Spain, but exploitation such as pimping is illegal.The only article in the Code dealing specifically with adult prostitution is Artícle 188, which bans pimping:
Whoever causes a person of legal age to engage in prostitution or to continue to do so, with the use of violence, intimidation or deception, or by abusing a position of power or the dependency or vulnerability of the victim, shall be punished with a prison sentence of two to four years and a fine from 12 to 24 months. Gaining profit from the prostitution of another shall incur the same penalty, even with the consent of that person.
Owning an establishment where prostitution takes place is in itself legal, but the owner cannot derive financial gain from the prostitute or hire a person to sell sex because prostitution is not considered a job and thus has no legal recognition.
Local government
Local governments differ in their approaches to both indoor and outdoor prostitution, usually in response to community pressure groups, and based on "public safety".Most places do not regulate prostitution, but the government of Catalonia offers licenses for persons "to gather people to practice prostitution".
These licenses are used by brothel owners to open "clubs", where prostitution takes place. Some places have implemented fines for street prostitution.
COVID-19 pandemic
As part of the State of alarm due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Spain, all brothels and other places of entertainment were closed.Politics
History
Prostitution was tolerated in Spain throughout the mediaeval period, until the 17th century and the reign of Phillip IV whose 1623 decree closed the mancebías forcing the women out into the street, a very unpopular decision, but one that remained in place till the 19th century. In the reign of Isabel II regulation was introduced, firstly in cities, the Disposiciones de Zaragoza and the Reglamento para la represión de los excesos de la prostitución en Madrid, followed by the 1848 Penal Code.In 1935 during the Second Republic prostitution was prohibited. Once the Dictatorship was established, this law was repealed. Spain became officially abolitionist on 18 June 1962, when the 1949 United Nations Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and of the Exploitation of the Prostitution of Others was ratified by Spain, and the Decree 168 of 24 January 1963 modified the Penal Code according to the Convention. In theory, this policy, in accordance with the Convention, regarded sex workers as victims of sexual exploitation and advocated punishment of their exploiters rather than the workers themselves, and refused to distinguish between voluntary and coerced sex work.
However, there were inconsistencies, as the prostitutes were in fact treated more like criminals: under Act 16/1970 of 4 August on social menace and rehabilitation prostitutes were declared amongst those classes categorized as social evils, and could be confined to special centres or forbidden to live in specified areas. In practice however, prostitution was quietly ignored and tolerated.
Although democracy was restored in 1975, it was not till the Penal Code revisions of 1995
that this policy was revisited, and most laws regarding prostitution were repealed, with the exception of those governing minors and those with mental health problems. This included the Act 16/1970. Further revisions in 1999 addressed trafficking, as did the 2000 Immigration Act which followed other European precedents by offering asylum to trafficked victims if they collaborated.
Public opinion
Opinion remains deeply divided in Spain over prostitution, and law reform has been in a political impasse for a long time.Consequently, it remains in rather a grey zone of unregulated but tolerated semi-legality. The standard debates exist as to whether it is work like any other work, or exploitation of women as espoused by groups like Malostratos.
Meanwhile, it thrives, and has prompted headlines such as El nuevo burdel de Europa.
Public policy
The key instruments in order of importance are the Penal Codeand the Immigration or Aliens Act 2000.
Plans:
- Plan Municipal de Intervención ante la Prostitución en el municipio 2011–2014, Santa Cruz de Tenerife
Migrant workers
There was an influx of prostitutes from China in the early 2010s. From 2012 to September 2013, 544 prostitutes were identified in 138 inspections in brothels of Asian prostitutes in Barcelona. In the late 2010s a large number of Nigerian women have been trafficked into the country for prostitution.
As in other countries in Western Europe, there are concern over the presence of migrant workers on the streets and claims that many of them were coerced. NGOs believe a large percentage of individuals in prostitution in Spain are trafficking victims. Various reports give figures of 80-90% of prostitutes in Spain being trafficked, but this is disputed. In 2008 the Spanish Government announced plans to aid women who had been trafficked.
There is also cross-border prostitution between Spain and Portugal, and between Spain and France.)
There are organisations working with migrant women, including Proyecto Esperanza and shelters such as IPSSE.
Advocacy
Organisations working with sex workers in Spain include APRAMPwhile sex workers' rights organisations include Hetaira,
as well as regional organisations such as SICAR Asturias,
AMTTTSE and CATS.
Spanish sex workers continue to be concerned about their lack of protection and in July 2011 petitioned the Minister of Health.
A demonstration is planned for 6 November 2011 in Madrid, and a communique has been released setting out sex workers' complaints and demands.
The Organización de Trabajadoras Sexuales was formed in August 2018 and registered with Spain's Labour Ministry as a trade union. Feminists and activist opposed the formation of the union and instigated a campaign on social media against them using the hashtag #SoyAbolicionista. Abolitionist groups brought a court action against OTRAS, which resulting on OTRAS's statutes being annulled on the grounds that there can be no employment contract for prostitutes and therefore they were not "workers" in terms of employment law, but the court did not dissolve the union. However, in February 2019, the Superior Court of Justice of Madrid ruled that a prostitute working in a club in Barcelona had a valid employment relationship with the club owners.
Social history
Prostitution in Spain was highly sectored, with at one end the damas cortesanas of high society,and the mistresses of the bourgeoisie and :es:barragana|barraganas, the concubines of the clergy.
Sex work in Spanish culture
frequently commented on the place of prostitution in Spanish high societysuch as satirising the church's involvement in the trade, for profit. Best known though are his controversial Majas.
Other examples are Murillo's Four Figures on a Step and Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon.
In literature, Miguel de Cervantes discusses prostitution in his early 17th century novel Don Quixote, and the subject is found throughout 19th- and 20th-century Spanish literature.
Sex work celebrities in Spain
is a Barcelona celebrity and Madam who told her story in Julián Peiró's La Sra. Rius, de moral distraída.Overseas autonomous communities
Canary Islands
In 2006, 42 people were arrested following the discover of a prostitution ring operating out of nightclubs in Las Palmas and Telde. The prostitutes were from South American countries, mainly Brazil. Five people were jailed as a result.In 2012, a councillor in Santa Cruz de Tenerife told the ABC newspaper about the city's draft plan for prostitution. He said that, in cases examined by NGOs, 91% of the prostitutes were women and 9% were transsexual women.
A study is 2016 estimated there were around 3,000 prostitutes working on the islands, mainly in the tourist areas and the cities of Santa Cruz de Tenerife and Las Palmas.
Ceuta
Prostitution occurs in the Ceti in Ceuta. The prostitutes are mainly Nigerian women.Melilla
Local NGO Melilla Acoge, which provides medical and other assistance to prostitutes, report that there are about 1,000 Moroccan prostitutes in Melilla. Some cross over the border into Melilla in the mornings and leave at midday, other cross over the border in the afternoon and leave at night.Sex trafficking
Sex traffickers exploit foreign victims in Spain and, to a lesser extent, Spanish victims abroad. Women from Eastern Europe, South America, Central America, China, and Nigeria are exploited in sex trafficking. Authorities report Nigerian women now make up the largest demographic of sex trafficking victims. Sex traffickers exploit Venezuelan women fleeing the collapsing social and economic conditions at home.Spanish law does not permit nor prohibit prostitution, and NGOs believe a large percentage of individuals in prostitution in Spain are trafficking victims. Various reports give figures of 80-90% of prostitutes in Spain being trafficked, but this is disputed.
Sex traffickers are increasingly using online apartment rental platforms to make their illicit operations difficult to track. An increasing number of victims arrived in southern Spain by sea via Morocco. Nigerian criminal networks recruit victims in migrant reception centers in Italy for forced prostitution in Spain. Unaccompanied migrant children continue to be vulnerable to sex trafficking. The increased numbers of newly arrived refugees and asylum-seekers are vulnerable to trafficking.
Law enforcement conducted targeted operations against 37 criminal organisations involved in sex trafficking in 2018. The judiciary initiated prosecutions of 63 defendants for sex trafficking. The government reported several cases in which convicted traffickers received significant penalties. In January 2019, an Oviedo court sentenced four Romanians to 20 to 55 years in prison for forcing 12 Romanian women into prostitution.
The United States Department of State Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons ranks Spain as a 'Tier 1' country.
History
Legal
Literature
- Carmen Y. Hsu. Courtesans in the Literature of Spanish Golden Age
Migration