Israel Escorts

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Escorts in Israel - Select An Escort

On Select An Escort, we list hundreds of experienced Israel escorts of all types, sizes, ethnicities, sexualities, services and personalities. It can be a minefield looking for the partner to suit you. We aim to make it easy for you to select a compatible companion. Using the menu immediately above the first Israel lady listed, you can refine your search. You can select the employment status of the courtesan. Is she self-employed, or is she represented by a third party, an agency? You may want to change the search area or look for a specific type of call girls. You could be looking by age, colour, height or one of many other physical attributes of the ladies on display. You can search for busty escorts, or you can look for a service which might be provided.

Once you have narrowed down the search of likely Israel escorts, you can now begin to look at their individual escort profiles. Each profile will contain the Israel models description, rates, services and contact details. From the profiles, you can swipe through your shortlist of companions looking for the one you would want to spend time and money with.

Israeli Escorts in the News

Sex workers fall victim to Israeli government paralysis -13 December 2019

Due to the paralysis of the successive governments in Israel, millions of shekels allocated to the Welfare Ministry to help sex workers get out of the business to have gone unused and might be returned to the Finance Ministry. A law goes into force in July 2020 making it an offence to use the services of a sex worker or to be found in a place of prostitution, such as a brothel.

Israel Fails to Implement Rehabilitation Programs for Sex Workers After Landmark Decision - 4th August 2019

More than six months after the Israel cabinet approved a plan to rehabilitate escorts and reduce sex work, funds have yet to be allocated. Nothing has happened in the last six months to implement the scheme to reduce the supply of Israeli escorts. This plan was put in place to help escorts after the law criminalising the purchase of sex was implemented in the state. This appears to be another case of implementing a law that causes harm to sex workers by reducing their income and not helping then find alternative employment.

Israel Sex Work News

Oh, isn't this grand news! Israel has decided not to prosecute brothels anymore, but here's the twist - as long as these brothels are owned by the hardworking women who actually work there.

Now, don't get too excited! While the laws against prostitution haven't changed, the state's prosecution office made a splendid promise on Monday. They won't go after charges against the prostitutes if they happen to be running their business from their own cozy homes or rented premises.

This splendid commitment came about during an ongoing court case in the Tel Aviv peace court. Judge Itay Harmelin is the star here, aiming to protect these diligent women from the dreadful violent pimps and even the pesky police harassment by getting them off the streets.

But hold your horses! The Justice Ministry's sneaky move to kind of, sort of, make prostitution legal might not sit well with everyone in politics.

Most Israeli politicians aren't keen on openly supporting legalization, and even the main women's rights groups are against it, believe it or not.

Here's a twist in the tale! There's a new law making its way through the Knesset. This law wants to criminalize the clients instead of the hardworking prostitutes. It's authored by the splendid Meretz Leader Zehava Galon and Shuli Muallem-Refaeli of Jewish Home.

Guess what? The Internal Security Ministry likes this proposal, but only if the police get extra help to enforce this new law. Quite a turn of events, wouldn't you say? Cheers to changes, but with a hint of controversy!

The Israeli police have recently declared a stringent crackdown on lap dancing in strip clubs, citing instances where the activity is deemed akin to prostitution, according to the State Attorney's office. Shlomo Lamberger, the Deputy State Attorney, emphasized that the practice of 'lap dances' will be treated as a criminal offense, and stern measures will be taken against establishment owners facilitating such acts.

Consequently, strip club owners across the nation have been served warning notices by the police, notifying them of the altered guidelines and the potential for impending police action should they fail to adhere to the new regulations.

The police have initiated the distribution of cautionary letters to strip club proprietors nationwide, outlining the revised policy and cautioning them about possible future repercussions.

Apparently, the duration of a dance and the level of physical interaction between the participants will be pivotal factors in categorizing the nature of the act.

A statement from the police emphasized that the continuation of such activities is deemed an offense and warrants the full utilization of legal measures.

While prostitution remains legal in Israel, operating a brothel, engaging in pimping, or involvement in sex trafficking are all criminalized.

Israel implemented the Nordic model, and set aside money to help sex workers exit,

 

Efrat Rubinstein, the head of Israel's Stripper's Union, challenged on decision-making processes behind the legislation, saying that "no welfare or aid organization representative has the right to represent Israeli sex workers, and they are being given the right to speak and make choices for women who have not asked to be represented by them."

Rubinstein also demanded that Israel's strip clubs be reopened, saying that their closure has created unsafe working environments for strippers and that programs have only offered them employment for minimum wage. This, she said, has created an impossible situation where strippers must choose between unsafe working conditions or poverty.

"There is a deep failure in the efficacy of steps that have been taken [to help] us that must be examined," said Rubinstein. "The minimum wage jobs that we have been offered as an alternative [to stripping] are not any safer for women when they put us in financial duress."

On July 10, 2020, the law criminalizing the purchase of sexual services came into effect in Israel. The local political campaign for criminalization began over a decade ago. Earlier drafts of the bill included both client criminalization and what is described as “rehabilitation” of sex workers. However, in 2018, the politicians and lobbyists pushing for client criminalization agreed to remove the “rehabilitation” part from the bill in order to get the government on board.

Even if the “rehabilitation” programs were executed to the letter, they only offer some form of assistance to roughly 200 sex workers annually. Moreover, there are major problems with the program.

We have no chance of finding alternative livelihoods when 1 out of every 5 Israelis is unemployed and we have criminal records that mark us as prostitutes. Due to the failure of the government to create welfare and other provisions to minimize the negative effects of the law, many rights groups have joined the call to postpone the start date of the ban. These include all Israeli LGBTQ organizations, feminist groups – Achoti Movement, Isha l'Isha – Haifa Feminist Center, Israel Women’s Forum, aid groups working with sex workers – Elem and HerAcademy, as well as social workers and law professionals. While these groups hold various views on sex work, they all share the concern that under current conditions, the law sentences thousands of sex workers to life-threatening poverty and violence.

 

Nearly one in three Israeli men have paid for sexual services at least once, while one out of six men have done so more than once, according to a survey conducted by Tel Aviv University.

Almost half of the men who have paid for sexual services in the past five years say the new law imposing a ban on frequenting prostitutes won't influence them, according to a poll conducted by Tel Aviv University

Israel's landmark law against the consumption of prostitution goes into effect today, July 10, a year and a half after it was passed. “Women are not merchandise and their bodies are not available for rent to anyone willing to pay for the price,” tweeted Justice Minister Avi Nissenkorn of Blue and White this morning. His tweet came in response to several days of intense pressure to postpone the law’s implementation.

The law is based on the Nordic model, which puts the onus of responsibility on consumers of prostitution. And many consider the law is a failure.