International Day to end Violence against sex workers

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http://rabble.ca/news/2013/12/sex-workers-around-world-fight-back-to-end-violence-and-create-justice

Today, December 17, sex workers, allies and advocates around the world will be marking the International Day To End Violence Against Sex Workers. Begun ten years ago, this day honours and mourns sex workers who’ve been affected by violence and celebrates those who continue the struggle to end it.

Sex workers are enormously diverse and those most impacted by violence, stigma and inequality are more likely to be those caught in the web of multiple forms of oppression and criminalization. Poor, street-based, drug-using, migrant, Black, Indigenous, people of colour, trans and young sex workers are especially likely to be targeted by police and predators and face the harshest impacts of the criminalization sex work. It is often their names called at December 17 vigils.

This December 17 is especially poignant as it comes just days before the Supreme Court of Canada releases their historic decision on whether to strike down three significant laws regulating sex work that have led to a dramatic increase in mortality among people in the sex industry since they were introduced in 1985.

The decriminalization of sex work would substantially increase protection for workers -- and especially for those already living at the margins.

Around the world, sex workers fight back -- so we asked a few: what are sex workers in your area and communities doing to end violence and to create sex worker justice?

Native Youth Sexual Health Network:

Indigenous youth in the sex trade, industry and economies -- among many other ways they may choose to identify -- persistently provide our communities with models for living self-determination (decisions over their bodies). This is an active form of resisting state violence, ongoing forms of colonialism and living Indigenous forms of justice. They’re doing this by reclaiming sex positivity in their nations, resisting gender binaries, building family and challenging the reasons why our bodies and communities are criminalized.

As youth impacted by multiple intersecting issues, they are at the centre of some of the most creative approaches in our communities at resisting colonial violence; reclaiming inherent rights to their bodies and the spaces they are in.

Elene Lam, former Director of Zi Teng (Hong Kong and Asia):

The migrant sex worker faces double criminalization of sex work and illegal working status. The discussion of trafficking assumes every woman is a victim, but always you can see underneath this idea, is just more law! This makes it worse and puts people more underground.

In the last few years more and more sex workers are campaigning together, at international conferences, or using arts like photography and writing to speak out and share their own stories. Sex workers in Hong Kong, in Asia and internationally are getting their voices out. We try to use December 17 to let people know that we are facing different kinds of violence like murder and sexual assault. People should not focus just on arresting perpetrators but on changing the law.

Empower Foundation, Thailand:

Men’s violence is a normal part of life for billions of wives, lovers, children, boys and men in every part of the world whatever their occupation. People in most danger from men’s violence in the world are people married to or living with men: daughters, sons and stepchildren of men, lovers of men, people who don’t love men except if they are men too, single widowed divorced people, people employed by men, people visiting areas where there are men, of special mention any contact with armed men in uniforms or religious leaders and those people who live in countries governed by a majority of men.

It is not unusual for anyone of any age or occupation in the world to meet a violent man.

Violent men usually prefer to find ways to be violent that don’t cause him to think less of himself, to be punished or to be looked down on by others. If being violent against someone in his intimate circle is not a good option he needs to find someone who he and the rest of society can agree is someone who deserves to be attacked…he needs to find someone who society does not support, acknowledge or protect under the law. Supporting laws that criminalize our work, our customers, our workplaces; imposing legal special regulations like zoning; perpetuating the stigma and myths of sex workers as bad women or pathetic victims all foster violence against us -- is that a kind of violence too?

Maggies: Toronto Sex Workers Action Project:

Sex workers have the solutions to the problems we face. Among these are honouring treaty rights, affordable housing, respectful health care and substance treatment, an end to poverty and an overhaul of the child welfare system. Another is to pull the anti-prostitution laws off the backs of the sex workers who are harmed -- not helped -- by them. For decriminalization of prostitution to truly make a difference in our lives, sex workers must be in leadership roles for all decision making about regulations that impact our safety and livelihood including: zoning and licensing, control over the conditions and locations of our work, human rights and labour rights protections, the right to organize as workers.

Chanelle Gallant is an intersectional feminist activist and part of Maggie’s: Toronto Sex Workers Action Project
 

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Annie Temple wrote: "Please post this as your profile if you support ending violence against sex workers. Today is International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers - a particularly meaningful day for us in the GVRD where "the missing women" case has rocked our world, with many of us losing loved ones and finding out that our justice/enforcement system does not protect some of our most vulnerable citizens.

Vancouver is now be one of the most progressive cities in the world in terms of sex worker rights and protections. Our VPD even changed the name of their VICE unit to reflect a change in policy towards sex workers. This is largely due to the continued efforts of Susan Davis and Kerry Porth, who tirelessly attend meetings with police and other city officials in unceasing attempts to increase safety of sex industry workers.

Watch for red umbrellas all over the world today, as we remember those lives lost to violence and share our hope that sex industry workers will be given the respect they deserve in our lifetimes.
 

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SPOC's December 17, 2013 release

December 17, 2013
International Day to End Violence against Sex Workers

On this December 17, 2013 we are remembering our colleagues who have gone missing and have been murdered. Sex workers continue to experience violence from: the police, the courts, through our oppressive and dangerous prostitution laws, and at the hands of the prohibitionist seeking to ‘save’ us from ourselves.

'Rescue' as Violence

"Trafficked persons refers to the transportation and compulsion of an individual into any form of labour through use of force, threats of force, fraud, or coercion or debt bondage" (Ditmore, 2009, see also UN1). The police and prohibitionists alter this definition of trafficking to include anyone engaged in sex work as an occupation. This deliberate conflation has led many Canadians to equate sex work with the word 'trafficking'. All sex workers are deemed to be domestically trafficked. The sex workers most greatly impacted by this are sex workers who are Asian, Indigenous and those from other ethnic groups. Migrant sex workers are also overwhelmingly targeted and framed as trafficked by the media, police and prohibitionists. Indeed, owing to many sensationalist news stories, and lurid docudramas the word "trafficking" evokes images of women and children forced into servitude in the popular imagination.

A sex worker who interacts with clients outdoors, places their ad in the paper or on the Internet, answers their own phone, and makes their own decisions about which clients to see, is deemed to be so victimized by sex work that they can't even realize that they are being abused. We are spoken about as lacking human agency to make our own choices, which denies us the right to even speak in our own defence. By constructing us this way, they can conveniently force us into 'rescue'. This is a way to deny us our voices.

In Canada, vice raids & sweeps occur. Our colleagues are arrested, handcuffed, photographed, fingerprinted, and thrown in jail. The only way out, without a criminal record, is to agree to forced 're-education' at one of the "exit" programs. These programs don't let sex workers speak for themselves, and construct us all as victims in need of their so called help. In some other countries, including India, sex workers have broken out and escaped from rescue camps (Hadaspar, India. 21 & 42 sex workers respectively in two separate incidents).

The reframing of sex workers’ own experiences and lives to suit agendas, and the continued conflation of sex work with trafficking, creates a world where we are not free to travel, where we are not free to be active agents in our own lives and work and where those who seek to 'rescue' us are actually perpetrators of violence against us.

~Sex Professionals of Canada (SPOC)
www.spoc.ca

Links:

1UN definition of trafficking:
http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/human-trafficking/faqs.html

Sex Trade Not Traffic:
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/Sex-trade-not-traffic-30177322.html

Bad Rehab You Tube Video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GM0r7N1rIMI

Health and human rights advocates denounce Gates Foundation's support of raids on sex workers:
http://www.nswp.org/resource/health...e-gates-foundations-support-raids-sex-workers

The Use of Raids to Fight Trafficking in Persons:
http://www.nswp.org/sites/nswp.org/files/swp-2009-raids-and-trafficking-report.pdf

Collateral Damage:
http://www.iom.int/jahia/webdav/sha...ction_070909/collateral_damage_gaatw_2007.pdf
 
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