German Callgirl

German Callgirl




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German Callgirl

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Published: 11 November 2021 09:37 CET
The 112 emergency number on an ambulance. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Boris Roessler

The Local Europe AB
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After a recent documentary lifted the lid on sex tourism in Germany, The Local spoke with Andrew M., an American who flies over several times a year to visit the country's brothels.


“I've been to brothels in all of Germany's big cities. It's definitely addictive,” the 39-year-old Floridian said.

Over the past 11 years, he has made three trips a year to Germany for its brothels. Most recently he spent a week in Frankfurt, where he spent €400 on having sex with 12 women. “This was two a day,” he said.

Andrew's interest in Germany did not initially involve paying for sex. “I was fascinated by Germany initially because of the cars,” he said.

“Then I got into reading about the Second World War and really got into learning about the country.”

'I saw a prostitute and thought this is the place for me'

He had a moment of revelation in 2000 when he was in Germany with some friends on holiday.

“I saw a prostitute standing on the street and my friends explained that it was common here. It was then that I thought 'oh my God, this is the place for me.'”

So two years later Andrew returned, alone, to Heidelberg. “It's such a cute Germany city. And it's close to Frankfurt, where I knew there were lots of prostitutes,” he said.

After sightseeing during the day, it was time to take the plunge. “I just got in a taxi and asked the driver to take me to a brothel. He did and was very helpful.”

It was in this Frankfurt brothel that the then 26-year-old first had sex with a prostitute. He was hooked.

“Most of my friends don't know that at night I'm going crazy having a great time.”

The legality of prostitution in Germany is one of the main draws for Andrew. Law changes in 2002 made Germany one of the most liberal countries in the world regarding commercial sex.

“There's a risk of being arrested in the US, but not here,” he said. “And it's cheaper. Germany is like Aldi for prostitutes.”

Twenty minutes with a woman in Frankfurt costs as little as €20, he said. “This is more than enough time,” he admitted.

There's no sticking around for a chat afterwards he said, as the women are normally keen to get punters out “as soon as they finish.”

Before the sex though, he said he did try to make conversation: “I ask them where they're from and treat them nice” although he has never talked with a prostitute for more than ten minutes.

Yet he admitted his use of prostitutes had ruined his view of women in general. “I no longer see women for what they are,” he said. “I've slept with so many that they're objects to me.”

He was, he said, past the point of no return. It was too late for him to see women as sentient beings. “I sometimes sleep with the same girls three or four times, but then it gets boring,” he said. He's never fallen in love with anyone, he admitted.

He said he was shy and insecure, and found it difficult to meet women, saying that paying a prostitute for sex was simply easier than trying to form a relationship.

“Dating women is expensive, they spend all your money,” he suggested.”Plus where I live there just aren't many nice women.”

But he said sex was better when it did not involve a financial transaction. “There are fewer limitations,” he said.

“But when you do pay, it's right there, it's at arms reach.” And Germany is his favourite place to do this: “Everything's so neat and ordered and the girls are clean.”

The few colleagues who he tells about his jaunts agree: “They're happy that I'm going somewhere safe, and not to Thailand or the Philippines.”

'I look for German women, not Romanians'

And he said he thought the women he paid for sex seemed happy. “It's a job; women do it to provide for their families.” Whether they could live off taking clients for €20, he did not know.

The recent documentary which exposed unsanitary working conditions where Eastern European women were being forced to sell sex was not something Andrew recognised from his experiences.

But he said, “Romanian girls aren't my thing. They have terrible teeth and just don't look as good.”

He said he preferred the idea of having sex with German women – but that he hardly ever encountered them in brothels – they were mostly picking up customers on the street – something he found particularly stimulating.

“I like this the best, it's exciting and you can take them back to your hotel room,” he said.

The larger German brothels presented a physical challenge of a different kind, he admitted. “Some of these brothels are huge and often over lots of floors, so by the time you've climbed to the third or fourth you're out of breath,” he said.

But then again the variety of women – who linger, lingerie-clad, at their bedroom doors – was a plus.

“If I'm paying for it, I want top quality,” he said, adding that a brothel in Frankfurt was his favourite, with women who he rated as at least ten out of ten.

“The girls there are 10s, 11s, 12s, really beautiful. They're young, fresh, and full of energy. Most can't be older than 24.”

When asked, Andrew said he would rate himself around five out of ten in comparison, and admitted he was often unhappy being alone.

“I can't see myself getting married or having children and sure, I'm lonely,” he said. So he will keep coming back to Germany to pay for sex, yet he said with a house in Florida and a steady government job, he would not be leaving the US.

“German winters are far too cold for me,” he added.
Callers to the emergency numbers 110 and 112 weren’t able to reach operators Thursday morning in several German states.
The emergency number 110 for police and 112 for fire crews failed around the country early Thursday morning, with callers unable to reach emergency operators for urgent assistance between about 4:30 am and 5:40 am local time.
The Office for Civil Protection and Disaster Aid is looking into these outages, which were reported in states including Lower Saxony, Baden-Württemberg, and Brandenburg, and in major cities like Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg, and Frankfurt. Cologne was further affected by cuts to electricity, drinking water, and regular telephone services. Lower Saxony also saw disruptions to the internal phone networks of police and hospitals.
Emergency services are not reporting any more disturbances and people should be able to once again reach 110 and 112 around the country as normal.
Investigators are looking into the problem, but haven’t yet established a cause or any consequences that may have happened due to the outage. Provider Deutsche Telekom says they have ruled out the possibility of an attack by hackers.
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Herbertstrasse - a pedestrianized brothel mall off the Reeperbahn, Hamburg

Herbertstrasse - a pedestrianized brothel mall off the Reeperbahn, Hamburg
It is estimated that 1.2 million German men use prostitutes each
year, and the industry has an annual turnover of US$1.6 billion.
Prostitution was legalised in Germany in 2002. The idea was to
remove the industry from criminal hands and thus reduce the illegal trafficking of women, make working conditions safer and reduce stigma.
Prostitutes are now able to join unions and get health insurance,
but many sex workers prefer not to register with authorities due to discrimination and stigma. The result is that prostitutes are
still often forced to work in dark uninhabited industrial areas, which puts them at risk.
The changes to German law do little to help foreign prostitutes,
who constitute almost half of the total, because they don't have
the correct work permit. This means they risk deportation if they
report ill treatment to the police. Prostitution is already legalised in The Netherlands, and could be legalised very soon in Belgium. Sweden legalised prostitution about 30 years ago, but recriminalised
it after about 20 years.
Registered prostitutes are regularly given free mandatory health
checks, and it is also possible for customers to write up contracts with sex workers in order to protect them in the case of the desired
'services' not being rendered. Unfortunately, a legal loophole means that the prostitutes can't do anything if the client fails to pay up after they have sex.
Brothels with officially registered prostitutes have to pay a fee of about 15-25 Euros per prostitute per day to local authorities.
The city of Cologne receives about 700,000 Euros a month. The Green Party is particularly active in campaigning for the rights of sex workers. There are several
prostitute's unions, (e.g. Berlin's HYDRA) which campaign for the
recognition of prostitution as a regular job. In Berlin
there's even an organisation of prostitute's customers, call 'Lust und Prostitution'.
Jobs in the sex trade are sometimes advertised in job centres.
Recent articles in several English language news portals told the
story of an unemployed 25 year-old IT specialist who was told by
her job centre that her benefits would be removed if she did not
accept a prostitution job offered to her. There was an outcry at
the time, but there is little evidence to support the story, which
is considered by some to be an urban myth.
The precise nature of prostitution in Germany varies from place
to place. In Munich , street prostitution is not allowed anywhere. In Berlin, almost anything goes. In Hamburg it is allowed at certain times of the day at the train station. Many bars and clubs offer sex services.
In many cities, there is a street known as the 'Mall', where brothels are located and prostitutes gather. These streets are usually pedestrianised,
so you have to walk there or get dropped of by a taxi, and of course
you have to be 18 to go there.
Many cities have an 'Eros Centre' where women rent a room by day,
sitting in the window to tempt men in. Alternatively, prostitutes
can be found via a host of magazines sold in sex shops (some of
which include customer reviews), or the telephone directory.
Germany currently has very high unemployment rates, which lead one brothel manager to offer 20% discounts to unemployed clients. The prostitutes' union gave their approval thinking that it might cheer up unemployed people. The manager of the brothel, a bar in Dresden, said that the sex industry was a very good indicator of
the economy as a whole, and that business had dropped about 50%
in recent months. The discount applies to snacks and drinks as well, but you have to produce proof of unemployment.
Another brothel had an unprecedented number of visitors when it
threw open its doors to raise money for a children's charity. Tickets
were 40 Euros, but sex wasn't for sale, there was just an art exhibition.
Brothels are expecting a big increase in trade during the World
Cup, and about 40,000 prostitutes are expected to travel to Germany
to take advantage of the boom.
In Dortmund , where the red light district does not have enough parking space,
they plan to install drive-in sex huts to cope with the problem.
A local official said that although most men would get used to them because they could protect their identity, 'there will always be
those who want to go behind a bush, under a bridge or into the woods.'
The age of consent in Germany is 14 if the partner is under
21 and 16 if the partner is 21 or older. Pimping is illegal.
Europe's largest brothel is the 12- storey Pascha with 120 rooms to rent (Wikipedia).
Many of the commercial sex workers working in Germany come
from Eastern Europe, particularly Hungary.
Do not take photos in the sex 'Malls', you will not receive
a friendly reaction.
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