Lifestyle
Germany's hookers ready for World Cup
Soccer tourney an expected boon for sex industry

As soccer's best players
prepare to square off this summer at the World Cup,
businesses across Germany are anticipating a huge
windfall with the arrival of an estimated one million
fans from around the world. The sex industry is no
exception. Just down the street from Berlin's Olympic
Stadium, site of the final, stands the city's largest
brothel, Artemis -- established in September with an eye
on capitalizing on the influx of World Cup visitors. The
four-storey, 40-bedroom bordello, which cost the
equivalent of $9.1 million Cdn, is decorated with
liberal doses of faux animal prints and velvet on beds,
walls and furniture amid an eclectic mix of Greek and
Roman statuary under Moorish arches. Among amenities are
saunas, a pool and a solarium. There's also satellite
television in case anyone bothers to watch the soccer
matches being played at the stadium a few blocks away.
The establishment has been averaging 130 visitors a day,
many from the nearby convention centre, and is planning
to blitz the Olympic Stadium and Berlin hotels with
leaflets during the World Cup. The stadium, built by the
Nazis for the 1936 Olympics, will host six World Cup
matches, including the July 9 final. "We're thinking of
staying open around the clock during the month,'' said
brothel manager Egbert Krumeich. "I think we will have a
lot more clients coming here, maybe 250 to 350 per day,
but maybe as many as 500.''
Helin,
a 30-year-old Turkish woman who works at Artemis and
gave only her working name, said she is toying with the
idea of splitting her time between Berlin and Munich to
earn as much as possible during the month-long
tournament. "With the World Cup there will be plenty of
crazy people in Germany, but there will also be very
good customers with a lot of money -- the earning
possibilities could go up 50 per cent at least,'' she
said, shifting her yellow bath towel and tapping her
pink flip-flops as she puffed a Marlboro ahead of her
shift. "But I think it will also be a lot of fun -- I'll
get to meet a lot of people from all around.''
Prostitution is legal in Germany, with about 400,000
people registered in the trade; the women who work in
Artemis pay taxes and receive social benefits like
people in any other job.
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At Artemis, men pay almost $100 Cdn to get in,
which goes to the brothel, and then pay about $80 directly to the women
for their services for a half hour. The prostitutes pay a fee of about
$68 a day for the use of the place and are allowed to live in the
establishment if they want. It's an innovative system that advocates say
shields the women from pimps, and gives them the freedom to pick and
choose their clients. However, the anticipated World Cup sex-trade boom
has also raised fears of an increase in forced prostitution with an
estimated 40,000 women from poorer Eastern European countries expected
to be heading to Germany, some against their will. Already, the European
Union estimates more than 100,000 women in Europe each year are forced
into prostitution. "If the number of prostitutes goes up, the assumption
is that on the fringes, the illegal forced prostitution will also go
up,'' said Ulrike Helwerth of the National Council of German Women's
Organizations. Helwerth's group has started an information campaign
against forced prostitution to coincide with the World Cup, endorsed by
German Soccer Federation President Theo Zwanziger. She said any large
event -- even the Frankfurt Book Fair -- attracts prostitutes, but that
the World Cup attracts so much international attention that it is a
natural "hook'' for her group's campaign. "The World Cup is the platform
because you can reach a much larger public, and also highlight that on
the peripheries of such events there is a dark side,'' Helwerth said.
The group wants stronger controls against human trafficking and also
hopes to reach prostitutes' customers with the message that if they
suspect the woman they are with is not there voluntarily, they should
report it to the police. "We are not campaigning against prostitution,
or prostitutes or against the clients of prostitutes -- only against the
traffickers of forced prostitutes,'' she said. Berlin police spokeswoman
Claudia Frank said her department plans raids to uncover forced
prostitution rings during the World Cup. Helin, one of Berlin's 8,000
registered prostitutes, said she has a different concern about the
influx of newcomers -- competition. "Some of us have worked a long time
at this job in Germany and if all the girls come here like they did in
Greece for the Olympics, it will be bad,'' she said. -By D. Reising.
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