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Editorial: El Mundo

  • The Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) is pushing for a project to eradicate prostitution in Spain, triggering a complex debate that extends beyond traditional political divides.
  • Prostitution in Spain currently exists in a legal limbo. Authorities are primarily concerned with human trafficking and exploitation.
  • PSOE's proposal to punish pimps, individuals who lease properties for prostitution, and customers provokes a division between abolitionist and regulationist currents.
  • Experts indicate such punishment may increase the clandestinity and insecurity for those in prostitution while also making their transition to other jobs difficult.
  • The results from testing different approaches to prostitution in countries like Germany and Sweden are unclear and do not provide a definitive model for Spain.

Conclusion: The lack of clear data and the sensitivity of the issue suggest it should not be dealt with solely from a partisan or moralistic perspective, but requires an understanding based on reality, individual contexts, and the goal of protecting people's freedoms and preventing trafficking and exploitation.