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I am sitting in the back of an unmarked police car on the small island of Skeppsholmen, to the east of Stockholm's picturesque old town. Above us is the city's modern art museum but it's a dark February night and we're not here to appreciate culture.
What happens next is a textbook example of the way Sweden's law banning the purchase of sex works in practice. The driver of the car, who's brought a prostituted woman to the island to have sex, is arrested on the spot.
He's given a choice: admit the offence and pay a fine, based on income, or go to court and risk publicity. The woman, who hasn't broken any law, is offered help from social services if she wants to leave prostitution. Otherwise, she's allowed to go. He's young, black, and his appearance β shaved head, baggy jeans β suggests a music industry executive rather than a cop.
But he's in charge of the prostitution unit of Stockholm county police and he's proud of the fact that he's arrested more than men under the Swedish law: "We've arrested everyone from drug addicts to politicians. Once I arrested a priest and he told me I'd ruined his life.
I told him, 'I haven't ruined your life, you have. Sweden's decision to reverse centuries of assumptions about prostitution and criminalise buyers of sex caused astonishment when the law came into force in As arguments raged elsewhere about whether prostitution should be legalised, the Swedish government's simple idea β that the wrong people were being arrested β was new and controversial.