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I t's not often that government legislation on prostitution has a direct effect on British theatre. But that's what has happened to the Everyman in Liverpool. This week, it presents a play called Unprotected, a verbatim work reflecting the campaign to establish a protected zone in Liverpool where sex workers could operate in increased safety.
Led by Liverpool playwright Esther Wilson, a team of writers and researchers have spent two years speaking to local politicians, residents, sex workers and their clients, gathering arguments for and against a managed zone.
But with recent government debates over prostitution, the work has had to be considerably rethought. The play traces how, at the end of last year, Liverpool city council forwarded its proposals to the Home Office for inclusion in its review of the prostitution laws - only for Home Office minister Fiona Mactaggart to announce in January that there would be no endorsement of managed zones.
Instead, the legislation surrounding brothels would be relaxed, making it legal for a maximum of three women to work together from a private address. Liverpool's pilot scheme was shelved. Those women include Flo Clucas, the Liberal-Democrat executive member for social care at Liverpool city council, who spearheaded the campaign and makes an appearance in Unprotected not under her own name as a charismatic and forthright local politician.
Clucas admits she makes an unlikely figurehead for the rights of sex workers. But," she says, "I am even more strongly opposed to girls being raped, murdered and mutilated on my doorstep. Clucas isn't being melodramatic. The campaign to protect sex workers began following the deaths in July of Pauline Stephen and Hanane Parry, two Liverpool prostitutes killed within 24 hours of each other by a paranoid schizophrenic who believed he had a divine mission to murder prostitutes.