A religious group has condemned the planned opening of a sex exhibition in Manchester next week.
The Erotica Festival runs from 21 to 23 March and features more than 80 stalls selling pornographic videos, magazines, DVDs and sex toys.
A show featuring 20 dancers called Torture Garden will also be performed daily at the event at Manchester's G-Mex.
But protesters say it is a disgrace the "tawdry" exhibition should be held in the city at all.
The exhibition's organisers claim it will feature "everything to do with an adult lifestyle" and brush off criticisms it will corrupt the morals of people in the North West. Paul Donnelley from Erotica Ltd, which is organising the show, told BBC News Online: "It is all about individual choice and I don't believe people should be stopped from making that choice."
But Dennis Wrigley from Christian organisation Maranatha said it was outrageous the festival should take place in a public building. "It is an act of irresponsibility to let the G-Mex be used for a sex show," he told BBC News Online.
"For the local authority to allow a show that promotes promiscuity is madness." Trumpet Call, a part of Maranatha that promotes family values, has already handed out leaflets and put up posters calling for the show to be stopped.
He said Maranatha had more than 10,000 members across the UK, and believed he had the majority of people in Manchester on his side.
"I believe in freedom and we live in a free country. "But if people want to go to these kinds of dirty shows, let them go to Soho or a back street." |