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 | News: New coalition challenges the status quo of “Pornland, OR” |
 Published in The Portland Alliance, February 2010
I have been a feminist a long time. First just a feminist, then a
liberal feminist, then a sex-positive feminist by my early 20s. To my
life-changing joy, I discovered radical feminism and I'm still in that
camp, but traipsing through my early 30s brought me to a new way of
working for women's rights. I am now a soroptimist.
Since last week I have been asking people if they know who the
Soroptimists are and what they do. Some folks had vague recollections
of community do-gooders, but most externalized the dialogue that ran
through my brain upon receiving word of the conference, “Sorop-wha?”
Soroptimist means “best for women.” They are an international
volunteer organization of professional women comprising more than 1,400
clubs in 19 countries who work to improve the lives of women and girls.
From microcredit to funding media projects and more, throughout the day
I heard astonishing success stories that convinced me they're not
bragging about that “best for women” declaration.
Soroptimists are the key constituents behind the Northwest
Coalition Against Trafficking (NWCAT), the official sponsor of the
anti-trafficking conference that drew a crowd of 500 to Portland's Red
Lion Hotel on January 9. Soroptimist International Northwestern Region
is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization that has formed a coalition
of agencies, political leaders, community organizers, media and
business contacts throughout the Northwest to work against trafficking.
And mama mia is there trafficking in the Northwest.
Deputy Keith Bickford, director of the Oregon State Human Trafficking
Task Force, explained why Portland is a major slave hub in the United
States, “Lots of pimps have come to Portland because there have been
few prosecutions.” One pimp told him “schools are buffets” where
slavers can find teen girls to turn out by the bunch. Bickford blamed
the city's legal sex industry, lax trafficking enforcement, large
numbers of homeless youths, proximity to two interstate freeways and
seasonal farmwork, but highlighted the fact that pimps only provide
what johns demand. Research on Scottish johns from 2008 revealed twice
as many prostitute-using men identified themselves as politically left
than politically right (32% versus 17%). Portland progressives need to
stop smirking at the sexual capitalism that has masqueraded under
liberalism's aegis for too long.
Talk of building a shelter for prostituted girls has been
buzzing for about two years, but little headway has been made into the
enormous project. Greg Moawad of the Multnomah County District
Attorney’s Office used his session “Prosecution 101” to explain the
critical role of a safe haven in seeing traffickers brought to justice.
Prosecution is almost impossible without victim testimony, but these
girls are scared for their lives. “The very reasons she was selected as
a victim makes it hard for her to effectively prosecute them,” Moawad
reported. Between the arrest date and the court date, girls often run
away rather than go to court and face their enslavers. A shelter will
provide victims with the security and social assistances they need to
put these career criminals in jail.
It is easy to be against trafficking, tantamount as it is with slavery.
More difficult by far is to take issue with the trafficker's propaganda
machine: the porn industry. Criticisms of pornography that go beyond
jokes about bad music, fake breasts, and other purely aesthetic
offenses are anathema in Portland. I have reported on many
anti-trafficking events over the years and very rarely have the
educational sessions or speakers broached the topic of pornography's
influence on sexual slavery.
Imagine my delight when I walked into Esther Nelson's workshop
and encountered a slide depicting pornography as a form of sex
trafficking. Nelson was there representing the Sexual Assault Resource
Center (SARC) and she did a bang-up job explaining how porn stimulates
men's desire to use prostitutes. To separate pornography from
prostitution is to deny that women and children are often exploited by
pimps who can operate camaras. Men who pay to watch prostitutes be
prostituted on film are long-distance johns, and many move on to buying
sex locally. An increasingly pornified culture was Nelson's target and
she criticized the current valorization of all things pimp; television
shows like “Pimp My Ride”, feature movies like “Hustle & Flow,” and
songs like 50 Cent's career-making “P.I.M.P”:
I let em' do as they please, as long as they get my cheese
Even if they gotta freeze, or if it's a hundred degrees
I keep em' on they knees, take a look under my sleeve
I ain't gotta give em' much, they happy with Mickey D's
Later that afternoon, Soroptimist International of the Americas
President Cathy Standiford made a soroptimist out of me when she also
pointed a finger-o'-blame at pornography, “80 percent of prostitutes
say johns have shown them porn to illustrate what they want.”
Read the rest
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Posted by smberg on Tuesday, February 09 @ 12:34:30 CST
(Read More... | 10803 bytes more | Score: 5)
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 | News: Carnival of Radical Feminists #22 |
Genderberg wasn't supposed to host a Carnival of Radical Feminists, but I made my trap and walked into it.
See,
months ago I emailed Heart (aka Cheryl Lindsey Seelhoff) for permission to put a call for future
hosts on the forum with the hope that some blogging members who are
radical feminists would volunteer; not all are radfems. Her reply
unmistakably identified the next open slot as Genderberg's and my inner
stepchild cracked a wry smile at the realization Heart had
misunderstood (or did she? hmm) my intention. She was thrilled with the
idea and then I was stuck. The pulse-quickening risk of
pushing into unknown internet territories to explore for material was
mostly pleasant. The same will not be said for sifting through the
official carnival entries, but offenders were usually apparent.
After
the carnival host concept solidified in my noggin, my second thought
was that I wanted to see my favorite essay on prostitution in the next
edition. The problem was that the essay didn't live anywhere online,
only in the book Not for Sale.
I am thrilled to announce author De Clarke has sent me an electronic
version to share, because I have read hundreds of essays on
prostitution and this one stands out for its singular round-up of
crisscrossing issues delivered in mellifluous prose. The addendum on
Abu Ghraib is not only eerily relevant today but a spectacular
explanation for why men make and use pornography.
"Prostitution for everyone: Feminism, globalisation, and the 'sex' industry'" by D.A. Clarke http://genderberg.com/docs/Prostitution ... ifinal.pdf
"First,
the prevailing Market-worship mocks and devalues any suggestion of
altruism; if women fortunate enough to have escaped sexual exploitation
in their own lives demonstrate concern and caring for prostituted
women, they are dismissed as naive, unrealistic idealists and (of
course) 'ideologues.' The 'sexual liberation' pseudo-progressive
ideology then serves to cast women who object to exploitation,
profiteering, coercion and other routine practises of the sex industry
as 'crypto-conservatives,' 'neo-Victorians,' 'anti-sex,' and so forth.
Should either of those barriers fail to discourage the feminist social
critic, the neoliberal dogma is trotted out to prove that, for example,
the woman eating dog food on the floor of Stern's studio is exactly
where she wants to be. Any woman who expresses disgust at the men who
enacted and enjoyed this ritual of humiliation is actually an anti-feminist:
she is denying the agency and choice exercised by this 'liberated'
female, the 'good sport' who is 'tough enough to take it' and needs no
sympathy or interference from well-meaning nannies. Just as, of course,
the poor are quite capable of pulling themselves up by their own
bootstraps and need no insulting assistance from the smothering hands
of Big Government." from addendum: "Why
did the Nazis take pictures and meticulously document the atrocities
committed in the camps? Why did a generation of white hunters take
pictures of themselves standing on wild animals they had shot? Why do
hunters hang trophy heads on their walls? Why did white people take
pictures of lynchings and make them into postcards that were then
collected and traded? Why did GIs in Vietnam collect ears and other
more private body parts from their victims? Why did ‘Indian fighters’
and bounty hunters in the old American West collect body parts from
dead Indians? And – lastly – why do men make documentary pornography?" Here's what else me and contributors (thank you!) culled together for your reading pleasure.
http://genderberg.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=17&t=3825
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Posted by smberg on Wednesday, July 01 @ 14:18:57 CDT
(Read More... | Score: 5)
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 | News: A Crime That Should Shame Us All |

A Crime That Should Shame Us All
Eighty percent of trafficking victims are sold for sex.
February 25, 2009
By Swanee Hunt
In the midst of the bitter winter of a failing global economy, the
United Nations is calling the world's citizens to recognize the plight
of the most vulnerable: slaves.
It's
fitting that on the birthday of Abraham Lincoln, the Great Emancipator,
the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) launched its first assessment
of the scope of human trafficking, the modern-day form of slavery.
The
findings are grim. Based on data from 155 states, the "Global Report on
Trafficking in Persons" includes country-specific information on
legislation and criminal-justice responses to global patterns and
criminal network flows. While the number of countries that have moved
toward implementing the UN Protocol Against Trafficking in Persons
(2000) has doubled since 2006, two of every five countries in the study
have not convicted a single person on trafficking charges -- that's
more than half of the UN member states.
True, the number of
convictions worldwide is increasing each year, but not in proportion to
the growing incidence of the crime. Governments are either unequipped
or, worse, unwilling to attack the fastest-growing criminal industry in
the world.
One of the greatest barriers to progress is the
misleading term "trafficking," which implies movement. There's nothing
magic about moving a girl from Kyiv to Paris, or from Dallas to Boston.
In either case, when children are exploited for pornography, or
terrified adults work for miniscule pay, it's enslavement.
Troubling Figures
The
UNODC study estimates that 80 percent of slaves are sold for sex, while
the remaining 20 percent are forced to toil in fields, homes, and
sweatshops. Worldwide, children make up 20 percent of victims, with
estimates as high as 100 percent in some areas of West Africa.
The
report provides much-needed data and brings us closer to understanding
the depth, breadth, and scope of trafficking; but as UNODC Executive
Director Antonio Maria Costa admits, "We don't know much about the size
of the iceberg that lies beneath." No UNODC figures for the total
number of victims exist, but the International Labor Organization
estimates that it is growing by 2 million people every year -- if you
don't count those who have died or been rescued. Countries documented
only 22,500 victims rescued in 2006. That means that only one in 100
victims is freed from bondage.
"Are we making some progress? I
wish we were," Costa lamented during the New York release of the
report. "Twenty-two thousand rescued; 2 million in the pool; 99 percent
of the victims are still victimized -- I would like member states to
take this more seriously. This is a very strong message." It's a
message the United States and Europe, in particular, must not ignore.
I've
just returned from a six-city swing, mostly in Eastern Europe,
examining antitrafficking strategies. So I was not surprised by the
finding that, although European countries (with the exception of
Estonia) have legislation against trafficking, there is a decrease in
the number of investigations in Western and Central Europe. The number
of people being trafficked within and between European countries is
growing, but it seems political interest is declining.
On a
positive note, Eastern Europe and Central Asia registered a steady
increase in convictions between 2003 and 2007. Although this could be
attributed to pressure from the international community, countries such
as Moldova, the Russian Federation, and Ukraine should be commended for
taking tangible steps to root out trafficking. During my travels, I was
amazed to discover that the government of Ukraine has created a unit
within the Interior Ministry to target trafficking, with no less than
600 personnel.
Negative Trends
Perhaps
the most troubling finding from the report was that a significant
number of arrested members of trafficking networks are women. And
often, women trafficking victims accept an offer of greater freedom and
less abuse in exchange for trapping others. Has Europe failed its women
twice over, creating appalling situations where women are compelled to
be both victims and victimizers?
Perhaps the real picture is
that male criminals in the upper echelons of the hierarchy use women to
carry out the most visible tasks, in the same way that drug lords use
women as "mules." As terrorists may use female suicide bombers because
they seem less threatening, women recruiters can more easily build
trust with the young women they're luring into the sex trade. And once
caught, women don't have the same "boys' networks" that allow them to
buy off corrupt police and judges as easily as their male counterparts.
After the Iron Curtain fell, rural villages in Eastern Europe
were emptied of their women, who were shipped like chattels to the
United States, Canada, and Western Europe. Although European children,
women, and men are still being exported and exploited, the UN
identified Europe as the destination for victims from other parts of
Europe, but also Africa, Latin America, and Asia. Prague is one of the
20 top sex-tourism destinations in the world, and the infamous
red-light district of Amsterdam has become a den of illegal trade in
flesh. The economic crisis will probably push more women to desperation
as the only thing they have left to sell is themselves.
Attacking Demand
We
need to find ways to attack the problem at its core -- by eradicating
demand. Yes, it's crucial to help rescue victims of trafficking.
However, unless we deal with the market, trafficking will continue to
grow. It's more likely that we can curb the demand for commercial sex
and labor before we solve the social inequities that contribute to the
supply.
Although Europe overall is a leading driver of demand,
individual countries are taking the lead in tackling demand, at least
for commercial sex. Last year, I traveled to Scandinavia with Lina
Sidrys Nealon, manager of the modern-day slavery project at Hunt
Alternatives Fund, to examine the innovative ways in which Sweden and
Norway are fighting the sex trade. Originally ridiculed yet now lauded
around the world, Sweden's 1999 "Sex Purchase Law," which criminalized
buying sex and decriminalized selling sex, is rendering trafficking
almost nonexistent in that country.
Norway recently made it
illegal for its citizens to purchase any sex act anywhere in the world.
In Lithuania, Greece, Ireland, and Finland, it's a crime to buy sex
from trafficked persons. Britain's Home Office has taken it one step
further, introducing a law in December that made it an offense to pay
for sex with someone "controlled for another person's gain," including
pimps, traffickers, and drug dealers who force addicts into
prostitution to repay them.
Even in Amsterdam, a third of the
red-light-district brothels were closed in 2008 due to their
involvement in illicit trafficking. Communities in the Czech Republic,
Italy, and England have shifted law enforcement energies to arresting
customers, while providing the sellers of sex with social services
rather than taking them to court, in contrast to the ineffective
practice we see in the United States of arresting women and girls in
the sex trade, while ignoring the men.
The UN calls trafficking
"a crime that shames us all." When our fellow human beings are treated
as commodities, our own humanity is diminished. Let us turn shame into
action and remove this stain from our soil, from our souls.
Swanee Hunt served as U.S. ambassador to
Austria from 1993 to 1997. She is Eleanor Roosevelt Lecturer in Public
Policy at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, and president of Hunt
Alternatives Fund, which includes a project focused on fighting the
demand for sex trafficking.
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Posted by smberg on Tuesday, March 03 @ 16:50:22 CST
(Read More... | Score: 5)
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 | News: Revealed: the truth about brothels |
 Revealed: the truth about brothels
A survey into London's off-street sex industry has exposed just how
widespread it is - and documents in disturbing detail the plight of the
women trapped in it.
Julie Bindel The Guardian Wednesday, Sept 10, 2008
http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2008/sep/10/women.socialexclusion
When Frank rang a brothel in Enfield, he could hear a baby crying in
the background. When Alan called one in Southwark, he could make out
the sound of a child asking for his tea. And when Mick called another
to inquire about their services, he was told that he could have a
"dirty Oriental bitch who will do stag nights, anal, and the rest." The
men were undertaking research for Big Brothel: a Survey of the
Off-Street Sex Industry in London, the most comprehensive study ever
conducted into brothels in the UK. The project, which gathered
information from 921 brothels in the capital, was commissioned by the
Poppy Project, the only British organisation that offers support for
women trafficked into prostitution. My co-author Helen Atkins and
I recruited male friends and colleagues to help with the research, and
warned them that the work might be upsetting. They were to telephone
brothels, posing as potential punters, with a list of questions
including "What nationalities are on offer tonight?", "Do the girls do
anal?", "How about oral without a condom?", and "What age are they?" We
wanted to look at what really goes on in brothels - how much control
the women really have; whether there is evidence of trafficking; if
local councils are giving licences for saunas and massage parlours when
it is clear that they are brothels; and how the sex industry is growing
and evolving. During 120 hours of telephone calls, we
established the following: at least 1,933 women are currently at work
in London's brothels; ages range from 18 to 55 (with a number of
premises offering "very, very young girls"); prices for full sex start
at £15, and go up to £250; and more than a third of the brothels offer
unprotected sex - including, in some cases, anal penetration. The
lowest price quoted for anal sex was £15. "Come along and bring your
mates," said one brothel owner. "We have a Greek girl who is very, very
young." While kissing used to be off-limits for women selling sex, it
can now be bought for an extra tenner. Of the brothels
researched, 85% operate in residential areas. Almost two-thirds are
located in flats and more than one-fifth are in a house. Wherever you
are in the city, the likelihood is that buying and selling women is
going on under your nose. Our researchers contacted only brothels
that advertised in local newspapers - not those that advertise on
websites or on cards in telephone boxes. Because of this we only
uncovered the tiniest corner of the trade. But we still encountered
brothels in every London borough, with Enfield (a typical residential
area of north London) having a minimum of 54, and Westminster at least
71. We estimated that the brothels we surveyed made anything from £86m
to £209.5m in total per year through newspaper advertisements alone. Although
it is a criminal offence to advertise prostitution services, the law is
not enforced, and this "blind eye" approach serves the pimps and
punters well. Researchers also interviewed women who have
worked in London brothels, and all reported having felt degraded and
violated while selling sex. This tallies with previous research: one
large US study on prostitution and violence found that 82% of women had
been physically assaulted since entering the trade, with many having
been raped. More than 80% were homeless, and a majority, on and
off-street, were addicted to illegal drugs and/or alcohol. UK research
published in 2000 found that prostitutes routinely face sexual and
physical violence from pimps and punters, but have little or no
"workplace" protection. One of the women we spoke to was Naomi,
who, like many prostitutes, has a history of childhood sexual abuse.
When she ran away from home, she met a man who pimped her - first into
hostess clubs, then from a private flat. "It's an unsettling, unhealthy
experience seeing 20 guys a day," she says, "and you don't know what
the next person will be like". A common assumption is that
brothels are safer than the street, and while it seems that women are
more likely to be murdered if they are working on the streets, the
prevalence of rape and other attacks from pimps and punters is also
high in brothels. "The men have up to an hour to do what they like to
you," says Janet, who was pimped into a Leeds brothel when she was 15,
"whereas at least on the street you can always try to run away." Rachel
told us about the reality of how much money the women make, as well as
the inherent danger in the off-street trade. "Flats are set up to be a
rip-off, to be truthful with you, because you're not going to make
money for yourself." Rachel made about £200 a day, but after paying
card boys, rent, the maid, and her "protector" (pimp), she came out
with next to nothing. "And you're not guaranteed security at the end of
the day." Alice brought it home to us just how accepted and normalised prostitution has become.
"You sit in a basque, in a window with your red light on. When you get
a client you close your curtains and turn your red light off. That
starts from eight in the morning." The minister for women,
Harriet Harman, is determined to curb the massive trade in women's
bodies. Last week she released findings from a Mori poll of more than
1,000 British adults on attitudes to paying for sex. It found that the
vast majority of both men and women polled would think it
"unacceptable" if a partner paid for sex; the majority would support a
law that criminalised paying for sex; and around half would back a law
that decreased the number of women being trafficked into the UK. As
our researchers discovered, brothels market women merely as
merchandise. Frank was offered "two for the price of one" if he visited
during "happy hour" (any time before 5pm). One brothel owner offered to
send two women to the punter's home for a £50 delivery charge; another
offered free oral sex without a condom if more than £50 was spent; and
at one suburban sauna, first-time buyers were offered a voucher which
entitled them to 50% off the next visit. We primed the telephone
researchers to look for evidence of trafficking. There was plenty.
Brothels offered women of 77 different nationalities and ethnicities,
including many from known-source countries for trafficking. One
researcher was told by a brothel owner, "For no condom and anal, call
tomorrow. Eastern Europeans promised later in the week." One
punter I interviewed for another research project told me that in
choosing a woman, "I made a list in my mind. I told myself that I'll be
with different races eg Japanese, Indian, Chinese. Once I have been
with them I tick them off the list." Many people are unhappy that
this research has been done at all. The pro-legalisation lobby do not
seem to want the horrors of what goes on in brothels exposed,
preferring to present such places as being similar to an office
environment; simple, clean, consensual workplaces. Punters are also
unhappy about public exposure of brothels. One frequent customer at a
Soho brothel told me, "I don't know why people have to research
prostitution - the army shoots innocent people, fast food poisons
people; no one wants to research them. It's the only job that has no
downside. It only brings pleasure to the customer." Some of the
male researchers had previously been liberal about prostitution. Frank
had thought that legalisation would be beneficial to the women, and
Mick believed that some would be happy earning good money. By the end
of the project, all the men considered prostitution to be a violent and
abusive industry, and perceived the punters as harmful misogynists.
Nigel said that after weeks of talking about sex to third parties in a
cold, clinical way he realised that the women were being used as
nothing more than a product. "The idea of sex started to be devalued
and demeaned, its sanctity lost," he says. Tony was shocked at the
number of brothels. "They're on high streets, down alleyways and in
suburban two-up two-downs." Unless we think about sustainable and
substantive solutions that will eventually eradicate prostitution, it
will continue to grow at an alarming rate - research published last
year found that in just 10 years, the number of men paying for sex in
the UK almost doubled. What Big Brothel shows is that
commercial sex is becoming as normalised as stopping off for a
McDonald's. There are two key ways that the UK can respond. We can
legalise the trade, make the women pay taxes, and declare the pimps to
be legitimate businessmen. Where brothels have been legalised- in
Amsterdam, for instance - the illegal sector continues to flourish.
Since brothels were legalised in Melbourne, Australia, more than 20
years ago, the number of unlicensed brothels has trebled. Few
prostitutes will pay tax, as the act of registering their trade is too
stigmatised, and their lives are often too chaotic. There is no
evidence that legalisation keeps women safe, but there is plenty that
shows it results in an increase in demand for the sex trade. In
Australia, $11.3bn was spent on prostitutes and strippers last year,
and the trade is growing at approximately 8% a year. The other
option is to bring in a law that makes paying for sex illegal, while
helping to educate the public that prostitution is not a victimless
crime. This has worked in Sweden, where such a law was introduced nine
years ago, and 80% of Swedes now support it. Trafficking into the
country is now lower than in any other EU nation. This is the approach
that government ministers Harriet Harman and Vera Baird support. Most
men do not pay for sex. Those who do need educating about the harm that
prostitution causes to women and society in general. Some will only
stop if they are frightened of the consequences, such as one charmer
who told me, "If she isn't crying but says no, I keep on. I only stop
if she is really crying." Others are able to justify to
themselves what they do, simply because it is not against the law. When
I asked why he pays for sex, one regular punter told me: "It's like
going for a drink. You are not doing anything illegal." At the moment,
he is right. Let's hope the government has the courage to change that.
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Posted by smberg on Thursday, September 11 @ 13:15:20 CDT
(Read More... | Score: 5)
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 | News: Challenging Men’s Demand for Prostitution in Scotland |
A new report published by Scotland’s Women’s Support Project is titled Challenging Men’s Demand for Prostitution in Scotland: A research report based on interviews with 110 men who bought women in prostitution”. Here is the beginning of entry from UK radical feminist blog At The Root that puts some of the report's findings about johns (aka punters) into context. -Sam
by Debs
Thanks to Jennifer Drew for emailing me information about a report published recently by Scotland’s Women’s Support Project. It is entitled Challenging Men’s Demand for Prostitution in Scotland, and is “A research report based on interviews with 110 men who bought women in prostitution,” by Jan MacLeod, Melissa Farley, Lynn Anderson and Jacqueline Golding.
Reading the report, and especially the quotes from some of the men
(a particularly telling example of which I have used as the title for
this post), I was reminded very much of another post I wrote some time ago,
after I had had the misfortune to stumble upon a site called Punternet,
where men who bought women for sex across the UK gave reviews of those
women, as though they were talking about a used car or a microwave
oven. I mention this not least to show that the types of attitudes
expressed by the men questioned for this report are not peculiar to
Scotland. Also, the “masturbation” quote I have used as a title is
extremely resonant with a comment made by Kiuku in this comment thread,
saying, “It is rape because it is basically men masturbating into your
body,” except the quote in this study is from a man, a punter himself,
unwittingly admitting to the rape of prostituted women.
Here is the quote, along with some others from the report:
“Nothing is going to deter me from masturbation and prostitution is an extension of that.”
“If a guy wants his hole, go and get it done with, get it out your system.”
“They know what they’re there for. You get what you pay for without the ‘no.’”
“It depends on if the woman has track marks on her vagina. That’s a real turn off.”
“I was with a group of pals. We’d been talking about it
for years, I think all blokes do. 8 of us specifically went to get the
puff and prostitutes… It was a rite of passage. We went to prostitutes
three times a day. We were like pigs in shit…”
Another punter was a frequent prostitution tourist in Asia. He
detailed the harsh conditions women were subject to in Thai and
Cambodian prostitution. Exposing his narcissism and his sadism, he
rationalised the commission of sexual violence against women and
children.
“I don’t get pleasure from other people’s suffering. I struggle
with it but I can’t deny my own pleasures. In Cambodia I knocked back a
lot of children; it makes it hard to sleep at night. But I don’t see
the point in making a moral stance.”
“I think it would help a couple if they weren’t happy
and the husband was going with a prostitute now and then – may help
cement the relationship. If the wife doesn’t know, it might make him
happy.”
Just in case anyone was under the illusion that men who use
prostituted women see them as human beings, or something. These quotes
are followed in the report by a woman speaking from the other side of
the ‘transaction’.
“Every day I was witness to the worst of men. Their
carelessness and grand entitlement. The way they can so profoundly
disconnect from what it is they’re having sex with, the way they think
they own the world, watch them purchase a female. I was witness to
their deep delusions. Spoiled babies all of them, and so many of them
called [telephoned] prostitutes. I thought,maybe all men called
prostitutes. It was a terrible thought, but really, what did I care.
There was a system in place that was older and stronger than I could
begin to imagine. Who was I? I was just a girl. What was I going to do
about it? If I had any power I would make it so that nobody was ever
bought or sold or rented,” Michelle Tea, 2004
These men’s contempt for the women they are paying for (and by
extention, all women) could not be clearer. They are deluded,
self-important pricks. They are also rapists, but, hey, let’s not be
too inflammatory here. No, let’s. They are rapists, and “masturbation
man”, who just came right out and said if he’s fed up of masturbating
on his own, he’ll go out and buy a woman to masturbate into, admits it,
whether he knows it or not.
I’m going to spin wildly off-topic for a moment, and bring Johnny Vegas into
the discussion. Except it’s not off-topic at all - it’s pretty much the
same thing, and exactly the same attitude towards women. Unless you
live in a cave half-way up a mountain, you will be aware that lovable,
fat oaf Johnny has distinguished himself this week by sexually
assaulting a woman live on stage as part of his side-splitting act.*
Apparently, this is okay, because Johnny is “funny” and some sycophants
in the audience laughed whilst he did it. According to eye-witness
accounts, he actually fingered the woman through her clothes, which, as
Cruella
rightly points out, means penetration, which means rape. So, well-known
comedian rapes woman live on stage, with, presumably, several hundred
eye-witnesses, but it’s okay because…why? He’s funny? He’s ‘just a
normal bloke’? He lost control for a minute? What? Rape is a criminal
offence (as is the “lesser” offence of sexual assault, which definitely
took place), so, why has Johnny not been charged? Why is he not being
questioned by the police? Why are most people acting like this is
perfectly normal and acceptable behaviour? Because, we live in a rapist
society, that’s why. Because the majority of men hold attitudes towards
women reflected by the johns who took part in this research, and would
cheer Johnny on from the audience, and laugh and think it was a really
good night out. And just as Johnny walks free, and receives pats on the
back from other men, so do the men who use prostituted women walk free,
and are congratulated by their friends for proving what great men they
are.
So, again this proves these types of attitudes are not specific to
the particular men who took part in this study. It is prevelant, it is
the norm - if you are a man and you don’t hold those attitudes, you are
in the minority. Read the rest of the post by clicking here
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Posted by smberg on Friday, May 02 @ 17:54:16 CDT
(Read More... | Score: 2.6)
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 | News: Feminist Coalition Against Prostitution, new UK activist group |
 Imagine a world where women and girls are not for sale. Now make it real.
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We are a coalition of UK Feminist individuals and groups who believe that prostitution is violence against women:
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We invite all Feminist individuals and groups, from all backgrounds, to join this Coalition
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We are calling for the decriminalisation of all women, children
and men involved in prostitution - and demand that all criminal records
for loitering and/or soliciting be wiped so that survivors are not
barred from employment branded as 'sex offenders'
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We urge the UK Government, the Scottish Parliament and Welsh
Assembly to consider a Swedish style law to make buying sex illegal and
to invest money in exit services such as housing, education &
training, legal advice, welfare benefits and health care
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We believe that prostitution is not inevitable - end demand
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We keep in touch via yahoo groups e.mail group - sign up online at: http://uk.groups.yahoo.com/group/radicalsister
Please note - this list is moderated, membership is moderated.
We are unfunded, we welcome donations to our campaign
to build a world where nobody is for sale - to make a donation to FCAP
please contact for bank details - londonfeminist@yahoo.co.uk
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Posted by smberg on Wednesday, February 20 @ 19:07:53 CST
(Read More... | Score: 5)
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 | News: Iranian child victim of prostitution |
By Julia Rooke
Reporter, Crossing Continents
BBC News
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/crossing_continents/7107184.stm
Sold into prostitution aged nine, condemned by an Iranian judge to hang
at 18, Leila was saved by a group of human rights activists.
"I was nine years old when my mother started selling me. I did not understand what was happening."
Today Leila is a young woman of 22. For the past two years she has
been cared for by a private home for destitute young women in Tehran,
Omid E Mehr, which means Hope.
"My mother would say: 'Let's go out to buy things, like
chocolates'. She would actually trick me. I was a tiny girl. She just
took me to places."
Leila still finds it difficult to talk about the past. But we know
that the "places" she speaks of are where she was sold for sex and
raped.
Leila became the main source of income for a family of five.
The lawyer who eventually saved Leila's life, Shadi Sadr, is a
controversial figure in Iran. Although she was imprisoned earlier this
year for taking part in human rights demonstrations, she is widely
respected and frequently quoted in the press.
A girl is considered one of the first commodities or properties
that can be traded or sold in the eyes of a parent who is poor in Iran
Ms Sadr says Leila's story is not unique.
"A girl is considered one of the first commodities or properties
that can be traded or sold in the eyes of a parent who is poor in
Iran," she says.
Ms Sadr says that, in practice in Iran, under the Islamic penal code a father has enormous power over his own children.
"If a father decides to kill his own child he will not be sentenced
to death, he will only be sent to prison for a couple of years."
Temporary wife
Leila lived in Arak, a small town four hours drive south of Tehran
- notorious for criminal behaviour and illegal drugs. Most of Leila's
earnings went on illegal narcotics for her family.
According to the United Nations three quarters of the world's opium
seizures take place in Iran and the authorities acknowledge addiction
is a serious problem.
But there are no such statistics on prostitution. The Director of the Omid E Mehr centre in Tehran says it is a growing problem.
"I have entered many homes in the south of Tehran where young girls
had to go out and sell their bodies to provide for their father's drug
habits," says Eshrat Gholipour.
I have also seen several cases of families chaining their own daughter to the homes to stop them from running away."
Leila's husband began selling her for sex to as many as 15 men each
night. Two months into the marriage, police raided the house and
arrested everyone.
The husband was sentenced to five years in jail for providing a house for illegal sex.
During the course of the criminal investigation, Leila's brothers
had confessed to raping her. They were flogged. For this Leila was
accused of incest. A crime punishable by death.
Leila was in a women's prison when she heard about her own sentence
from the warder: "I am going to tell you something but please do not be
upset. You are going to be hanged."
Ms Sadr says the judicial system is deeply conservative and unfair.
"These male judges have not had any training about sexual charges.
They all have a chauvinistic point of view and they see the woman as
guilty," she says.
Leila's brothers later retracted their confessions. Ms Sadr took Leila's case to appeal and won.
Death sentence
Earlier this year Ms Sadr defended and won the case of 19-year-old
Nazanine, sentenced to death for killing a man who tried to rape her.
Today she too is a free woman.
There will be so many protests... from the human rights activists
that the judges are under pressure not to issue a death sentence"
According to Amnesty International, 177 people were executed in
Iran last year, of these four were women - this year the number is up
to five. The real figures could be higher as executions are not always
reported.
But Ms Sadr and other Iranian lawyers say that constant
human-rights campaigning and publicity is making Iran's judges more
sensitive to public opinion. "There will be so many protests or so much
complaints from the human rights activists that the judges are under
pressure not to issue a death sentence," she says.
Tender hope
Today Leila lives in a small flat with a full-time carer paid for by Ms Sadr and the Omid E Mehr day centre.
When Leila arrived she was illiterate and needed to be taught the basics of life.
"She did not know anything," says Marjaneh Halati, the founder of
Omid E Mehr, "to the point that she did not know that you wear a pad
when you get a period."
Today Leila is learning to read and earning money as a seamstress.
But Ms Halati also knows that by helping girls like Leila - by
boosting their self-esteem and encouraging independence - the centre is
treading a fine line.
"We live in Iran and there are certain rules we have to abide by,
but it does not mean we cannot tell the girls that they are no
different to men. They are individuals," she says.
Today Leila is free and attitudes may slowly be changing. Iran passed its first child protection laws five years ago.
This spring a new bill drafted by human rights lawyers, is expected
to go before Parliament to make prosecutions in child abuse cases
easier.
Crossing Continents on BBC Radio 4
tells Leila's story on Thursday, November 29 at 1100 GMT, her story
will also be told on the World Service programme Assignment on
Wednesday, December 5 at 0900 GMT.
Leila's interview was recorded by the Iranian filmmaker, Hamid Rahmanian for a forthcoming film about the Omid e Mehr.
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Posted by smberg on Thursday, November 29 @ 11:32:20 CST
(Read More... | Score: 5)
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 | News: Israel's fight against sex trafficking |
By Raffi Berg
BBC News, Jerusalem
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/7070929.stm
Marina rarely leaves her two-room home in northern Israel these days.
She is in hiding - wanted by the Israeli authorities for being an
illegal immigrant, and by the criminal gangs who brought her here to
sell her into prostitution.
Marina - not her real name - was lured to Israel by human traffickers.
During the height of the phenomenon, from the beginning of the
1990s to the early years of 2000, an estimated 3,000 women a year were
brought to Israel on the false promise of jobs and a better way of
life.
"When I was in the Ukraine, I had a difficult life," said Marina,
who came to Israel in 1999 at the age of 33 after answering a newspaper
advertisement offering the opportunity to study abroad.
"I was taken to an apartment in Ashkelon, and other women there
told me I was now in prostitution. I became hysterical, but a guy
starting hitting me and then others there raped me.
"I was then taken to a place where they sold me - just sold me!"
she said, recalling how she was locked in a windowless basement for a
month, drank water from a toilet and was deprived of food.
That part of her ordeal only ended when she managed to escape, but the physical and mental scars remain.
Last year, the United Nations named Israel as one of the main
destinations in the world for trafficked women; it has also
consistently appeared as an offender in the annual US State
Department's Trafficking in Persons (Tip) report.
While this year's report said Israel was making "significant
efforts" to eliminate trafficking, it said it still does not "fully
comply with the minimum standards" to do so.
Like Marina, some trafficked women are brought into the country
legally, while others are smuggled by Bedouins across the border from
Egypt.
In all cases, the traffickers - as many as 20 in the chain from
recruitment to sale - take away the women's passports before selling
them on to pimps.
Sometimes the women are subjected to degrading human auctions, where they are stripped, examined and sold for $8,000-$10,000.
Sanctions threat
Prostitution in Israel is legal, but pimping and maintaining a brothel are not.
The law however is not widely enforced and few brothels are closed down.
In Tel Aviv's Neve Shaanan district for instance, just a short walk
from the city's five-star tourist hotels, brothels masquerading as
massage parlours, saunas and even internet cafes, fill the side
streets.
One such place even operates opposite the local police station.
There are bars on windows and heavily-built men guard the doors, which are only opened to let customers in and out.
Inside, groups of sullen-looking women sit in dimly-lit rooms, waiting for their next client.
Foreign women fetch the highest prices, with trafficked women forced to work up to 18 hours a day.
For years, the absence of anti-trafficking laws in Israel meant
such activity - less risky and often more profitable than trafficking
drugs or arms - went unchecked.
"During the first 10 years of trafficking, Israel did absolutely
nothing," said Nomi Levenkron, of the Migrant Workers' Hotline, an NGO
which helps trafficked women and puts pressure on the state to act.
"Women were trafficked into Israel - the first case we uncovered was in 1992 - and not much really happened," she said.
"Occasionally traffickers were brought to trial, but the victims
were arrested as well, they were forced to testify, and then they were
deported."
In 2000, trafficking for sexual exploitation was made a crime but
the punishments were light and its implementation was poor, NGOs say.
It was only after repeated criticism of Israel by the United States
- and the threat of sanctions - that authorities began to act.
Investigations into suspected traffickers increased, stiff jail
terms were handed down and Israel's borders were tightened against
people smuggling.
Changing tactics
Campaigners say things began to change for the better in 2004, when
the government opened a shelter in north Tel Aviv for women who had
been trafficked for sex.
It marked a change in the way the state perceived them - as victims of a crime rather than accomplices.
There are some 30 women at the Maggan shelter - most from former Soviet states, but also five from China.
"When they come here they are in a bad condition," said Rinat Davidovich, the shelter's director.
"Most have sexual diseases and some have hepatitis and even
tuberculosis. They also have problems going to sleep because they
remember what used to happen to them at night," she said.
"It's very hard and it's a long procedure to start to help and treat them."
Police say their actions have led to a significant drop in the
number of women now being trafficked into Israel for sex - hundreds,
rather than thousands, a year - and they say the women's working
environment has improved too.
"There is a significant change in the conditions that the women are
being held in," said anti-trafficking police chief Raanan Caspi.
"In 2003 we used to find women who were being raped, incarcerated
and suffering violence. In 2007, the situation is completely different
- they get paid in most cases and the conditions that they're in are
much more humane."
Now most trafficking occurs through what people like to call
discreet apartments and escort agencies. But the true picture might not
be so clear-cut.
Campaigners say increased police activity has also had an adverse
effect. Instead of operating openly in brothels, traffickers have
become more discreet, plying their trade in private apartments and
escort agencies, making the practice more difficult to detect.
"We've been keeping tabs on trends, in terms of, for instance,
prices of exploitative services," said Yedida Wolfe, of the Task Force
on Human Trafficking.
"Those prices have not gone up, which leads us to believe that the supply of victims has not gone down.
"While government officials are saying that their efforts have
drastically cut the number of victims in the country, the NGOs on the
scene really don't feel that's true."
Israel might well have turned a corner in its fight against the traffickers, but the battle is far from won.
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Posted by smberg on Tuesday, November 06 @ 15:39:53 CST
(Read More... | Score: 5)
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 | News: |
"Legalised prostitution: what sex workers say"
The South African Daily News September 17, 2007
By Troy Martens and Vivian Attwood
Durban sex workers have urged the authorities not to legalise
prostitution in the lead up to the 2010 World Cup Soccer tournament in
South Africa.
Making their feelings known to The Daily News this week, a group of
women earning their living through sex work claimed that National
Police commissioner Jackie Selebi "has got it all wrong".
The sex workers were responding to Selebi's idea of legalising the sex
trade during the world soccer event, a suggestion that has angered
many.
'You will still be raped, abused and violated'
"Those advocating legalisation think prostitutes' lives will improve," said Sindy a former Durban prostitute.
"It won't happen, because of the nature of the work. You will still
be raped, abused and violated. The emphasis should be on encouraging
women away from this profession by giving them better options."
She said that legalisation would not mean protection from the law, or improved working conditions.
This week the Daily News will run a series of articles looking at
issues surrounding sex in the city, dispelling many of the current
perceptions about sex work, hearing the real life experiences of the
city's prostitutes, some frank, some shocking, some poignant, others
hopeful.
The South African Law Reform Commission says it is looking at the
experiences of other countries like Germany, the Netherlands and
Australia who have all legalised prostitution, as well as countries who
have criminalised sex work.
'Policing is expensive and a waste of manpower'
Some sex workers believe that legalisation is the way to go.
Vicki, a sex worker at an upper-class massage parlour, said: "I think
it should be legalised or at least decriminalised. It is never going to
go away; policing is expensive and a waste of manpower.
"No little girl sits on her mother's knee, dreaming of her future,
and says, 'When I grow up I want to be a prostitute'. We all have big
hopes and dreams."
Debbie Toughey is a 46-year-old former prostitute who was once the madam at a highly successful Durban brothel.
Having spent most of her adult life in degradation, fear and isolation
as a worker in the sex industry, she is passionately anti legalisation.
"There's been a lot of discussion regarding the subject. 'Let's
dignify the trade', the pro lobby says. 'Let's call them sex workers,
not prostitutes'.
"The bottom line is, it's not a job like any other," she said. "It is
an occupation that dehumanises you and robs you of your womanhood."
Debbie asserted that low self esteem, coupled with lack of a
supportive family structure and financial need, are key reasons why
many women become prostitutes.
"If you had to fill in a CV to apply for a job as a prostitute, the one vital criterion would be poor self-worth," she said.
Why did an obviously intelligent, attractive woman stay in prostitution for so long?
"I only have a Standard 9, and work wasn't easy to find. I started out
trying to earn enough to look after my baby, and then I got sucked in
by a prominent businessman who promised to look after us.
"He had links with organised crime, although his public front was
squeaky clean. He made me the front for a brothel, and gradually and
systematically broke me down until I had no will of my own, and was
absolutely terrified for my own and my son's life.
I suffered daily torture, both physical and emotional, to the point where I had no future, and didn't dare dream of one.
"My entire being was focused on staying alive that day."
Because her pimp controlled members of the police force, Debbie was too terrified to seek help from the law.
"I knew they couldn't protect me, and he had eyes everywhere," she said.
"I started to think that suicide would be my only way out."
Debbie was finally released from the cycle of torment when her abuser
was shot and killed. However, she was so traumatised by her experiences
that she temporarily lost her memory and the power of speech.
These symptoms are common in severe cases of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, with which she was diagnosed.
It has taken her 11 years to claw her way back from the darkness.
Today, Debbie is dedicated to improving the lot of women who are still
in prostitution, and raising awareness of the frequently abusive and
exploitative dynamics at play in the sex industry.
She is a spokesperson for Doctors for Life International, and has been featured on television and radio.
"Don't think for a moment that my story is unique," she said. It is
happening all over the world, every day. The public is entitled to all
the facts about prostitution before a decision of this magnitude
[legalisation] is made."
Doctors for Life International is a non-profit organisation
championing the sanctity of life. They operate 'Life Place', a care
centre for prostitutes and abused women in Durban."
www.dailynews.co.za
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Posted by smberg on Thursday, September 20 @ 11:48:10 CDT
(Read More... | Score: 5)
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 | News: Turkey's Brothels Produce Two Election Candidates |
Run Date: 07/15/07
By Nicholas Birch, Women's Enews correspondent
http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3240/context/cover/
Two former prostitutes are running for seats in Turkey's July 22
election to raise awareness about the stigma sex workers face in the
nation's Muslim culture. With little chance for political victory, they
say their goal is to change society instead.
ISTANBUL, Turkey (WOMENSENEWS)--Raped by her uncle when she was 9
and sold into prostitution by a man who had promised to marry her, Ayse
Tukrukcu remembers her first day at a state-controlled brothel in the
southern Turkish city of Mersin like it was yesterday.
"There was a song--'Is This Justice, World' by Hakki Bulut--playing
in the shop opposite the big metal gate and a line of men waiting," she
says. "I asked the policeman at the door where I was, but he just
laughed and pushed me in. My world collapsed."
It's been more than a decade since she paid off the $12,000 price
she was sold for. Now, in an effort to draw attention to the plight of
Turkey's 3,000 state-registered prostitutes, she's running as an
independent candidate in parliamentary elections on July 22.
"They talk about domestic violence, but it was the state that beat
us up," she says, in the stuffy, shabby office that is serving as her
Istanbul headquarters.
Frequently breaking down in tears, she goes on to talk about
18-hour working days in the brothel, social security payments withheld,
even murder.
"Serpil, mother of three; Fatma from Diyarbakir; Hatice from Izmir;
all three were killed while I was inside and their deaths passed off as
overdoses," she says. That was the rule for disobedience, she explains:
first, a beating, then rape, then murder.
"We're not here simply to get attention," Tukrukcu says. "We're here so that people know the truth about all these things."
Running for political office from the margins, Tukrukcu is one of
thousands of candidates in an election that has been defined by a
national debate over Turkey's delicate balance between its staunchly
secular state and popular support for a conservative government that
has its roots in political Islam. Analysts expect that women will
double their ranks and win about 10 percent of the seats and the
Justice and Development Party will maintain control of parliament. Its
first task following the election will be to select a president, and
the prospect of a government fully dominated by the Islamic faction has
heightened political tensions over the past two months.
'Labeled for Life'
For Saliha Ermez, who escaped in 2002 from another state-run
brothel in southern Turkey and is now standing alongside Ayse Tukrukcu
as an independent candidate, the worst thing about having worked as a
registered prostitute in Turkey is that you're labeled for life.
She's not just talking about those ex-prostitutes who fall afoul of
this predominantly Muslim country's conservative morals, sacked from
new jobs when their former identity became clear. She's talking about
the way her daughter's hopes of becoming a police officer collapsed
when her mother's record was revealed in a background investigation.
"I haven't seen her for two years and I don't know where she is,"
Ermez says. "All I know is that she refers to me as 'that woman' and
vows to kill me if she meets me."
Hunched over his desk in a tiny office near the historic center of
Istanbul, criminal lawyer Abdurrahman Tanriverdi confirms her story.
A statute passed in 1930 requires prostitutes working in official
brothels to register with the police. Though the records are
theoretically secret, they can be used in cases of national security,
such as investigating the identities of people joining the security
forces.
"It's a disgraceful piece of legislation, really, unconstitutional,
illegal, inhuman," Tanriverdi says. "Above all, it breaches the
fundamental principle of penal law: the criminal alone should be
punished for the crime."
Since 1995, he says, he's represented nearly a dozen former
prostitutes--including Ayse Tukrukcu--trying to get rid of their police
records. Not one case has been successful. While he's as adamant as
ever that the statute needs to be excised from Turkish law, he's not
optimistic.
Islamic Party Led Reforms
The obstacle to change is not necessarily the Islamic government.
Since coming to power in 2002, the Justice and Development Party has
pushed through some of the most significant legal reforms benefiting
women in the 84-year history of the Turkish Republic. In 2004, a
constitutional amendment guaranteed equality between men and women.
That year also saw major reforms to the nation's penal code that
criminalized marital rape and sexual harassment in the workplace, and
stiffened penalties for honor killings. The government also launched
programs to address domestic violence and improve access to education
for girls.
The problem, as is so often the case in Turkey, lies in a
legislation that is opaque and frequently ignored by state officials
contemptuous of the rule of law.
Hayrettin Bulan, campaign manager for Tukrukcu's and Ermez's election bids, is more positive.
"The people we're aiming to represent are working too hard to
survive from day to day to get involved in politics," he says. "Yet
complaining from the sidelines isn't enough; you need a political
platform."
Founder of Turkey's first-ever shelter for men in difficulty, as
well as the shelter where Tukrukcu and Ermez are now living, Bulan has
been campaigning for the rights of street children, drug addicts,
prisoners and prostitutes for over a decade now. He's a past master at
getting headlines.
In 1997, he locked himself into a cage for 24 hours to protest at
prisoners' living conditions. For years, he had his weekly program on a
local television station about social issues in his home city of Konya.
"We picked Istanbul for the simple reason that all the press is
here. Saliha Ermez is running in the same electoral district as
(Turkish Prime Minister) Tayyip Erdogan."
Running with the slogan "neither left, right or center but
underneath," the campaign has attracted a surprising amount of
attention from the Turkish press. "My vote's for you, Ayse Tukrukcu,"
Engin Ardic, a popular columnist for the mass daily Aksam wrote on June
11.
Public Support, but Not Votes
While both candidates admit they have almost no chance of winning
the 60,000 votes needed for a parliamentary seat, they say they've been
overwhelmed by the support they've received by ordinary people on the
street.
Baskin Oran, a dissident university professor who is also standing
as an independent candidate, says that five years ago Tukrukcu's and
Ermez's campaigns would have never happened without the reforms spurred
by Turkey's bid to join the European Union. "People who before were too
frightened to speak out are beginning to make their voices heard," he
says, "and there are people out there willing to listen."
There are skeptics, though.
A doctor who runs a health and information center for prostitutes
in Istanbul, Muhtar Cokar sympathizes with the story Ermez tells about
her daughter and has heard it from other prostitutes. But he thinks the
two candidates' emphasis on state-employed prostitutes, and their
implication that prostitution should be banned, is an unrealistic
approach to the fundamental problems of prostitution in Turkey.
"In Istanbul, there are 126 registered prostitutes and 30,000
unregistered prostitutes," he says. "The kind of brothels that these
women worked in are disappearing in Turkey because no party wants to
open them."
They don't want to give financial support to projects aimed at
protecting prostitutes either, he says, and that risks causing major
problems as the prostitution trade is carried on without official
oversight.
A freelance reporter, Nicholas Birch has been working in Turkey and the surrounding region for five years.
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Posted by smberg on Thursday, July 26 @ 11:27:28 CDT
(Read More... | Score: 0)
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| The only alliance I would make with the Women's Liberation Movement is in bed. -Abbie Hoffman, American Political Revolutionary (1972) |
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| ms-heard by women |  |
| We must say to every member of our society: If you violate your children, they may not speak today, but as we gather our strength and stand beside them, they will, one day, speak your name. They will speak every single name. -Marilyn Van Derbur |
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