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Tue, Aug 07, 2001 - Page 24 News List

Dutch prostitutes fight to open accounts

LEGAL, YET REJECTED Representatives of the world's oldest profession say discrimination on the part of Dutch banks is keeping prostitutes from receiving business-related tax credits, but banks say prostitution is too risky a business for them

REUTERS , AMSTERDAM

A prostitute, who would not give her name, poses last week in her window in Alkmaar, a Dutch town 40km north of Amsterdam. Nowhere is the world's oldest profession more legal than in the Netherlands where the booming sex industry pays tax, but prostitutes say they still struggle to gain the financial acceptance they need from Dutch banks.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Nowhere is the world's oldest profession more legal than in the Netherlands where the booming sex industry pays tax, but prostitutes say they still struggle to gain the financial acceptance they need from Dutch banks.

Amsterdam's Ladies of the Night consider themselves small business entrepreneurs -- providing a service in a sector where demand far exceeds supply.

They want bank accounts which show their income is not personal so that expenses -- like condoms and sex toys -- can be tax-free and tax-deductible.

Dutch banks say prostitution is too risky a business, too associated with crime and too likely to offend other clients.

But the representative body for the around 20,000 prostitutes in the Netherlands says banks are sexist, judgmental, worried what people might think and missing out on a good opportunity in an industry estimated to earn almost US$1 billion annually.

The Rode Draad (Red Thread), which acts and speaks on behalf of prostitutes, has filed a complaint against the Dutch bank ING Groep with the Office of Fair Treatment, a forum for voicing complaints about inequality.

The case, which had its first hearing last week, alleges discrimination against women because ING won't allow prostitutes to open the kind of commercial bank accounts to which, they say, as legitimate workers in a legal industry, they are entitled.

ING, the country's biggest financial group by market capitalization, says it does not want its name tied in any way to sex and that this might offend other clients in the 65 countries it operates, which might not be as liberal as the Dutch.

"We're not discriminating against women. Our policy for years has been that we don't want to do business with persons from the sex industry, the entire sex industry. Not only prostitutes but also makers of porn videos and other articles," says ING spokesman Peter Jong.

"We don't have a moral judgment on this. Our decision is purely business. There is too big a risk. The sex industry is not very stable, not very transparent and so it is difficult to calculate the risks," he added, raising the point that the large amount of cash changing hands could facilitate money laundering.

Prostitution was banned in the Netherlands in the 17th century but legalized by then-ruler the French emperor Napoleon in 1815.

Since 1988 it has been officially defined as a legal profession and prostitutes joined the service sector union. They have been required to pay income tax since 1996.

"We're talking about a legal branch of the sex industry here. It's been legal since Napoleon. They've had a few hundred years to research the risk," says Rode Draad spokeswoman Christy ten Broeke from the organization's headquarters near Amsterdam's thriving red light district.

"Sex is a major industry and booming. If a bank is clever and wants to make money they should take our business," she added.

As private clients, who don't need to disclose their occupation, prostitutes in the Netherlands can open current and savings accounts like other individuals with money.

But sex workers say they face a cold shoulder when trying to open commercial accounts that will allow their revenues to be treated commercially by tax authorities and open up small business credit facilities needed to rent and decorate premises from which they conduct their trade.

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