Carman Fox

)penly managed mass killings of prostitutes in central Baghdad - trigger warning

susi

Sassy Strumpette
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Jun 27, 2008
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@the Meat Market!!!lol
this made me cry this morning....sex workers are also being rounded up and put into camps in other parts of the world....gives an entirely new meaning to survival sex work....and gives me perspective on what is happening here ...i feel lucky to be in canada....but also can see that we ourselves are only steps away from forced rehabilitation and labor camps....and truely, the case of the missing women and how no one did anything? it seems to be eerily close to what is described as monthly murders of sex workers below....

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...-and-the-dark-world-they-inhabited/?tid=hp_mm

Morning Mix

The slaughter of dozens of alleged Iraqi prostitutes and the dark world they inhabited
By Terrence McCoy July 15

It was late Saturday when several four-wheel drive vehicles rolled to a stop before a sun-battered, taupe apartment building in the eastern Baghdad neighborhood of Zayounah. The cars deposited militants who filed inside the widely known house of prostitution. In the militants’ hands were reportedly silenced guns.

Later, after the killing was done, Agence France-Presse said a single warning clung to a door: “This is the fate of any prostitution.”

The images gathered of that fate are snapshots of terrible carnage, each more chilling than the last. One shows the bloody bodies of eight young women amid discarded furniture. Another reveals five women who died in one another’s arms inside a bathroom. Three more bodies were splayed along the floor, their hair wild and matted.

In all, anywhere from 20 to 29 alleged prostitutes were killed in a massacre that also claimed the lives of several men. No one appears to know what happened: who the killers were, why they did this, who ordered it. In a city besieged by an encroaching Sunni army that has proclaimed a modern Caliphate, it looked on Monday as though those questions wouldn’t be answered. Residents told AFP that every few months prostitutes are found murdered in those apartments. And nothing is ever done.

“If a person got shot right next to a policeman, they wouldn’t say anything,” one shopkeeper who requested anonymity explained to the news agency. “They’re afraid. It’s the rule of the strong over the weak.”

However rough life is for sex workers elsewhere in the world, it’s rougher in Iraq. According to a review of journalistic, academic and aid agency accounts, theirs is a precarious economic existence made worse by perpetual warfare, regime change and the threat of summary executions and beheadings. In 2003, the U.S. State Department reported Iraqi militants, under the auspices of fighting prostitution, “beheaded in public more than 200 women throughout the country, dumping their severed heads at the families’ doorsteps. Many families have been required to display the victim’s head on their outside fences for several days.”

Analysts agree refugees are among the most susceptible to human trafficking, and Iraq has loosed hundreds of thousands of refugees in decades of unrest. The Organization of Women’s Freedom in Iraq reported that “an estimated 4,000 Iraqi women, one-fifth of whom are under 18, have disappeared [in broad daylight] since the 2003 invasion; many are believed to have been trafficked.” Some estimates said an additional 50,000 Iraqi women and girls were then forced into Syria’s sex trade.

But it wasn’t always that way. After the nation was founded in the late 1950s, the Organization of Women’s Freedom in Iraq said it was home to something similar to a regulated sex “trade. … There was a strong women’s movement on the ground.” When the Baathist regime swept into power in 1963, however, it ushered in laws that made prostitution illegal. Then came the implementation of economic sanctions on Saddam Hussein’s Iraq — and scores of desperate women were pushed into the industry.

“A starvation-style economy translated into exploitation of women in the workplaces,” the report said. “Although women were a big part of the public work force, their monthly salary became equivalent to a few dollars. A huge population of widowed single mothers started to practice individual and hidden prostitution in workplace or in neighborhoods for survival.”

That survival became even harder in the subsequent crackdowns and honor killings that claimed at least 9,000 Kurdish women within nine years — and that was still before the U.S.-led invasion shattered the country. In the years after, “families keep their girls inside, not only to keep them from being assaulted or killed, but to prevent them from being kidnapped by organized prostitution rings,” wrote analyst Debra McNutt in Common Dreams. “Gangs are also forcing some families to sell their children into sex slavery.”

That happened to a 15-year-old girl Human Rights Watch calls “Muna B.” She said men abducted her on May 11, 2003, along with her two sisters, age 11 and 16. “They did bad things to my sister,” she told the aid agency. “She told me that they had slept with her; she was crying. She only told me about that one night, and she said that all [four men] did it.”

The killings did not stop after Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki came to power. In some ways, they got worse as religious fanaticism crept into certain ministries. The Ministry of Interior “openly managed mass killings of prostitutes in Al Battaween in central Baghdad,” according to Organization of Women’s Freedom in Iraq. In July 2006, six alleged prostitutes and one man were executed in Baghdad by armed militants. More mass killings of women accused of prostitution also reportedly occurred in the southern cities of Basra and Umara between 2006 and 2008.

Today, the sex trade continues to thrive in Baghdad, Al-Monitor said, a precarious system hinging on older prostitutes called “sheikha” who look after younger ones. Business is done in nightclubs or in individual residences. “This is how things are for prostitutes in Baghdad,” wrote journalist Ali al-Saray. “Aliases are part of the precautions they take in a society that chases them down but derives pleasure from them at the same time.”

The journalist then asked one worker named Wardah, who has a 4-year-old son and said she “pleasures anyone who pays,” whether anything can dismantle the trade. “This,” she replied, “is just a dream.”



Terrence McCoy is a foreign affairs writer at the Washington Post. He served in the U.S. Peace Corps in Cambodia and studied international politics at Columbia University. Follow him on Twitter here.
 

juniper

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Re: Prostitution in Iraq

Thank you for bringing this to our attention, Susi. Most North American feminists, unlike yourself, are so involved in what they consider personal freedom issues at home (whether factual or fanciful) that they lose complete interest when it comes to their "sisters" in foreign, non-European countries. Honour killings (mentioned in this article) are commonplace in Islamic regimes such as Iraq but feminists rarely denounce them. One of their excuses, if they are aware of it at all, is that if it's a normal cultural practice then it should not be criticized giving firm credence to the injustices caused by unfettered multiculturalism and political correctness. I would like to mention the current and very articulate writings on this subject by psychologist and pioneer feminist Phyllis Chesler. She has become thoroughly discouraged by what modern feminism has morphed into. Dr. Chesler's various articles can be found on her website/blogsite.

One further remark, Susi. Please take this as a friendly criticism: "..steps away from forced rehabilitation and labor camps..." I think you are being overly dramatic in this respect. That's not what this great nation is all about. And once more, thanks for bringing this issue to our attention.
 
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Aug 17, 2011
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Bloody barbarians! And to think there are moral relativists out there who will try to dismiss this away by saying "It's a different culture, who are we to judge?" Some cultures are simply better than others, end of story.

And Juniper is right, Susi. If you start using hyperboles like "forced rehabilitation and labor camps", people will start tuning you out. Keep it real, sister.
 
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rickoshadows

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Susi is right that the laws currently contemplated by our government are the first step leading to forced rehabilitation camps etc. Once you start criminalizing a class of citizens, it is like a ball rolling down the the hill which gathers momentum as it goes. Each following sanction and indignity becomes easier to implement. Canada has made great progress since the forties, but I fear that last year have walked us back 30 years. I am saddened at what is happening to the country I served for 35 years.
 

susi

Sassy Strumpette
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@the Meat Market!!!lol
with respect men, i understand you believe its far fetched, i do not. the rhetoric coming from the cons on this have many links which may not at first be obvious but from experiences shared by swedish sex workers we know some of the problems which will emerge as a result of the all sex workers are victims.

for example, it may become mandatory to denounce sex work and enter "exiting programs" in order to qualify for social assisatnce.

exiting programs are necessary for those who are unhappy hookers as it were, don't get me wrong....

but when accessing supports becomes dependent on exiting sex work, it is not longer a choice and is more in line with the chinese re-education model.

some of the police men with their "arrest sex workers for their own good" position are the same, how is arresting someone helping them? its not. in particular for those on street who may miss court dates and receive additional charges for failure to appear,etc. and end up in jail. in jail, they give you "work".....for which they pay if you are lucky around $9 a day....

so in canada, mandatory exiting ( re-education ) and incarceration in work camps......already that's how it is moving....

i know its difficult for people who are not interacting with the criminal justice system on a regular basis to understand, but i do not feel like my statement was over the top at all.

i do think its unfortunately true that people do not want to hear it, so will tune us out when we talk about canada in this way, but that does not make it untrue.....
 

juniper

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I haven't "tuned" you out, Susi but I disagree with your assessment. Before retirement, I worked intensely with the justice/criminal system in BC so I think I also have some valuable experience with it. Nonetheless, your opinion, based on your experience and intelligence, is respected.
 

newatit

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Jan 31, 2011
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I can see the Swedish system problems coming here real fast. McKay isn't fooling around with the soft approach, and the police will be cleaning up the country fast as they can.

But you have to respect the police issue, as they see the bad side of this constantly, their lives revolve around this kind of thing, they see it as a problem and their job is to solve problems.

Trouble is they will be concentrating on a few at the expense of the many.

We won't see mass murders in Canada, physically, but legally I am convinced it won't be much short of that.

In other words, the LE will be gathering up those who buy sex, and legally murdering us in court. No "murder". Think of the implications of a criminal record! and maybe no pardon after five years, thanks again to Harper.
 
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