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Der Kreuzzug gegen Sexsklaverei oder Prostitution (sog. Menschenhandel)
Intimer Bericht aus Thailand, Kambodscha und U.S.A., wo Geld und Politik herkommen.

The Crusade Against Sex Trafficking



By Noy Thrupkaew
This article appeared in the October 5, 2009 edition of The Nation.
September 16, 2009


Auf Deutsch lesen:
http://translate.google.de/translate?u= ... e&ie=UTF-8


Gary Haugen is cradling the padlocks in his thick hands. A former high school football player--bristly crew cut, broad shoulders squeezed into a dress shirt--Haugen has more the mien of a military man than a lawyer, although his image is in keeping with the muscular work of the organization he founded and heads. The president of the International Justice Mission www.ijm.org, an evangelical Christian organization devoted to combating human rights abuses in the developing world, Haugen is musing over the mementos of IJM's work in India and Cambodia. The padlocks look ordinary enough: heavy brass, a squat square one, a round one with a key. But they had once hung on the doors of brothels, until local law enforcement busted the establishments in raids initiated by IJM.

"Have you been to Tuol Sleng?" Haugen asks, looking down at the padlocks. He is speaking of the central Khmer Rouge detention center in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, now a museum filled with photographs of the thousands who perished at the prison. "There it is--you see a factory where people got up every day and then went to work, and their job was to torture people as painfully and horribly as possible to extract a confession from them and then kill them.

"A lock on a brothel, for me, represents this element of violence and force," says Haugen. "The lock is on the outside of the door, not inside."

For Haugen, the locks are reminders of his calling: to break the chain of human rights abuses, one person at a time. He argues that the main problem facing the disenfranchised is not one of hunger, homelessness, lack of education or disease. Rather, the root cause of much of the suffering in the developing world is the failure of the criminal justice system to protect the poor from violence--the brutality that robs them of food, home, liberty and dignity.

In an effort to counter those failures, IJM marshals more than 300 Christian lawyers, law enforcement specialists and social workers who collaborate with local counterparts and police to provide services to victims of slave labor, sexual abuse, police brutality, illegal detention and land seizure. In the case of its best-known and most controversial work--brothel raids--IJM provides evidence of trafficking to police in countries including India, Cambodia, the Philippines and, in the past, Thailand; and it collaborates on "interventions" to remove victims from the establishments and arrest and prosecute their abusers. Although the raids have undoubtedly saved a number of trafficking victims from exploitation, human rights advocates have criticized the interventions for disrupting HIV-outreach efforts, heightening the potential for police brutality and subjecting adult sex workers and trafficking victims to possible deportation or long involuntary stays in shelters.

In light of the organization's tactics, Haugen's mention of Tuol Sleng is an uneasy one that points out the potential perils of IJM's approach--an example of state power used to prey on, rather than protect, its populace. Haugen acknowledges that law enforcement agents have often been the perpetrators of abuse, and he has testified against this police corruption in Congress. Nonetheless, he has based his decision to work with local police on the premise that power can be harnessed to bring about justice--especially when tethered to divine aims. As Haugen writes in his book Good News About Injustice, "God is the ultimate power and authority in the universe, so justice occurs when power and authority is exercised in conformity with His standards."

Buch: "Good News about Injustice Witness"
http://www.amazon.de/dp/0830822240
Buch "Terrify No More Undercover Operation"
http://www.amazon.de/dp/0849918383





This philosophy found deep resonance with the Bush administration. Eager to complement his war on terror with a parallel "soft-power strategy," according to his speechwriter Michael Gerson, President Bush signed on to the "war on trafficking" with a vengeance. Although countertrafficking funds found their way to groups that worked more broadly on immigrants' rights and services, much of the money went to organizations like IJM, whose interventionist attitude was congruent with Bush's foreign-policy stance, and to groups that believed that prostitution was inherently exploitative and deserving of abolishment.

Part of the appeal of the law-and-order solutions proposed by groups like IJM is that they are highly visible and forceful responses to the horrifying abuses faced by trafficking victims and sex workers--injury, extortion, rape, even murder. (New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof tried a similarly dramatic tack when he went so far as to purchase the freedom of two trafficked girls, with decidedly mixed results.) The narrative that frames such vigorous interventions as the noblest response to the scourge of sex trafficking is an understandable one, but it skirts the economic and social problems that make recovery so difficult for the "rescued." It also rips their lives out of context, so that an approach that might be suitable, if still controversial, in a country with reliable law enforcement and criminal justice systems is applied in a country where those systems are more likely to be part of the problem than the solution. The Obama administration seems to be aware of these issues, but rolling back the momentum on raid work in order to scrutinize its efficacy is a tough challenge--especially when there is always another young victim to rescue.

In 1997 Haugen launched IJM to answer the biblical mandate to seek justice. As he writes, "Over time, having seen the suffering of the innocent.... More and more I find myself asking not, Where is God? But, Where are God's people?" Dedicated to a "casework" model, IJM staff work to remove victims from exploitation. IJM then prosecutes the abusers under local law and assists victims with "restoration" by winning them financial compensation or providing "aftercare" services through partner organizations.

IJM's casework approach focuses on individual rescue. As Haugen has written, "The good shepherd would leave the ninety-nine to go find the one lost sheep because the one mattered." Sharon Cohn Wu, IJM's senior vice president of justice operations, concurs. "While there are millions of girls and women victimized every day, our work will always be about the one," she said in a public address. "The one girl deceived. The one girl kidnapped. The one girl raped. The one girl infected with AIDS. The one girl needing a rescuer. To succumb to the enormity of the problem is to fail the one. And more is required of us."

Thousands of Christians have answered Cohn Wu's call, joining IJM campus chapters, attending Haugen's talks at the Saddleback and Willow Creek leadership conferences, and swelling the organization's budget to $22 million in 2008. IJM has become a major force in humanitarian work and an even larger one in burgeoning evangelical activism.

IJM's rise was fueled by the millions in federal grants it received under the Bush administration, which also expanded the federal law on trafficking. Before the Bush era, the law created a State Department office to rank--and potentially sanction--countries on the basis of their countertrafficking efforts in its annual "Trafficking in Persons" report. When the law was reauthorized under Bush, however, it included a clause to suspend funding to organizations that "promote, support, or advocate the legalization or practice of prostitution." Those applying for funds for HIV education or outreach were subject to the same clause.

President Bush then released anti-trafficking funds to feminist anti-prostitution groups and to faith-based organizations like IJM. The funding decision outraged HIV-education NGOs and sex workers' unions, a number of which were cut out of HIV-outreach and countertrafficking funding or refused it in protest. Human rights advocates, meanwhile, raised concerns that IJM's criminal justice approach would cause "collateral damage"--putting women and girls on a collision course with police brutality, detention and deportation, and disrupting HIV services while failing to address the economic inequities that would replace one rescued girl with another victim.

Those concerns fell on deaf ears. IJM began receiving federal funding in 2002, and by the end of 2010 the organization will have received more than $4 million from the government, including a $500,000 grant to open an office--established just last January--to work against trafficking for forced prostitution in Samar, the Philippines.

IJM's ardent sense of mission--its moral clarity about justice work, dedication to the individual and passionate desire to find relief for victims--brought a revitalized engagement to believers and those concerned about trafficking. But those qualities often led to a quagmire in IJM's early years. Although the organization has refined its techniques, its operations have ambiguous, and sometimes troubling, results on the ground.

As for IJM's symbolic quest to provide individual rescue, finding "the one" for whom the group toiled and whom IJM had "saved" would prove nearly impossible. She is a cipher, a repository of innocence and redemptive hope that seemed to call more loudly to the IJM staff than the voices of trafficking victims and sex workers who decried the raids and their experiences of police brutality. "The one" was a symbol that IJM staff would always be driven to break free, even if she would wind up running away from her rescuers in the end. The shepherd claimed to have benevolent aims but did not always know the way to safety.





Ping Pong is frowning, her formidable charm dampened by memory. The sex worker is mulling over IJM's work in Thailand. As a health and legal-services advocate with the sex-worker organization Empower www.empowerFoundation.org, she's seen the aftereffects firsthand.

"Oh, yes, there were problems," she says at last. "The deportation--and back to Burma! They were desperate to leave in the first place. The long detention. The girls running away. And the way they treated other NGOs, just expecting them to clean up the mess afterward. Even the other anti-trafficking groups couldn't get along with them."

We are meeting in Empower's Chiang Mai offices, perched over the Can-Do Bar, an "experitainment" venue cooperatively owned by sex workers and managed in compliance with Thai labor laws. The bar is a cavernous space--front patio, full bar, pool table, fairy lights and two poles for dancing.

IJM set up its Chiang Mai office in 2000, intent on tackling the northern city's trafficking and child-prostitution problems. Located near the Burmese border, Chiang Mai serves as the gateway to uncertain refuge for Burmese and ethnic Shan migrants seeking escape from a despotic regime, or fleeing the rape and plunder of a Burmese military determined to eradicate a Shan insurgency through the cruelest means possible. Thailand has thrived on the underground labor of these migrants, who often work the construction sites, wash the laundry and sell sex--largely without benefit of documentation or legal protections.

The group's early raids soon resulted in IJM being branded vigilante "cowboys" and "cops for Christ" by other humanitarian workers. The organization even busted the same brothel twice, in 2000 and 2003, each time calling local NGOs in a panic afterward to ask for translation help--no one had realized the frightened women and girls were Burmese and Shan.

In accordance with Thai laws, older, voluntary prostitutes caught in IJM raids were deported to the border, while younger ones, automatically defined as trafficking victims on the basis of their age, were moved to government rehabilitation centers, where they were often required to stay for months or years, waiting to testify in court and be repatriated directly to their families. As Thai law did not grant trafficking victims temporary legal documents at the time of IJM operations in country, the girls were not allowed to leave the shelter grounds. (The new law, passed last year, allows for the possibility of temporary residence for foreign trafficking victims, but it remains to be seen if this provision will be implemented.)

Rather than face a potentially long period of detention, some rescuees took matters into their own hands, knotting sheets together to escape shelters--one was hospitalized with back injuries when she fell during an escape attempt.

Ping Pong sighs, recalling the reaction of the women and girls rescued in an IJM raid in 2003. "They were so startled, and said, 'We don't need rescue. How can this be a rescue when we feel like we've been arrested?' All their possessions were taken away, they were photographed by the media and some of them couldn't leave for quite a long time. The women who get rounded up usually wind up back here and doing sex work again--but this time with more debt from having to make the journey or be retrafficked again.... We wrote a report critiquing the raid, but then IJM accused us of supporting brothel owners--so we never talked to IJM again." In a 2003 position paper, IJM had argued that Empower turned a "blind eye" to child prostitution by failing to report brothel owners they knew were practicing it "in order to further their work among adult commercial sex workers."

According to Empower staff member Liz Hilton, in the late '90s, before IJM began its work in Thailand and when police raids were at a high, brothel owners would occasionally drop off women and girls at the Empower office after learning of an impending raid. Empower staff would then assist the women in deciding what their next steps would be. Should the brothel remain open, they could return there to work. Others sought work elsewhere, returned home or entered shelter programs voluntarily. Hilton says, "After they were deposited on our doorstep, well, we eat first--it's Thailand!--and we see what everyone needs and wants." Hilton recalled two cases where girls under 18 were dropped off by brothel owners, and both were referred to shelters and services. According to Hilton, Empower made it clear to the brothel owners that "there was no guarantee that they'd be willing to go back" and that Empower had as its dictate "whatever the women want." Even so, "to be honest, sometimes the best interests of the women and what they want fits more closely with brothel owners than with the rescue organizations or police," says Hilton, meaning that sometimes the women wanted to continue working rather than face deportation or receive alternate vocational training. Still, the evacuation prompted by the threat of the raid did mean that some who wanted to leave got the chance to do so.

A number of trafficking victims from the 2003 raid initially refused to provide their real names and addresses in order to protect themselves and their families, according to Ping Pong. They were willing to stay in the shelter rather than face a return to impoverished villages and the shattering shame at the discovery of the nature of their work or the possibility of detention in Burma for their illegal exit from the country. Burmese officials are not above extorting the women's families, and Ping Pong recounted anecdotes of entire households being forced to move because village gossip broke out after Burmese officials came to locate the women's relatives in the repatriation process. The victims eventually relented and were repatriated--my efforts to find and speak directly with women and children recovered in IJM-initiated raids in Thailand were unsuccessful.

Thai Sexworker-Workshop zum Thema Razzien:
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=42777#42777
US-Studie:
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=48268#48268





"IJM talks about saving an individual," says Joe Amon, director of the health and human rights division at Human Rights Watch. Amon met with the group in 2007 to discuss its tactics. "And what's incredible is that it's not clear if that individual has been saved. IJM is not clear on how aftercare leads to protection for these kids. I asked them about deportation of these girls. And they had no tracking for that, for any minors that had been repatriated. That to me is incredibly troubling."

Ben Svasti is the executive director of Trafcord, a Thai organization that provides liaison among social workers, police and lawyers on trafficking cases. Trafcord used to work closely with IJM--the group's undercover investigators would hand over evidence of trafficking to Trafcord, which would launch an inquiry and decide the best course of action.

"Half of those IJM cases didn't hold water," says Svasti. Part of the problem was that IJM had difficulty differentiating between voluntary sex workers and trafficked women and girls, a difficult task even for Trafcord. "IJM would go in and ask, Do you like working here?" says Svasti. "The girl says no, and then they'd assume she wanted to be rescued. But you very rarely get a woman who says, I like this kind of work."

Svasti links this problem with US policies that conflate trafficking and prostitution. "I remember talking to US officials who were confused that there could be voluntary prostitution," he says. "They thought, 'Why would we need to differentiate? It's all forced and largely the same as trafficking. If we come across it, we should shut it down.' If you think that sex work is one of the worst things that can happen to a person, then I guess you can say you are rescuing people to take them out of it."





Christa Crawford served as IJM's country director in Thailand in 2001 and '02, after which she worked for the United Nations and wrote a book on using international law to fight trafficking. As she explains it, American perceptions of trafficking led to policies centered on eradicating large-scale brothel prostitution, rescuing "an innocent pre-pubescent girl victim who has been kidnapped or tricked" and targeting traffickers who are part of international criminal rings. "That does exist. But the on-the-ground reality often consists of the big murky middle," says Crawford, referring to the family members, neighbors or formerly trafficked women who often pull others into prostitution.

"There were degrees of volition involved," Crawford continues. "Under international law the minors can't consent to prostitution, but it was important to understand what they were thinking. As for the women, they were making a rational decision under horrible conditions--to be raped for free in Burma or paid to do commercial sex work is one situation. For me, they are making a rational decision, but that's a decision no one should have to make. We should be talking about the labor laws, migration laws and the situation in Burma--just as much as working with the courts and police."


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A high-ranking police officer at the provincial level agrees with Crawford's assessments. "The 'victims' we found intended to come and work in prostitution. That's the majority of the people we found, I would say 80 or 90 percent, back then when we were working with IJM, and now, too," he says, speaking on condition of anonymity. "I feel bad for the women--and they get so angry about what we're doing."

IJM harnessed US influence to pressure local NGOs and police to fall in line. In one IJM-initiated case, Trafcord's "slowness" in taking action on raiding a brothel earned it a rebuke from the State Department, according to Svasti, which raised diplomatic hackles in Thailand and in effect severed the relationship between IJM and Thai countertrafficking efforts.





Stymied by Thailand's inflexible laws on detention and deportation and shut out by Thai organizations, IJM gradually tapered off its countertrafficking work there; now it focuses on helping ethnic minorities file for legal citizenship. It shifted its countertrafficking efforts to the next battlefront--a neighboring country with an appetite for child prostitution, Cambodia.

Head north out of Phnom Penh on National Road 1 for eleven kilometers and turn left, and you'll find what was once Cambodia's most notorious haven for child prostitution. These days, visitors who come to Svay Pak during the day will find an open-air billiards area, a few drugstores and one or two gold shops that form part of an informal banking system for the poor and undocumented, who display the gold as a form of aspirational fashion or tuck it away for safekeeping. A few young men and women are cutting and stacking rags, and farther down, past a dusty marketplace full of the smell of overripe fruit and empty of customers, is a recycling outpost where a woman with a scarf wound around her head is at work crushing water bottles. Svay Pak is a town of scraps and remnants--including a diminished child-sex trade that lingers on, despite the efforts of IJM and the Cambodian police.

It's a melancholy ending to what was supposed to be a happily-ever-after story--after all, Svay Pak helped IJM make its name. The predominantly Vietnamese village was the staging ground for IJM's most celebrated raid, in March 2003, which became the subject of a Dateline NBC special and Haugen's book Terrify No More.

"They would bring the youngest of girls and sit them on your laps in the streets," said Patrick Stayton, who became IJM's field office director in 2007, after the first IJM raid. "There were girls that were anywhere from 5 to 8. After that [IJM raid] they no longer had to have every orifice of their body violated ten times a day.... That ended for at least a few that day."

I first met Stayton in February 2008. The tall lawyer had a deep, rolling voice--a natural fit for singing in a chorus, which he says serves as "one of my outlets"--and an intense gaze that radiated moral seriousness and genuine, if guarded, warmth.

He folded himself into a wicker chair, and we turned to his work, faith and the classic conflict that IJM had encountered: how to balance the needs of trafficked women and girls with the potential for disruption in the lives of adult sex workers and the distribution of HIV services.

"I believe that God is all-powerful. He could do this, but I think it pleases him to let his creations be his hands and feet here," he said. "I have an opportunity to bring heaven on earth in places that are already hell on earth. I believe in a God who created us with the ability to feel this kind of pain, and to understand and recognize and see it, a heart to want to do something about it. I think the evil that happens here breaks his heart.

"Am I happy about the potential disruption? No. But I'm looking at the girl there, the 15-year-old girl who is nothing more than an organ for rent," he says. "That's what we find unacceptable. And I think that IJM has weighed that cost--I have personally weighed that cost. I wouldn't be working with IJM if I didn't feel that cost was one I could take."

IJM was prepared to stake it all on its first major intervention in Cambodia. On March 29, 2003, it staged an ambitious and massively publicized raid. Haugen had agreed to embed a crew from Dateline, hoping that the TV segment would create enough public outrage to force Cambodian authorities to shut down the village, should the raid fail.

Posing as prospective clients, IJM investigators had amassed videotaped evidence that around forty girls, some as young as 8 or 9, were being offered for sexual services. After the raid, IJM was able to count thirty-seven girls among the rescued; the ensuing court case resulted in six convictions. I was unable to meet the girls rescued in the raid or any from subsequent interventions; shelter managers said they wanted to protect the girls from too much media exposure. But in August 2008 Dateline ran a follow-up story with the girls, who appeared healthy and happy, and had dreams of becoming doctors and dance teachers.





The Svay Pak raids seemed to close on that triumphant note--but the story after the redemptive ending is far darker, according to Peter Sainsbury, a consultant who worked with Cambodian human rights group LICADHO to review the IJM raid. A number of bystanders had been caught up in the intervention, including a noodle seller suffering from high blood pressure. Although Sainsbury notified IJM staff of her condition, little was done to earn her release or provide her with medical care, and she died in custody. Her body was returned to her family with teeth missing--prison guards had used pliers to wrench out any with gold fillings.

As for the children, a number of them were addicted to ketamine and injectable drugs, according to Sainsbury, and cut deals with police in the safe house in order to procure them. At least twelve of the victims ran away, some of them later reappearing at Svay Pak to continue prostitution, according to local sources. A police raid a year later netted a number of the rescuees from the high-profile March 2003 IJM raid. Within days of the later raid, all the girls had fled the shelter.

A USAID-funded "census" of sex workers in Cambodia uncovered the fact that the number of underage children offered for prostitution actually increased after the raid, from forty-six before to twelve directly after to fifty-five by May 7 of that year.

"We were a little surprised at the increase after the raid," said researcher Thomas Steinfatt by phone. "But a lot of the girls have a debt contract. If [a girl] winds up in a shelter after a raid, she wants to get out because her family will be pressured to pay back the debt. They won't be able to do that, so the 15-year-old [sister] may get sent. Then the 13-year-old may get sent as well. That's one way the larger number could be accounted for. I argue that the contracts should be null and void, but the girls and women are not going to see it that way."

Those who remained or returned to Svay Pak faced an additional challenge: according to Sainsbury, pimps believed that local HIV-education and social work NGOs had aided IJM and the police, and after the raids cut off the groups' access to the women and barred them from providing care.

In an effort to put a definitive end to child prostitution in Svay Pak, IJM raided the village multiple times after its initial intervention, and the Cambodian police also conducted 100-day saturation/surveillance operations. In his report on the impact of these initiatives, however, French economist Frederic Thomas discovered that the raids had merely dispersed the problem. The women and girls of Svay Pak who hadn't returned to Vietnam had been relocated to Phnom Penh and Siem Reap, the town just outside the famous Angkor Wat ruins.





By 2007 business in Svay Pak had recovered and reappeared more covertly. Pimps would search clients for cameras, according to Interior Ministry and IJM sources, or use intermediaries like hotel staff and motorcycle-taxi drivers to help deliver children from the village directly to clients' hotel rooms.

Shortly after its first Svay Pak raid, IJM launched a police-training initiative in Cambodia that brought its own controversy. USAID awarded a nearly $1 million grant to the organization to train police in countertrafficking techniques--a decision that fueled criticism from human rights advocates concerned about corruption. Cambodian police are notorious for their involvement in trafficking, through extorting protection money from brothel owners, or through assault and rape of sex workers and trafficking victims.

According to a 2006 USAID-funded study that drew on interviews with 1,000 sex workers and sixty police officers, approximately a third of the freelance sex workers surveyed had been raped by a policeman in the past year; a third had been gang-raped by police. As for sex workers who worked in brothels but also accepted clients outside, 57 percent had been raped by a lone policeman; nearly half had been gang-raped by law enforcement. Fifty percent of freelancers and nearly 75 percent of the brothel group had been beaten by police in the past year.

The police themselves testified to their behavior:
  • "Frankly speaking, I did not like sex workers in the past. I have recently abused many hardheaded women who were working in the parks at nighttime. I beat them when they refused sex with me.... I can't remember the number of beatings. Because I thought that sex workers needed extreme sex from men [laughs]. People in my area called sex workers pradap (meaning "equipment that people can use for doing something," a public vagina for men). Sometimes I asked for some money from them to buy beer or wine.... Sometimes I f***ed them on the stone bench. I never paid them for sex.... There were many policemen who used to work in this park and they did the same.... Now I realized that women become sex workers because they have no job and no money to do business. I know that sex workers have suffered a lot from men, especially men who have guns and power like policemen. I am so sorry for what I have done to those sex workers. Maybe at that time I was too young to know everything in this society. About five years ago, I arrested one woman who was walking on the street late at night. I threatened her to give me some money. I needed money for buying beer and cigarettes. That woman told me that she had no money. I beat and forced her to find money for me. She took off her earring and sold it for money to buy wine for me. I raped her on the ground near Wat Phnom. I used a condom and I raped her three times. I beat her when she was crying for my mercy. [Respondent silent for a while.] I will never do it again. I did many wrong things in my life. I want POLICY [the project that performed the study] to train police about women's rights.... I want to be a good man and take care of my family."
Such stories, according to a US government official who works on anti-trafficking, speaking on condition of anonymity, raise serious questions about "whether or not working with police as allies on this issue was a good [policy] in Cambodia."





Indeed, the "war on trafficking" blew up in Cambodia last year. In the wake of US pressure on trafficking and the advent of a new countertrafficking law, the Cambodian government launched a campaign of indiscriminate sweeps of streets and brothels. Security forces harassed HIV-outreach workers, disrupting condom-distribution efforts, and caged sex workers and street people in detention centers--actions that drew criticism from UN agencies and other civil society groups.

Cambodian government officials responded with indignation. "It is not true police are using this law to arrest and extort money from the suspects," said Gen. Bith Kim Hong, head of the anti-trafficking police. "We never arrest prostitutes, but rather we save them from brothels."

According to LICADHO, the sweeps resulted in the murder of three detainees, who were beaten to death by prison guards, and the suicides of at least five others.

IJM did not help conduct the sweeps and condemned them publicly--Stayton even attempted to contact the local sex workers' collective to offer his help in investigating the allegations of abuse. He was rebuffed by silence, however--a representative of the collective argued that the sweeps were an unsurprising consequence of US pressure on trafficking, in which IJM has played a strong part, and of a policy that favors engagement with law enforcement while failing to heed the voices of those they ostensibly protect.

Some in the human rights community remain open to dialogue with IJM and to the possibility of positive collaboration with the police. Joe Amon of Human Rights Watch offered a slew of possible modifications to IJM's work, including establishing formal mechanisms like citizens' commissions and independent investigations to pursue complaints about police abuses. As for the sex workers, IJM could engage in "real dialogue with sex workers' groups, which have their own ways of gathering information and informing police they trust. They could also provide legal representation for adult sex workers, particularly those abused by police, or they could support local legal NGOs to do so." In the absence of those safeguards, Amon felt that IJM's strategies have yielded mixed results at best.

It's unclear how IJM may be addressing the potential complications of working with such volatile partners. The organization did not respond to repeated requests to speak on concrete strategies in the field to avoid or counter police corruption and brutality. IJM staff did, however, mention the protocol they had issued to local police, which advises them on ways to shield sex workers from the media and to reassure them they are not being arrested, and which explains techniques for conducting raids so they do not implicate social service NGOs operating in the area. My request to see the manual, however, resulted in no response. Asked about the provision of legal representation for adult sex workers, Haugen responded by noting that most of the women were undocumented and therefore less likely to press charges against law enforcement.





For Marielle Lindstrom, weighing the balance of IJM's work in Cambodia is a difficult task. Formerly chief of the Asia Foundation's anti-trafficking project, Lindstrom was in charge of disbursing the major USAID grant on the issue and served as main coordinator on Cambodia's anti-trafficking strategies, convening a task force of government officials, ministries and more than 200 NGOs. She acknowledges that IJM is "doing a good thing rescuing the children" and could have a strong positive effect should its training be incorporated into the national police academy, but she is torn about the overall impact of the organization's work.

"In the end," she says, "it's the way of thinking that troubles me. Do you want to make a difference in one person's life, or change the system? Many people are here because they've been called to do something, they have a calmness and a conviction. They know this is right. For me, I'm only human. I doubt myself all the time. I need to consider different approaches. I'd much rather say that God tells me to do this. It would be easier." Lindstrom sighs again. "Because what about your responsibility to a fellow human being, to what they want? Do we ever ask them? Some see proof of their faith in that one person they rescue. That's my concern--there's no self-doubt. It didn't cross anyone's mind to work with sex workers on the law, for example. And we talk about the minimum standards of assistance, but victims are not consulted in the creation of those standards."

Before I left Cambodia, I met with the secretariat of the sex workers' collective. Three of them had been trafficked--although I didn't ask for details, they provided them, their stories of deception by friends and family.

At the end of our conversation, I asked if they had any questions. They had only one. "Sister," Preung Pany said,
  • "we tell our stories to so many journalists, so many people like you, but then nothing changes. Still we are raped by the police, still there are young ones in the brothels. There are so many people working on this--the rescuers, the HIV people, people like you--and so much money going into this problem. But why doesn't anything change?"


About Noy Thrupkaew
Noy Thrupkaew is a freelance writer based in New York City

Original:
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20091005/thrupkaew/single





Länderberichte U.S.A., Thailand, Kambodscha:
www.sexworker.at/international





_________________





Fachbuch:

Jo Doezema
Sex Slaves and Discourse Masters: The Construction of Trafficking



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http://www.amazon.de/dp/1848134134





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Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 10.05.2010, 23:39, insgesamt 2-mal geändert.

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Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Ein Versuch die internationale Pendlermigration in die Sexarbeit zu verstehen:
Brüssel/Belgien <-> Sliwen/Bulgarien

Veranstaltung und Lesung
in Bern


Montag, 28. September, 20.30 Uhr, Café Kairo.
Reservation: 031 330 26 25. (ddf)


Stöhnen, bis der Wecker ratscht oder:
Warum ich im Juli nach Sliven fahre.

In der Serie „Brüssel zartherb“, war der erste Bericht erschienen, s.o. posting #183, Seite 10:
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=60311#60311

100.000 Einwohner Stadt Sliwen/Sliven in Bulgarien:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sliwen
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sliwen
http://www.panoramio.com/photo/12080130





Warum Sliven?

Von Martin Leidenfrost.



Sliven ist eine adrette bulgarische Stadt. Bekannt ist sie für die vielen Roma, die vielen Winde und die «Blauen Steine», eine Felsformation. Ausserdem kommen von hier auffällig viele Prostituierte, die in Brüssel tätig sind. Eine Reise ins neue Europa, wo man Brüssel «Bruksel» nennt und «Demokratie» ein anderes Wort für Kapitalismus ist.

Dort, wo das alte aufhört, beginnt das neue Europa, und mit beidem kennt sich Martin Leidenfrost aus: Der Schriftsteller und Kolumnist des «Kleinen Bund», geboren 1972 in Österreich, lebt in Brüssel und im slowakischen Devinska Nova Ves. Jetzt kommt er für eine Lesung nach Bern und berichtet von seinen Expeditionen in die «Welt hinter Wien»: von Visionären und Nationalisten, von hussitischen Predigern und einem schwulen Rossknecht. Und davon, wie ihn eine schöne Romni verhexte.

Unter dem Bahndamm des Brüsseler Nordbahnhofs zieht sich eine heruntergekommene Strasse hin, die Rue d’Aerschot. «Dies ist kein Pissoir», steht an einigen Stellen in Rosa geschrieben. Beinahe alle Häuser haben Schaufenster, in den Schaufenstern sitzen Prostituierte.

Kleine Rudel junger Männer ziehen daran vorbei. Sie rufen obszöne Aufforderungen gegen die Scheiben, verspotten die Huren mit Blicken und Gesten, kühlen ihr Mütchen. Die Prostituierten lächeln. Die meisten sind jung, viele sind auffallend schön. Sie sind Europäerinnen.

Die Rue d’Aerschot ist nur ein Ausschnitt aus der Brüsseler Prostitution. Etwa 200 Frauen arbeiten in den Vitrinen. Wohl 70 Prozent von ihnen sind Bulgarinnen, wiederum 70 Prozent kommen aus ein und derselben ostbulgarischen Stadt. Insgesamt sollen 2000 Prostituierte aus Sliven im Grossraum Brüssel identifiziert worden sein. Eine Studie des bulgarischen «Center for the Study of Democracy» schätzt die Zahl der im Ausland arbeitenden Slivener Prostituierten auf 1000. Das bedeutet, dass sich, je nachdem, jede fünfzehnte oder siebente Slivenerin der infrage kommenden Altersschicht prostituiert.

Warum kommen gerade aus Sliven so viele Prostituierte?, fragte ich beim zuständigen Polizeiposten. Die Polizei bestätigte mir die Zahl. Und auch die Zuhälter seien aus Sliven. Warum gerade aus Sliven?, insistierte ich. «Es war ein armes Dorf», antwortete der Polizist, «das auf diese Weise reich geworden ist.» Sliven, «Stadt der Winde und der Zigeuner» genannt, ist aber kein Dorf. Es hat 100.000 Einwohner.

Armut und Arbeitslosigkeit, das war die erste und erstbeste Antwort, ich sollte sie noch öfter hören. Sie stellte mich nie zufrieden. Arm sind sie anderswo auch, dennoch sind Polinnen zum Putzen nach Brüssel gegangen und Polen nicht als Zuhälter, sondern als Klempner. Die Antwort war auch deswegen schlecht, weil in den Schaufenstern der europäischen Hauptstadt Uni-Absolventinnen und Abgängerinnen von Slivens Fremdsprachengymnasien gesehen wurden. Diese Gymnasien sind Eliteschulen. Mit einem solchen Abschluss findet man auch andere Jobs.

Warum Sliven?, fragte ich die bulgarische Vertretung bei der EU. Die Sprecherin rief mich an, ihre Stimme bebte vor Empörung. «Wollen Sie Bulgarien WIRKLICH über PROSTITUIERTE porträtieren?», schrie sie ins Telefon. Ich hatte eine Dame beleidigt. Zu Jahresbeginn waren die bulgarischen Behörden schon vom Kunstwerk «Entropa» der tschechischen Ratspräsidentschaft beleidigt worden. Die Bulgarien darstellende türkische Toilette musste damals mit einem schwarzen Tuch verhängt werden. Ich entschuldigte mich. Ich gab zu bedenken, dass es für das Bild Bulgariens in Europa von Bedeutung sein könnte, wenn Zehntausende Bewohner und Besucher Brüssels das Balkanland ausschliesslich in Gestalt von käuflichem Sex kennenlernten.

Ich bekam keine Antwort. Auch andere bulgarische Behörden schwiegen. Ich sollte nie wieder eine Antwort vom offiziellen Bulgarien bekommen.

Ich streunte ein paar Mal in der Rue d’Aerschot herum. Die meisten Prostituierten lächelten süss, manche klopften auffordernd an die Innenseite der Scheibe. Einige waren bildschön, einige sahen tatsächlich wie Elitegymnasiastinnen aus.

Ich sprach mit den Freiern. Die Mehrheit bestand aus jungen Migranten, gruppenweise durchlaufend und durchfahrend. Von Sliven hatten sie noch nie gehört. Ich liess mir den Vorgang beschreiben. Er dauert fünfzehn Minuten. Er findet hinter einem Vorhang statt, der Kunde hört die Kolleginnen tratschen und stöhnen. Der Preis ist 40 Euro, für 50 ist ein Stellungswechsel inbegriffen. Die Frauen lassen sich nicht küssen, nirgendwohin. Damit der Kunde rasch ejakuliert, beginnen sie automatisch zu stöhnen. Im Schauraum, immer als behagliche Stube eingerichtet, tratscht inzwischen die unbeschäftigte Kollegin mit dem biederen Mütterchen, das dort herumsitzt. Die Rolle der Alten erschliesst sich auf Anhieb nicht. Wenn die Viertelstunde um ist, scheppert ein Wecker. Zum Abschluss fragt die Frau den Kunden: «Ça va, chéri?»

Ich sprach mit einer Frau aus Sliven, jung, schön, dunkel gelockt. «Warum arbeiten hier so viele aus Sliven?», fragte ich sie. Sie habe keineswegs studiert, erklärte sie, Sliven besuche sie nur noch zum Ferienmachen. Warum Sliven?, fragte ich erneut. Wie kann ein einziges Städtchen namhafte Teile der Niederlande und die Millionenstadt Brüssel mit Prostituierten beschicken? «C’est comme ça», gab sie zurück: Das ist eben so.

Die Frage liess mich nicht mehr los. Ich machte mich im Juli nach Sliven auf. Ich kam von der Küste, durch eine dürre, nicht allzu intensiv bewirtschaftete, fast baumlose Ebene. Als ich die schroff aufragende Felswand der berühmten «Blauen Steine» sah, war ich am Ziel. Es war hochsommerlich heiss. Die nördlichen Winde mehrerer Balkanpässe treffen in Sliven zusammen, in jenen Sommertagen kühlte jedoch nichts, allenfalls der reife Baumbestand der herausgeputzten Flaniermeile.

Sliven sah nicht schlecht aus. Die Fauteuil-Landschaften der Lounge-Restaurants luden zum Ausspannen ein. Unerträglich war mir mein Blick auf die jungen Frauen von Sliven. Viele waren aufreizend angezogen, wie anderswo auch. Ich bekam die Frage nicht aus dem Kopf, ob ich ehemalige oder zukünftige oder Huren in den Ferien sah.

Am Anfang half mir die Sofioter Schriftstellerin Janina Dragostinova durch die Stadt. Es war das Wochenende der bulgarischen Parlamentswahl. Wieder einmal erlag Bulgarien einem Erlöser, diesmal dem ehemaligen Leibwächter des kommunistischen Diktators Todor Schivkov. Der da auf Anhieb vierzig Prozent bekam, war massig und geschoren. Er sprach langsam und markig, konnte vor Kraft kaum gehen. Aus den Fernsehberichten hörte ich immer wieder «Bruksel» heraus, Brüssel. Dieses Bruksel hatte für Bulgarien bestimmte Fördergelder eingefroren, wegen Korruption. Der Leibwächter hat seine Partei «Bewegung für die europäische Entwicklung Bulgariens» genannt. Er versprach aufzuräumen und den Geldfluss aus Bruksel wiederherzustellen.

Die am weitesten hergeholte Antwort gab mir ein auf Wahltour befindlicher Sofioter Chefredaktor. Das Gebiet Sliven sei ja ein Zentrum der Karakatschaner, diese hätten die hiesigen Bulgaren in die Arbeitsmigration eingeführt. Die Karakatschaner sind Hirten, die ein archaisches Griechisch sprechen. «Sie sind so fromm, dass sie Schwarz tragen, seit Byzanz von Ungläubigen besetzt ist.» Niemand würde ihnen Zuhälterei nachsagen.

Wir fuhren in ein Dorf der Umgebung. Dragodanovo war flach, ärmlich, graubraun. Einige wenige teure Autos, aber sein Ruf war Dragodanovo nicht anzusehen – dass buchstäblich jedes ansehnliche Mädchen im Dorf Dragodanovo Prostituierte im Ausland wird.

Die angesprochenen Dörfler gaben sich ahnungslos. Im Dorfcafé sassen Blödsinn brabbelnde Suffköpfe. Sie gaben mir Antwort Nr. 3: «Das ist die Demokratie.» Die Demokratie – eigentlich meinten sie den Kapitalismus – sei für die grassierende Prostitution verantwortlich. Aber warum Dragodanovo, warum Sliven, ist nicht woanders auch Demokratie? Ich wollte gehen, da winkte mich Janina an einen anderen Tisch. Sie hatte einen Mann zum Reden gebracht. Er war jünger, klüger und reinlicher gekleidet. Er war vor Jahren ein Brüsseler Laufbursche für den berühmtesten Slivener Zuhälter gewesen. Jener Atanas Mundev hatte acht Kugeln überlebt und sass zur Zeit meines Besuchs in Hausarrest.

Der ehemalige Laufbursche erzählte, dass der Profit der Prostitution in Drogen investiert wurde, holländisches Ecstasy für Bulgarien, türkisches Heroin für den Westen. Auch er sprach von Demokratie und führte Beträge an, welche die Frauen aus der Nachbarschaft angeblich verdienen, unrealistisch hohe Beträge. Er sagte, die «weissen Männer in Brüssel» würden nach der Exotik einer dunklen Frau verlangen, darum würden sich die Prostituierten bräunen. Ich äusserte leise Zweifel, was die «weissen Männer» betraf; viele Sexkunden in Brüssel sind Araber. Dass die meisten Huren der Rue d’Aerschot stark gebräunt sind, konnte ich bestätigen. Zu Hause halten sie an der Gewohnheit fest, sagte der Laufbursche. «Die Solarien in Sliven wurden alle von ehemaligen Prostituierten aufgemacht.»

Zurück in Sliven, wurde mir eine Person vorgestellt, deren Identität ich zu schützen versprach. Ich nenne sie nur «die Quelle». Die Quelle hatte die brutalen Anfänge in den Neunzigerjahren erlebt. Im «Château Alpia», Todor Schivkovs ehemaliger Slivener Residenz, seien damals fetten alten Sextouristen aus Italien und Deutschland Minderjährige zugeführt worden. Sie habe ein entflohenes Mädchen geschützt, erzählte die Quelle, daraufhin habe man ihr im Park einen Stein an den Kopf geworfen. Die Quelle gab mir Antwort Nr. 4: «In Sliven gab es eine Sportschule, die international erfolgreiche Boxer hervorbrachte. Nach der Wende verloren die Jungs ihren sozialen Status. Sie wussten nicht mehr, wohin mit ihrer Kraft. Sie wandten sich anderen Dingen zu, Schutzgelderpressung und Zuhälterei.»

Mittlerweile habe sich die Machtbalance verändert, die Zuhälter wagten keine Gewalt mehr anzuwenden. «Jetzt sind es die Mädchen, die sich einen Zuhälter suchen, nicht mehr umgekehrt.» Die Quelle lüftete das Rätsel der soliden Omas hinter den Brüsseler Schaufenstern: «Das sind pensionierte Buchhalterinnen und Lehrerinnen. Sie sammeln für die Zuhälter das Geld ein.» Man nenne diese Frauen «Madamkas».

Am Wahlsonntag geriet ich in ein undurchsichtiges Spiel. Eine sommersprossige Bohnenstange, Gemeinderat für die rechtsextreme Protestpartei Ataka, stellte sich mit den Worten vor: «Ich existiere nicht.» Er bat mich in seinen klapprigen Lada und fuhr mich den Berg hinauf. Er hielt vor einem Berghotel. Es war ein vertikales Schlösschen aus kühlendem unverputztem Stein. Es war das «Château Alpia», Todor Schivkovs ehemalige Residenz.

Ein Herr setzte sich zu uns, dasselbe Modell Mann wie der mittlerweile als Premierminister amtierende Leibwächter-Erlöser. Der Herr stellte sich als Unternehmer vor, als Gemüsehändler. Er sagte, es gebe 300 Zuhälter in Sliven. Einen von ihnen habe seine Schwägerin in den Niederlanden angezeigt, deshalb habe ihm der Zuhälter eine Bombe in den Garten geworfen.

Was die Prostitution seiner Schwägerin betraf, blieb er vage. «Der Zuhälter hat ihr nichts gezahlt.» Nichts? «Na gut, er hat ihr wenig gezahlt.» Der Gemüsehändler wollte mir seine Schwägerin nicht vorstellen, er hatte ein anderes Anliegen. Ich sollte alle Slivener Polizisten, denen er Korruption vorwarf, namentlich in meinem Artikel nennen. Ich konnte ihm das nicht versprechen. Er flösste mir kein Vertrauen ein.

Auf meine Frage – Warum so viele aus Sliven? – bekam ich noch ein paar Erklärungen. Die fünfte Antwort, «das sind Zigeunerinnen», kam von der nationalbewussten Lehrerin einer «technischen Eliteschule». Zwar sind ein Viertel der Slivener Roma, zwar schwärmt manch junger Rom, dass es «kein süsseres Geld» als die Zuhälterei gebe, doch war diese Antwort falsch. Die Studie des «Center for the Study of Democracy» hielt fest, dass eine Minderheit der Slivener Prostituierten Roma sind. Ich erzählte der Lehrerin, dass es sich mit den Hautfarben auf der Rue d’Aerschot andersrum verhalte: die Freier ziemlich orientalisch, die Huren vergleichsweise weiss. Sie verzog pikiert das Gesicht.

Ich fand eine Maturandin des elitären Fremdsprachengymnasiums. Sie sagte, sie kenne keine Prostituierten in ihrer Klasse. Was die Gymnasiastin erzählte, mochte aber eine Annäherung sein, eine Annäherung an einen möglichen Wertewandel auf Slivener Art: «Viele meiner Mitschülerinnen sehen sehr gut aus. Sie haben deutlich ältere Freunde, oft Besitzer von Restaurants. Zwei Kolleginnen haben eine Brust-OP als Geschenk gekriegt. Die Eltern werden gar nicht gefragt.»

Nach all den Gesprächen fehlte mir das vermeintlich Naheliegendste, eine Slivener Prostituierte. Ich traf einen Lokalreporter, das wurde die siebente Antwort. Der Reporter erklärte meine Zahlen für «Blödsinn» und das Thema für «erschöpft». Er behauptete, aus Sliven kämen keineswegs überdurchschnittlich viele Prostituierte. Er kenne keine und wüsste auch nicht, wo man welche fände. Er fügte hinzu: «Ich vertraue der Polizei.»

Nach der Abreise von Janina Dragostinova war ich auf mich gestellt. Der Strom der Geschichten versiegte, ich begann zu zweifeln. Ich spazierte mehrmals durch «Klein-Amsterdam», einen Strassenzug in Zentrumsnähe, angeblich der bevorzugte Rückzugsort der ehemaligen Prostituierten. In den neuen pastellfarbenen Apartmentblocks gab es viele Läden für Kindermode und zahlreiche Solarien. Ich betrat die Solarien und fragte: «Parlez-vous français?» Niemand bejahte. Allein die Gestecke aus Plastikblumen, die sie in die Auslagen gestellt hatten, erinnerten an die Schaufenster der Rue d’Aerschot.

Ich hatte weniger Vertrauen als der Lokalreporter, ging aber zur Slivener Polizei. Der Gemüsehändler sei ein vorbestrafter Zuhälter, sagten mir die Beamten, die Bombe in seinem Garten sei eine Silvesterrakete gewesen. Ich sprach mit einem auf Menschenhandel spezialisierten Polizisten. Er schätzte die Zahl der Slivener Frauen in der Rue d’Aerschot etwas niedriger ein, bestätigte aber das meiste, das Verschwinden der Zwangsprostitution, das Phänomen «Fremdsprachengymnasiastin», das Phänomen «Madamka». Er sagte, die Etablissements selbst seien meist im Besitz von Russen. Eine Prostituierte verdiene «nicht mehr als 7.000 Euro monatlich». Das Geld werde von Bargeldkurieren in Linienbussen nach Bulgarien gebracht und in Immobilien investiert.

... Fortsetzung nächstes posting ...

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Marc of Frankfurt
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Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

... Fortsetzung:

Der Mann klang vernünftig, ich begann ihm unwillkürlich zu vertrauen. Er sagte, er habe zwei Schulmädchen auf der Strasse gehört. «Die eine sagte zur anderen: Wenn ich achtzehn bin, gehe ich nach Brüssel, und dann werde ich auch so ein Auto haben.» Er leitete damit die achte Antwort ein. Es gebe mittlerweile junge Slivener Paare, die für einige Monate nach Brüssel gehen, um freiberuflich anzuschaffen. «Warum tun sie das?», fragte ich. Er zögerte. «Sie finden das wohl modern. Sie wollen mit sich selbst experimentieren.»

Nichts schien unmöglicher, als in Sliven eine Prostituierte zu finden. An meinem letzten Abend liess ich mir zeigen, was es in Sliven selbst an Prostitution gab. Es war ein Strassenstrich mit gerade einmal drei Frauen, kaputt wirkenden Romni aus dem 20.000-Einwohner-Slum, der «Hoffnung» heisst.

Ich ging mit einer mit. Von Bruksel hatte sie nie gehört. Sie sagte, sie sei 20, sah aber wie 40 aus. Sie sagte, sie stille gerade ihr zweites Kind. Aus dem Dunkeln eines nahen Parks schälte sich ihr Zuhälter. Es war ihr Bruder. Den späteren Verlauf des Abends hätte ich mir gern erspart. Als ich der Frau zu erkennen gab, dass ich keinen Sex will, sollte die Situation in Bettelei umschlagen, lang und quälend.

Der Weg zum Bett hielt allerdings eine Überraschung bereit. Lange fand der kleine Zuhälter nicht die Wohnung, zu der er mich und seine Schwester führte. Irgendwann standen wir im dunklen Treppenhaus eines gutbürgerlichen Hauses, irgendwann ging eine Wohnungstür auf.

Es empfing uns ein biederes Grossmütterchen im Nachthemd, die Augenbrauen frisch gezupft. Sie war überaus freundlich, nahm vier Franken Miete und wies uns den Weg zum gemachten Bett. Diese Oma sieht wie die Brüsseler «Madamkas» aus, durchfuhr es mich. Wie die ordentlichen Rentnerinnen, die strickend und plaudernd hinter den Schaufenstern der Rue d’Aerschot sitzen.

Warum so viele Frauen aus Sliven Prostituierte werden? Ich weiss es immer noch nicht. Wenn es jemand weiss, dann die Omas von Sliven. Was die Omas wissen, weiss ich aber ehrlich nicht. Es wäre Antwort Nr. 9.

http://www.derbund.ch/zeitungen/der_kle ... y/31906453





Bulgaria one of Europe's biggest prostitute exporters: study
in Länderberichte Bulgarien:
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=28880#28880





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News

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Ev. Landeskirche Hannover und Landesbischöfin Dr. Käsmann entschuldigen sich bei Heimkindern für die in den 50-60er Jahren erlittenen Qualen


Mit einem Gottesdienst bittet die Kirche um entschuldigung und startet einen Sühneprozess mit rundem Tisch mit Kirchenvertretern und den jetzt erwachsenen ehemaligen Heimkindern.

S.o.:
viewtopic.php?p=35552#35552




________________





Urteil Italien:

Leitung und Crew vom Rettungsschiff Cap Anamur freigesprochen im Prozess um Schleusung und Menschenhandel von afrikanischen MigrantInnen, die im Mittelmehr vor Italien in Seenot geraten waren und gerettet wurden.






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Warum Frauen migrieren und Sexarbeiterinnen werden

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Studie:

Albanierinnen reisen zur Sexarbeit nach Frankreich


Warum Migration nicht gleich Menschenhandel ist,
und was Reiselust mit heimischem Heiratsmarkt zu tun hat.



This study argues that the conceptualisation that considers trafficking as being best explained by the ‘demand’ of men for paid sex and the naivety of the trafficked women is inadequate for explaining many of the trafficking experiences reported by the Albanian women in Lyon.

Trafficking as a gendered aspect of crisis in a migration order in transition [Van Hear’s migration order theory]. The subjective notion of intolerability [of the local marriage habits] is being a substantial motivation for migration.

  • My name is not Natasha

    How Albanian Women in France Use Trafficking
    to Overcome Social Exclusion (1998-2001)

    John Davies

    Amsterdam University Press


    http://dare.uva.nl/document/138910
    (pdf, 324 pages)




Zum Diagramm-Download:
Beachte die Unterscheidung Entkriminalisierung vs. Legalisierung.

Migrationsmatrix von Eichenbaum 1975 s.o. Seite 9, posting #171:
viewtopic.php?p=55683#55683

Laura Agustín: "Forget Victimisation: Granting Agency to Migrants":
http://www.nodo50.org/Laura_Agustin/for ... o-migrants
Dateianhänge
Wichtigste Tabelle als Graphik, 1 page
Wichtigste Tabelle als Graphik, 1 page

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Dortmunder Mitternachtsmission

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Menschenhandel zur sexuellen Ausbeutung

Die Fesseln der Opfer sind im Kopf



Tatort Westfalen, 11.10.2009, Katja Sponholz

Dortmund. Für NRW-Frauenminister Armin Laschet ist es ein „besonders verabscheuungswürdiges Geschäft”. Für das Landeskriminalamt „eine besonders menschenverachtende Form der Kriminalität” : der so genannte „Menschenhandel zum Zwecke der sexuellen Ausbeutung”.

Opfer von Menschenhandel, die von der Polizei aufgegriffen werden oder sich freiwillig melden, haben in Nordrhein-Westfalen einen mindestens vierwöchigen Abschiebeschutz.

In dieser Zeit werden sie mit Hilfe von Einrichtungen wie der Dortmunder Mitternachtsmission aus Schutz vor den Menschenhändlern dezentral untergebracht und versorgt und können in dieser Zeit in Ruhe entscheiden, ob sie vor Gericht aussagen wollen. Wenn dies der Fall ist, dürfen sie bis zum Abschluss des Verfahrens im Land bleiben.

Zur Finanzierung ihrer Arbeit ist die Mitternachtsmission dringend auf Spenden angewiesen: Sparkasse Dortmund, BLZ 440 501 99, Konto: 151 003 168. Auch Kleidung (für Frauen und Kinder), Hygienartikel, nicht verderbliche Lebensmittel oder mitunter auch Möbel sind willkommen.

Infos:
www.standort-dortmund.de/mitternachtsmission .
Telefon:
0231/144 491

Die Opfer:
ausländische Mädchen und Frauen aus ärmlichen Verhältnissen, meistens aus osteuropäischen Ländern wie Bulgarien, Litauen, Rumänien und Polen, immer mehr auch aus Nigeria oder Guinea. Sie kommen nach Deutschland, weil sie hier kurzzeitig Geld verdienen wollen, weil sie sich davon für sich und ihre Familie ein besseres Leben erhoffen. Doch die Versprechen, mit denen sie angelockt werden, die Perspektive auf einen Arbeitsplatz als Kellnerin oder Altenpflegerin, sind falsch. Und die Vermittler entpuppen sich als brutale Menschenhändler: In Deutschland werden die Frauen eingesperrt, vergewaltigt, misshandelt und zur Prostitution gezwungen. Weil ihnen die Zuhälter ihre Ausweispapiere abnehmen, verlieren sie ihre Identität - und die Hoffnung, ihren Peinigern in dem fremden Land, dessen Sprache sie nicht sprechen, entkommen zu können.

Wenn es um Hilfen für diese Opfer von Menschenhandel geht, hat Nordrhein-Westfalen eine Vorreiterrolle. „Die Zeugenaussage der Opfer ist häufig das einzige Beweismittel und daher für den Ermittlungserfolg gegen Menschenhandelsdelikte von besonderer Bedeutung”, sagt Minister Armin Laschet. Deshalb gibt es für die betroffenen Frauen in NRW - anders als in anderen Bundesländern - einen mindestens vierwöchigen Abschiebeschutz.

Zudem fördert das Land acht spezialisierte Beratungsstellen zur Bekämpfung von Menschenhandel. Eine davon ist die Mitternachtsmission e.V. in Dortmund. Sie besteht bereits seit 1918 als eigenständiger Verein mit einer Beratungsstelle für Prostituierte - um den Frauen und Mädchen psychosoziale Hilfe, praktische Unterstützung und neuen Lebensmut zu geben.


"Jeder einzelne Fall hat mich berührt"

Bild

Andrea Hitzke arbeitet bereits seit über 20 Jahren in der Mitternachtsmission. Seit 1997 leitet sie den Bereich „Opfer von Menschenhandel”. Ob sie sich an einen Fall erinnert, der ihr besonders nahe ging? Der besonders tragisch war? Einen Moment schweigt sie bei der Frage. Dann schaut sie auf die Jahresstatistik von 2008. „Im letzten Jahr haben wir 206 Opfer von Menschenhandel betreut”, sagt sie nachdenklich. „Gesehen habe ich sie alle. Und im Prinzip hat mich jede auf ihre Art berührt.” Denn immer seien es junge Frauen, die Stärke und viel Hoffnung gehabt hätten, als sie ihr Land verließen: „Sie kommen mit dem Willen, etwas zu schaffen. Um ihren Familien ein besseres Leben zu ermöglichen. Doch statt dessen werden sie hier gequält, drangsaliert, vergewaltigt. Und dann sitzen sie irgendwann vor mir: verängstigt und schwer traumatisiert.” Bei manchen Frauen sind die psychischen Erkrankungen so stark, dass sie in eine Klinik eingeliefert werden. Andere müssen rund um die Uhr betreut werden, weil sie Suizidabsichten haben. Denn sie haben ein Martyrium hinter sich: Nicht nur, weil sie geschlagen, mit brennenden Zigaretten und Messern verletzt und immer wieder brutal vergewaltigt wurden, sondern auch, weil die Täter sie einschüchtern und erniedrigen. „Man vergewaltigt sie und filmt und fotografiert sie dabei - und sagt ihnen, man werde die Bilder an die Familie schicken. Oder man droht, dass den Kindern oder Eltern zu Hause etwas passiert, wenn sie sich nicht fügen.” Oft suggerieren die Zuhälter auch, dass sie mit der Polizei zusammenarbeiten - und jeder Versuch, dort Hilfe holen zu wollen, zwecklos sei. Und die Opfer glauben das: Weil ihnen eine korrupte Polizei aus ihrem Heimatland vertraut ist. Irgendwann dann sind die Frauen so erniedrigt, so gebrochen, dass sie keinen Widerstand mehr leisten. Dann dürfen sie sogar irgendwann ihr Zimmer verlassen, und ihre Bewachung wird gelockert. „Aber die Frauen sind nicht wirklich frei”, sagt Andrea Hitzke. „Die Fesseln sind im Kopf. Die Opfer haben einfach keine Hoffnung mehr, dass ihnen jemand helfen kann.”


Täter suggerieren eine Zusammenarbeit mit der Polizei

Andrea Hitzke leitet seit 1997 den Arbeitsbereich "Hilfen für Opfer von Menschenhandel" und ist seitdem auch stellvertretende Leiterin der Dortmunder Mitternachtsmission. (WAZ)

Deshalb ist es so für die Sozialarbeiterinnen der Mitternachtsmission so schwer, an sie heranzukommen. Und deshalb dauert es viele Wochen oder auch Monate, bis die Frauen Vertrauen gefasst haben und von sich, den Gewalttaten und ihren Problemen erzählen. Ohne Muttersprachlerinnen, die als Honorarkräfte für den Verein im Einsatz sind, wäre eine solche Kontaktaufnahme nicht möglich. Oft begleiten sie die Frauen danach auch zum Arzt, zu Behörden oder - falls es überhaupt soweit kommt - zur Polizei und zu Gerichtsverhandlungen. „Die Opfer haben einfach schreckliche Angst davor, dass sich der Täter an ihnen oder ihrer Familie rächt”, sagt Andrea Hitzke. Deshalb dränge man die Frauen auch nicht dazu, eine Aussage zu machen. „Letztendlich sind sie es, die damit leben müssen,” sagt die 48-Jährige. „Aber wir versuchen schon, ihnen klar zu machen, dass sie Vertrauen in die Polizei haben können.”


ZAHLEN

12,7 PROZENT MINDERJÄHRIG

Im vergangenen Jahr verzeichnete das Landeskriminalamt NRW 69 Verfahren beim „Menschenhandel zum Zweck der sexuellen Ausbeutung” - ein Plus von 1,4 Prozent im Vergleich zum Vorjahr und 79 Opfer (130). Die Zahl der Tatverdächtigen sank um 18,5 Prozent auf 101. Der Anzahl deutscher Tatverdächtiger ging auf 28,7 Prozent zurück.

Bei den Opfern waren am stärksten wieder die 18- bis 25-Jährigen (58,2 Porzent) betroffen. 12,7 Prozent waren minderjährig.

3,6 Prozent (5,2 %) der Opfer mit nichtdeutscher Staatsangehörigkeit wurden im vergangenen Jahr abgeschoben oder ausgewiesen.

„Auffallend niedrig” ist laut LKA-Bericht der illegale Gewinn, der im vergangenen Jahr abgesschöpft werden konnte: Er lag 2008 in sechs Verfahren bei knapp 51 000 Euro. Alleine in einem Verfahren waren es im Jahr zuvor mehr als 1,35 Millionen Euro.

Einen Rückgang der Anzahl der Verfahren führt das LKA auf Gesetzesänderungen der letzten Jahre zurück. „Erleichterte Einreisemöglichkeiten, die Visafreiheit und die Möglichkeiten legaler Arbeitsaufnahme senken die Zahl möglicher Straftaten, bei denen die Polizei zuvor vielfach den Erstkontakt zu Opfern herstellte und nach deren Aussagen Verfahren einleiten und die notwendigen Personalbeweise erbringen konnte”, heißt es im Lagebild. Unter den gegebenen Bedingungen sei davon auszugehen, „dass die Zahlen der Menschenhandelsverfahren, ihrer Tatverdächtigen und Opfer auf dem erreichten Niveau stagnieren beziehungsweise noch geringfügig sinken werden.”

Darum kämpft auch das Landeskriminalamt. „Menschenhandel zum Zweck der sexuellen Ausbeutung ist ein Delikt, bei dem wir sehr auf die Mithilfe der Geschädigten angewiesen sind”, sagt LKA-Sprecher Frank Scheulen. „Wir wissen, dass die Frauen mit den übelsten Mitteln genötigt und bedroht werden. Und wir können immer wieder nur appellieren: Vertraut der Polizei, wir arbeiten rechtsstaatlich - und nicht korrupt wie möglicherweise die Polizei in ihren Herkunftsländern.”

Gerade in Dortmund gibt es offenbar viele Beamte mit viel Verständnis und Engagement: „Polizei und Staatsanwaltschaft haben hier ein sehr großes Interesse, den Menschenhandel zu bekämpfen”, sagt Hitzke. Seit 15 Jahren arbeiteten alle Beteiligten der Polizeibehörden, der Stadt und der Hilfsorganisationen bei einem Runden Tisch zusammen. „Das funktioniert ganz wunderbar.” Und der Erfolg lässt sich auch in Zahlen ablesen: Von den 69 Menschenhandels-Verfahren in NRW, die das Landeskriminalamt in seinem Lagebild 2008 nennt, stamme etwa die Hälfte aus Dortmund. „Eine gute Quote!” freut sich die Sozialarbeiterin. „Das ist unser Lohn.” Und der Beweis, dass man mit dem Konzept der aufsuchenden Arbeit auf dem richtigen Weg ist.


Inzwischen melden auch die Kunden Opfer

Zunehmend passiert es jedoch auch, dass sich der Kontakt zu den Opfern über Kunden ergibt. „Die Männer melden sich bei uns und sagen: Ich bringe euch jetzt eine Frau, die das nicht freiwillig macht.” Für Hitzke eine gute Entwicklung: „Das ist eine Richtung, die wir gerne stärken würden: Dass die Männer ein Verantwortungsgefühl für das entwickeln, was sie erleben und sehen.”

Doch immer wieder wird den Mitarbeiterinnen der Mitternachtsmission auch bewusst, dass sie ein Kampf gegen Windmühlen betreiben, dass es kaum gelingen kann, den Menschenhandel mit all seinen Folgen zu stoppen. Etwa, als im vergangenen Jahr zig Frauen aus Bulgarien nach Dortmund kamen: Junge Mädchen einer Roma-Minderheit, von denen viele nicht lesen und schreiben können, die krank sind und unter einer Mangelversorgung leiden, die kein Wissen von Hygiene und Gesundheitsvorsorge haben. Und die hier schwanger werden. Allein im letzten Jahr betreute die Mitternachtsmission 38 Geburten. Inzwischen kümmert sich eine eigene Mitarbeiterin speziell um die Versorgung der Kinder.

Und dann wieder gibt es auch Lichtblicke: Wenn Briefe von jenen Frauen kommen, die es geschafft haben, die wieder zurück in ihren Heimatländern sind, die irgendwie ein neues Leben angefangen haben. Und die nicht vergessen haben, was die Mitternachtsmission geleistet hat. „Ich erlebte in Deutschland nur Gewalt und Prostitution”, schrieb Elena aus Russlang. „Aber Ihr habt mir die Chance gegeben, ein anderes Gesicht von Deutschland kennenzulernen.”

„Davon”, sagt Andrea Hitzke, „zehrt man lange.”

http://www.derwesten.de/nachrichten/wr/ ... etail.html





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UN-Propaganda-Machwerk

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Menschenhandels-Propaganda gegen Sexwork


Junggesellenabschiedsfeier im Nightclub so dargestellt als sei Missbrauch von Kindern inklusive und Konsequenz.

Eine fragwürdig manipulierende Kampagne für eine jugendliche Zielgruppe



A new "rockumentary" called Call+Response exposes the dehumanizing effects of human trafficking. The film targets a younger audience and features celebrities working to raise awareness about human trafficking.

UN Ambassador Mark P. Lagon calls it, "a superb outreach tool, especially to young people". The film's popularity in its opening week will determine the length of its screening schedule and its potential to reach a broader audience. To maximize its viability and ensure it is shown in the most theatres possible, film makers encourage you to buy tickets online.

The film's producer and director, Justin Dillon, mobilized the music industry to draw attention to the dehumanizing nature of trafficking. All the money earned will go towards funding field projects to address forms of trafficking.

www.callAndResponse.com





Medienschaffende, die sich vielfach an eine Medienmaschine verkauft haben, um unerreichbare Ideale des Frau- oder Mannseins zu zelebriert, arbeiten in dem Projekt scheinheilig zusammen, um ihr geldwertes Image aufzupolieren, indem sie diejenigen Verteufeln, die solche Phantasien der Geschlechter als real konsumierbare Dienstleistungen anbieten.
Das ist medial aufgepeppte Putophobie.
-T. Sexworker und Autor, USA





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Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Tag gegen Menschenhandel

"Du hast ja freiwillig mitgemacht"

Laut der "Task Force Menschenhandel" gab es wegen grenzüberschreitendem Prostitutionshandel 61 Verurteilungen.

Sexuelle Ausbeutung macht den größten Anteil des inhumanen Geschäftemachens mit Frauen aus - Opfer schweigen zumeist aus Angst

http://diestandard.at/fs/1254311502255/ ... mitgemacht





Oh Baby, bitte nimm das ganze Geld, was ich für dich zusammengefickt habe !

http://www.bw7.com/forum/showthread.php?t=32368





Moderne Sklaven
Osteuropäerinnen werden zur Prostitution gezwungen
Von Ilka Platzek

http://www.dradio.de/dlf/sendungen/dlfmagazin/1051963/





Liechtenstein

«Menschenhandel existiert auch bei uns»

Weltweit werden geschätzte zweieinhalb Millionen Menschen jedes Jahr Opfer von Menschenhandel, achtzig Prozent von ihnen sind Frauen und Mädchen. Stella Jegher von Amnesty International setzt sich aktiv dagegen ein.

Interview: Bettina Frick

http://www.vaterland.li/index.cfm?resso ... t&id=35592





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USA

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Macht Euch gefaßt darauf, dass wir demnächst auch solche Vorträge halten und organisieren müssen, wenn die Politiker wie die Grüne Jugend Sexworker brauchen, um zu verstehen, daß Prostitution und Menschenhandel nicht dasselbe sind:


Sexworker and Sexworker-Advocat Mariko Passion:

Dekonstruktion des asiatischen Menschenhandelsmythos



[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uq457Ic2XK8[/youtube]



The sexual politics of anti-trafficking efforts

(first in a series on analyzing the contemporary anti-trafficking movement.)
by Kari Lerum

US Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) seit 2000.
(Sex trafficking is considered a separate category from labor trafficking, reinforcing the notion that “sex” and “labor” are mutually exclusive, despite two decades of sex work activism arguing for legitimate recognition of sexual labor (e.g., Jenness 1990; Chapkis 1997; Nagel 1997).)

BUT: "Approximately 11 out of 12 [92 %] constitute OTHER forms of labor exploitation [and NOT sexualized trafficking] (TIP report 2009, p. 8)"

"Who gave the US the authority to define global trafficking?
What authority does the US have in dictating standards for other countries?"

“demand-side” (punish-the-bad-guys) versus “supply-side” approaches to labor exploitation.
A “supply-side” approach to prevention would focus on reducing the economic, social, and cultural conditions that make children and adults vulnerable to abuse and labor exploitation. In this paradigm, interventions would focus on reducing poverty, sexism, racism, and other forms of inequality.

http://contexts.org/sexuality/2009/10/0 ... afficking/





The New Abolitionist Movement

Prof. Donna Hughes on progress fighting sex trafficking.


Q&A by Kathryn Jean Lopez

http://www.nationalreview.com/interroga ... 260824.asp





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Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 18.10.2009, 12:01, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

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Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

3. Europäische Tag gegen Menschenhandel ­

doch was haben die Opfer davon? titelt www.scharf-links.de



So lange die Opfer "nur benutzt werden als Zeuginnen der Anklage", damit unser System sich gegen die Hintermänner eines fremden "Systems" durchsetzen kann, ist das nichts anderes als organisierte staatliche Zwangs...




________________





Zeitungsleser postet Zweifel an der Glaubwürdigkeit von Opfergeschichte der Mitternachtsmission Dortmund


"Die Frau hatte laut Video einen Job in Rumänien, den sie aufgegeben hat, um nach Deutschland zu kommen. Ihr gelingt später die Flucht nach Rumänien, aber statt dort ihr Leben wieder aufzubauen, kehrt sie freiwillig nach Dortmund zurück, um im gleichen Puff zu arbeiten.

Erst als sie bei einer Razzia kontrolliert wird, offenbart sie ihre Geschichte.

Für mich klingt das nach ordinärer Geldgier. Auch wenn sich Fälle von Menschenhandel ereignen, diese spezielle Geschichte halte ich so für nicht glaubwürdig."

Leserbrief #3
http://www.derwesten.de/nachrichten/sta ... etail.html
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=67194#67194 (Sicherungskopie s.o.)





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Zypern

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Beispiel wie Feministinnen und Frauenforscherin Sexwork
und damit m.E. sehr wohl auch die Sexworker diskrimieren:

Susana Elisa Pavlou,
Leiterin des Mediterranean Institute of Gender Studies
Universität von Nikosia
Zypern




Sie wird im Interview der Jungle World gefragt:
"Viele Migrantinnen arbeiten als Prostituierte auf Zypern."

Aber sie antwortet weder auf die Frage Migrantinnen, noch auf den Punkt Prostituierte = Sexarbeiterinnen, sondern sie antwortet auf den ideologisch unterstellten Zusammenhang Menschenhandelsopfer = ausgebeutete Sexsklavinnen:
"Bis vor kurzem wurde die sexuelle Ausbeutung vor allem in so genannten Nachtclubs, Bars oder Cabarets praktiziert. Die Betreiber dieser Bars konnten ganz legal Migrantinnen beschäftigen, die sie mit einem so genannten Künstlervisum ins Land geholt hatten. Vor allem Frauen aus Osteuropa wurden ganz legal ins Land gebracht und ganz legal beschäftigt. Wir haben uns aktiv für die Abschaffung dieser Visa-Regelung eingesetzt, weil sie dem Frauenhandel einen gesetzlichen Rahmen verschafft hat."

Sie definiert also selbstherrlich als Feministin und Wissenschaftlerin für alle Frauen die Gleichung:
"Prostitution = Ausbeutung von Frauen = Menschenhandel" und gibt das auch zu und bekräftigt es auf die Nachfrage:
"Welche Haltung nehmen Sie und das Institut gegenüber der Prostitution ein?
Verstehen Sie sich da als Wissenschaftlerinnen oder als Feministinnen?"

"Das Projekt »Human Trafficking« nimmt explizit eine feministische Perspektive ein. Unser Ziel ist es, ein gesellschaftliches Bewusstsein für die Problematik sexueller Ausbeutung zu schaffen. Ich lehne jede Form von sexueller Ausbeutung ab und nehme da eine politische Position ein. Unser Institut sammelt nicht irgendwelche Fakten und sagt dann, schau mal, wie interessant. Nein, wir betreiben Forschung mit dem Ziel, genderpolitische Positionen zu Themen wie Prostitution zu promoten. Wir sind also für die Abschaffung der Prostitution, sind aber nicht gegen die Prostituierten, das ist ein Unterschied, der manchmal übersehen wird, denn wir wollen nicht die Prostituierten kriminalisieren. Als Feministinnen sind wir der Überzeugung, dass Prostitution keine Option sein darf. Prostitution ist keine Wahl, sondern eine erzwungene Entscheidung. Keine Frau, die die freie Wahl hat, wird unter lauter Möglichkeiten ausgerechnet die Prostitution wäh­len. Was wir erreichen können, ist zwar nicht die Abschaffung der Prostitution, aber wir können die Lebens- und Arbeitsbedingungen von Frauen so gestalten, dass Prostitution nicht länger eine existenznotwendige Option ist."

Dann müßte man alle Arbeit abschaffen, nur weil es auch Sklaven gibt die arbeiten müssen.

Sich auf die Niederungen des Arbeitsrechtes und Arbeitsschutzes und die Verbesserung der Arbeitsbedingungen der SexarbeiterInnen etwa durch gewerkschaftliche Stärkung will sie sich offensichtlich gar nicht erst einlassen.


Und wie scheinheilig es ist auch zwischen Sexarbeit und SexarbeiterInnen zu unterscheiden und eine männlich-weibliche(?) Spaltung einzufügen. Diese Unterscheidung ist überhaupt nur möglich durch die feminismusfundamentalistische Unterstellung Sexarbeit sei Mißbrauch und mithin die Sexarbeiterin Opfer per se.

So argumentiert auch die erzkonservative, sexualfeindliche und frauenfeindliche katholische Kirche.

Liebe Feministinnen und Pseudowissenschaftlerinnen, wie wäre es mit den Männern mit den langen Gewändern wegen gemeinsam deklamierter Frauenfreundlichkeit einen Freudentanz aufzuführen? :-((





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Anal-yse der Quellenlage Menschenhandelszahlen

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

England:
Wie sich die Menschenhandels-Opferzahlen in einem ideologisch geführtem Diskurs stetig aufgebauscht haben:

Prostitution and trafficking – the anatomy of a moral panic



Bild
Nick Davies
The Guardian, Tuesday 20 October 2009


[Image]: A police officer finds a bag of condoms during a raid.
[Sicherheitsbedarf für sexaktive Menschen wird als Beleg für verbotene Prostitution mißbraucht. Das macht undokumentierte Sexworker verletzlich. Anm.]
Photograph: Johnny Green/Press Association



There is something familiar about the tide of misinformation which has swept through the subject of sex trafficking in the UK: it flows through exactly the same channels as the now notorious torrent about Saddam Hussein's weapons.

In the story of UK sex trafficking, the conclusions of academics who study the sex trade have been subjected to the same treatment as the restrained reports of intelligence analysts who studied Iraqi weapons – stripped of caution, stretched to their most alarming possible meaning and tossed into the public domain. There, they have been picked up by the media who have stretched them even further in stories which have then been treated as reliable sources by politicians, who in turn provided quotes for more misleading stories.

In both cases, the cycle has been driven by political opportunists and interest groups in pursuit of an agenda. In the case of sex trafficking, the role of the neo-conservatives and Iraqi exiles has been played by an unlikely union of evangelical Christians with feminist campaigners, who pursued the trafficking tale to secure their greater goal, not of regime change, but of legal change to abolish all prostitution. The sex trafficking story is a model of misinformation. It began to take shape in the mid 1990s, when the collapse of economies in the old Warsaw Pact countries saw the working flats of London flooded with young women from eastern Europe. Soon, there were rumours and media reports that attached a new word to these women. They had been "trafficked".

And, from the outset, that word was a problem. On a strict definition, eventually expressed in international law by the 2000 Palermo protocol, sex trafficking involves the use of force, fraud or coercion to transport an unwilling victim into sexual exploitation. This image of sex slavery soon provoked real public anxiety.

But a much looser definition, subsequently adopted by the UK's 2003 Sexual Offences Act, uses the word to describe the movement of all sex workers, including willing professionals who are simply travelling in search of a better income. This wider meaning has injected public debate with confusion and disproportionate anxiety.





Two academics from the University of North London, Liz Kelly and Linda Regan, tried to estimate the number of women who had been trafficked in the UK during the calendar year 1998, an exercise which they honestly described as "problematic".

First, there was the problem of the word, which Kelly and Regan solved by accepting all variations of its meaning. Then, there was the shortage of facts. They spoke to specialists, studied news reports and surveyed police, who reported that 71 women had been "trafficked", whether willingly or not, during 1998. In Stopping Traffic, which they published in May 2000, Kelly and Regan argued that the real scale of the problem was probably bigger than this and, in the absence of any accurate data, they made various assumptions which they themselves described as "speculative".

At the very least, they guessed, there could be another 71 trafficked women who had been missed by police, which would double the total, to 142. At the most, they suggested, the true total might be 20 times higher, at 1,420.

But reaching this figure involved a further quadrupling of the number of victims missed by police, plus quadrupling existing estimates by sex health workers, plus assuming the accuracy of a newspaper report that "hundreds" of women had been trafficked into the UK from Albania and Kosovo, plus assuming that mail-order brides were also victims of trafficking, plus adding women who were transported within the UK as well as those brought into the UK.

Kelly and Regan were transparent and honest about the speculative character of their assumptions. They were clear about their adoption of the widest possible meaning of the term. They presented their conclusion with caution: "It can be estimated that the true scale of trafficking may be between two and 20 times that which has been confirmed."

And they presented their conclusion as a range of possibilities: "It is recognised that this is a wide range, but it indicates the likely scale of the problem while reflecting the poverty of information in this area."





During the following years, the subject attracted the attention of religious groups, particularly the Salvation Army and an umbrella group of evangelicals called Churches Alert to Sex Trafficking Across Europe (Chaste). Chaste explicitly campaigned for an end to all prostitution and, quoting their commitment to the principles of the Kingdom of God, they were enlisted as specialist advisers to the police.

Chaste took the work of Kelly and Regan, brought the estimate forward by two years, stripped out all the caution, headed for the maximum end of the range and declared : "An estimated 1,420 women were trafficked into the UK in 2000 for the purposes of constrained prostitution."

The misleading figure was repeated in news stories and adopted by politicians. Even the government's Crimestoppers campaign recycled it. And over and over again, the absence of a definition in the original work was replaced with the certainty that this was about women who were forced to work against their will. Chaste spoke repeatedly about "sexual enslavement" and "sex slavery".





Margin of error

Three years after the Kelly/Regan work was published, in 2003, a second team of researchers was commissioned by the Home Office to tackle the same area. They, too, were forced to make a set of highly speculative assumptions: that every single foreign woman in the "walk-up" flats in Soho had been smuggled into the country and forced to work as a prostitute; that the same was true of 75% of foreign women in other flats around the UK and of 10% of foreign women working for escort agencies. Crunching these percentages into estimates of the number of foreign women in the various forms of sex work, they came up with an estimate of 3,812 women working against their will in the UK sex trade.

The researchers ringed this figure with warnings. The data, they said, was "very poor" and quantifying the subject was "extremely difficult". Their final estimate was "very approximate", "subject to a very large margin of error" and "should be treated with great caution" and the figure of 3,812 "should be regarded as an upper bound".

No chance. In June 2006, before the research had even been published, the then Home Office minister Vernon Coaker ignored the speculative nature of the assumptions behind the figure, stripped out all the caution, headed for the maximum end of the range and then rounded it up, declaring to an inquiry into sex trafficking by the Commons joint committee on human rights: "There are an estimated 4,000 women victims."

The Christian charity Care announced: "In 2003, the Home Office estimated there were 4,000 women and girls in the UK at any one time that had been trafficked into forced prostitution." The Salvation Army went further: "The Home Office estimated that in 2003 ... there were at least 4,000 trafficked women residing in the UK. This figure is believed to be a massive underestimation of the problem." Anti-Slavery International joined them, converting what the Home Office researchers had described as a "very approximate" estimate into "a very conservative estimate".

The Home Office, at least, having commissioned the research, was in a position to remind everybody of its authors' warnings. Except it didn't.

In March 2007, it produced the UK Action Plan on Human Trafficking and casually reproduced the figure of 4,000 without any of the researchers' cautions.

The evidence was left even further behind as politicians took up the issue as a rallying call for feminists. They were led by the Labour MP for Rotherham and former Foreign Office minister Denis MacShane, who took to describing London as "Europe's capital for under-aged trafficked sex slaves". In a debate in the Commons in November 2007, MacShane announced that "according to Home Office estimates, 25,000 sex slaves currently work in the massage parlours and brothels of Britain."

There is simply no Home Office source for that figure, although it has been reproduced repeatedly in media stories.


Two months later, in another Commons debate, MacShane used the same figure, but this time he attributed it to the Daily Mirror, which had indeed run a story in October 2005 with the headline "25,000 Sex Slaves on the Streets of Britain." However, the newspaper had offered no evidence at all to support the figure. On the contrary, the body of its story used a much lower figure, of between 2,000 and 6,000 brought in each year, and attributed this to unnamed Home Office officials, even though the Home Office has never produced any research which could justify it.

MacShane was not deterred.

"I used to work for the Daily Mirror, so I trust the report," he said.

The then solicitor general, Vera Baird, replied by warning MacShane that "we think that his numbers from the Daily Mirror are off" and then recycled the figure of 4,000 without any of the researchers' cautions. MacShane then switched line and started to claim, for example in a letter to the Guardian in September 2008, that there were "18,000 women, often young girls, trafficked into Britain as sex slaves." He used this same figure in another debate in the House of Commons, adding "We have to get the facts and figures right."





Sources

On this occasion, the source he was quoting was Pentameter Two, the six-month national police operation which failed to find a single person who had forced anybody into prostitution. But MacShane had a point: presenting the results of the operation to the press in July 2008, its operational head, Tim Brain, the chief constable of Gloucester, was widely reported to have said that there were now 18,000 victims of trafficking in the UK and that this included under-age girls.

Other senior figures who were involved with this press conference say they were taken completely by surprise by Brain's claim. "None of us knew where that came from," according to one senior figure. "It wasn't in his pre-brief. It wasn't in anything: ministers weren't briefed. Tim may have meant to say 1,800 and just got his figures mixed up."

Brain now agrees that the figure is not correct and suggested to the Guardian that he had been trying to estimate the total number of prostitutes in the UK, not the total number of trafficked women.


But the damage had been done. Patrick Hall, Labour MP for Bedford, solemnly told the House of Commons that there was sex trafficking "in towns and villages throughout the land."





Fiona Mactaggart, a former Home Office minister, in January 2008 outstripped MacShane's estimates, telling the House of Commons that she regarded all women prostitutes as the victims of trafficking, since their route into sex work "almost always involves coercion, enforced addiction to drugs and violence from their pimps or traffickers." There is no known research into UK prostitution which supports this claim.

In November 2008, Mactaggart repeated a version of the same claim when she told BBC Radio 4's Today in Parliament that "something like 80% of women in prostitution are controlled by their drug dealer, their pimp, or their trafficker." Again, there is no known source for this.

Challenged to justify this figure by a different Radio 4 programme, More or Less, in January 2009, Mactaggart claimed that it comes from the Home Office's 2004 report on prostitution, Paying the Price. But there is no sign of the figure in the report.

[UK government's review of demand (Maddy Coy, Miranda Horvath and Liz Kelly 2007) with sex workers' replay. Auch auf Deutsch. Anm.].





In the summer of 2004, The Poppy Project, which is committed to ending all prostitution on the grounds that it "helps to construct and maintain gender inequality", surveyed London prostitutes working in flats and found that 80% of them were foreign, a finding which is well supported. They then added, without any clear evidence, that "a large proportion of them are likely to have been trafficked into the country", a conclusion which is challenged by specialist police, but which was then recycled through numerous media reports and political claims.

Last year (2008), Poppy published a report called The Big Brothel, which claimed to be the most comprehensive study ever conducted into brothels in the UK and which claimed to have found "indicators of trafficking in every borough of London".

That report was subsequently condemned in a joint statement from 27 specialist academics who complained that it was "framed by a pre-existing political view of prostitution". The academics said there were "serious flaws" in the way that data had been collected and analysed; that the reliability of the data was "extremely doubtful"; and that the claims about trafficking "cannot be substantiated."

[Anwort einer Sexarbeiterin. Anm.]





But by that time, the report had generated a mass of news stories, most of which took the unreliable results and overstated them. Like Chaste, the Poppy Project, which has been paid nearly £6m to shelter trafficked women, has been drafted in to advise police and continues to have its own office in the Sheffield headquarters of the UK Human Trafficking Centre.

The cacophony of voices has created the illusion of confirmation.

Politicians and religious groups still repeat the media story that 40,000 prostitutes were trafficked into Germany for the 2006 world cup – long after leaked police documents revealed there was no truth at all in the tale. The Daily Mirror's baseless claim of 25,000 trafficking victims is still being quoted, recently, for example, by the Salvation Army in written evidence to the home affairs select committee, in which they added : "Other studies done by media have suggested much higher numbers."

[Unheilige Allianz der Zwangsprostitutionsbekämpfer hat um den Faktor 8.000 übertrieben, wie die Ergebnisse der aktuellen EU-Untersuchungen zeigen.
[...] only five cases were assumed to have a direct link to the 2006 World Cup", concludes the report. In contrast to the horror stories involving enslaved Africans, Latin Americans, Asians or Russians, the five were from countries that are members of the EU, or which were soon to be members, and all were entitled to travel freely to Germany; indeed, one was actually a German. Of the others, two were from Bulgaria, one from the Czech Republic, another Hungarian victim was a 20-year-old man
. Ann.]





Illusion

Somewhere beneath all this, there is a reality. There have been real traffickers.

Since the Sexual Offences Act came into force in January 2004, internal police documents show that 46 men and women have been convicted and jailed for transporting willing sex workers and 59 people have been convicted for transporting women who were forced to work as prostitutes.

Ruth Breslin, research and development manager for Eaves, which runs the Poppy project, said: "I realise that the 25,000 figure, which is one that has been bandied about in the media, is one that doesn't really have much of an evidence base and may be slightly subject to media hype. There is an awful lot of confusion in the media and other places between trafficking (unwilling victims) and smuggling (willing passengers). People do get confused and they are two very different things."

She said that in the six and a half years since Poppy was founded, a total of 1,387 [231 per year] men and women had been referred to them, of whom they had taken in just over 500 [83 per year] women who they believed had been trafficked into sexual exploitation or domestic servitude by the use of coercion, deception or force. "I do think that there a lot more trafficked women out there than the women we see in our project. I do think there are significant numbers. I would say the figure is in the thousands. I don't know about the tens of thousands. That's probably going too far."





Certainly there have been real victims, some of whom have been compensated as victims of crime. The internal analysis of Pentameter Two, obtained by the Guardian, reveals that after six months of raids across the UK, 11 women were finally "made safe". This clashes with early police claims that Pentameter had rescued 351 victims. By the time that Brain held his press conference in July last year, that figure had been reduced to 167 victims who were said to have been "saved from lives of abuse, exploitation and misery".

However, the internal analysis shows that supposed victims variously absconded from police, went home voluntarily, declined support, were removed by the UK Borders Agency or were prosecuted for various offences.

Dealing with this, the document explains: "The number of 'potential victims' has been refined as more informed decisions have been made about whether or not the individual is believed to be a victim of human trafficking for sexual exploitation ... Initial considerations were made on limited information ... When interviewed, the potential victim may make it clear that they are not in fact a victim of trafficking and/or inquiries may make it clear that they are not and/or inquiries may show that initial consideration was based on false or incomplete information."





Research published recently by Dr Nick Mai of London Metropolitan University, concludes that, contrary to public perception, the majority of migrant sex workers have chosen prostitution as a source of "dignified living conditions and to increase their opportunities for a better future while dramatically improving the living conditions of their families in the country of origin". After detailed interviews with 100 migrant sex workers in the UK, Mai found: "For the majority, working in the sex industry was a way to avoid the exploitative working conditions they had met in their previous non-sexual jobs."

[Video.]





The UK Network of Sex Work Projects, whose outreach workers deal with thousands of prostitutes, told the home affairs select committee last year: "It is undoubtedly the case that women are trafficked into the sex industry. However, the proportion of sex workers of whom this is true is relatively small, both compared to the sex industry as a whole and to other industries." The chairman of that committee, Keith Vaz, observed: "We are told that this is the second largest problem facing the globe after drugs and we do not seem to be able to find the people responsible."

For the police, the misinformation has succeeded in diverting resources away from other victims.
Specialist officers who deal with trafficking have told the Guardian that although they will continue to monitor all forms of trafficking, they are now shifting their priority away from the supposed thousands of sex slaves towards the movement within the UK of children who are being sexually abused. They say they are also dealing with more cases where illegal migrant workers of all kinds, including willing sex workers, find themselves being ripped off and overcharged for their transport.





Unheard

However, the key point is that on the sidelines of a debate which has been dominated by ideology, a chorus of alarm from the prostitutes themselves is singing out virtually unheard. In the cause of protecting "thousands" of victims of trafficking, Harriet Harman, the deputy Labour leader and minister for women and equality, has led the parliamentary campaign for a law to penalise men who pay for sex with women who are "controlled for gain" even if the men do so in genuine ignorance.

Repeatedly, prostitutes groups have argued that the proposal is as wrong as the trafficking estimates on which it is based, and that it will aggravate every form of jeopardy which they face in their work, whether by encouraging them to work alone in an attempt to show that they are free of control or by pressurising them to have sex without condoms to hold on to worried customers. Thus far, their voices remain largely ignored by news media and politicians who, once more, have been swept away on a tide of misinformation.


Original with no highlighting or links added:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2009/oct/2 ... xaggerated


UND FORTSETZUNG etwas weiter unten:

Inquiry fails to find single trafficker who forced anybody into prostitution





Siehe auch:

SPECIAL INVESTIGATION: The myth of Britain's foreign sex slaves

For years ministers have insisted that thousands of women are being smuggled into Britain and forced into prostitution. But when police staged a multi-million pound operation to smash the gangs, how many traffickers did they find? Not one

By Tom Rawstorne, 13th November 2009
viewtopic.php?p=70099#70099
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... laves.html





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Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 06.04.2012, 21:47, insgesamt 7-mal geändert.

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Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

EU kämpft gegen die moderne Sklaverei

Brüssel. Sonia ist 15 Jahre .. in Nicaragua ..

...

Gestern einigten sich deshalb die Innenminister verschiedener Länder, die EU-Kommission und Vertreter zahlreicher Hilfsorganisationen auf einer Konferenz in Brüssel, schärfer gegen das Verbrechen vorzugehen. „Es handelt sich um eine Form der modernen Sklaverei, die wir nicht hinnehmen dürfen“, erklärte EU-Innenkommissar Jacques Barrot.

...

Rund 270 000 Opfer von Menschenhandel leben in der EU

...

laut UN-Organisation gegen Kriminalität und Drogen (Unodc) ist der Anteil minderjähriger Opfer zwischen 2003 und 2007 von 15 auf fast 22 Prozent angestiegen, verlässliche Statistiken fehlen allerdings bislang.

...

„Wir brauchen EU-weite Mindeststandards für den Schutz von Opfern“, fordert Anastasia Crickley, Vorstandsmitglied der Europäischen Grundrechteagentur. „Minderjährige dürfen nicht abgeschoben werden, wenn man sie aufgreift.“

...

In Deutschland und den meisten anderen EU-Staaten werde das Aufenthaltsrecht nur dann erteilt, wenn die Betroffenen mit Polizei und Justiz kooperierten. [Zwangszeugen. Anm.]

...

Barrot [hat] einen Vorschlag vorgelegt, wonach Sextouristen nach ihrer Rückkehr in die Heimat vor Gericht gestellt werden können. In allen Mitgliedsstaaten soll Tätern zudem eine Höchststrafe von sechs Jahren oder mehr drohen.

...

http://www.derwesten.de/nachrichten/waz ... etail.html





Diskurs Zwangs-Freier-Kriminalisierung:
viewtopic.php?t=985





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Nicht einen einzigen Menschenhändler gefunden !!!

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Fortsetzung
Lageaufklärung Menschenhandelsmythos England:

Inquiry fails to find single trafficker who forced anybody into prostitution



Bild
Nick Davies
The Guardian, Tuesday 20 October 2009

[Image: Sex worker in Soho, London.
Photograph: Dan Chung]



The UK's biggest ever investigation of sex trafficking failed to find a single person who had forced anybody into prostitution in spite of hundreds of raids on sex workers in a six-month campaign by government departments, specialist agencies and every police force in the country.

The failure has been disclosed by a Guardian investigation which also suggests that the scale of and nature of sex trafficking into the UK has been exaggerated by politicians and media.

Current and former ministers have claimed that thousands of women have been imported into the UK and forced to work as sex slaves, but most of these statements were either based on distortions of quoted sources or fabrications without any source at all.

While some prosecutions have been made, the Guardian investigation suggests the number of people who have been brought into the UK and forced against their will into prostitution is much smaller than claimed; and that the problem of trafficking is one of a cluster of factors which expose sex workers to coercion and exploitation.





Acting on the distorted information, the government has produced a bill, now moving through its final parliamentary phase, which itself has provoked an outcry from sex workers who complain that, instead of protecting them, it will expose them to extra danger.

When police in July last year announced the results of Operation Pentameter Two, Jacqui Smith, then home secretary, hailed it as "a great success". Its operational head, Tim Brain, said it had seriously disrupted organised crime networks responsible for human trafficking. "The figures show how successful we have been in achieving our goals," he said.

Those figures credited Pentameter with "arresting 528 criminals associated with one of the worst crimes threatening our society". But an internal police analysis of Pentameter, obtained by the Guardian after a lengthy legal struggle, paints a very different picture.





The analysis, produced by the police Human Trafficking Centre in Sheffield and marked "restricted", suggests there was a striking shortage of sex traffickers to be found in spite of six months of effort by all 55 police forces in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland together with the UK Border Agency, the Serious and Organised Crime Agency, the Foreign Office, the Northern Ireland Office, the Scottish government, the Crown Prosecution Service and various NGOs in what was trumpeted as "the largest ever police crackdown on human trafficking".

The analysis reveals that 10 of the 55 police forces never found anyone to arrest. And
122 of the 528 arrests announced by police never happened:
they were wrongly recorded either through honest bureaucratic error or apparent deceit by forces trying to chalk up arrests which they had not made. Among the
406 real arrests, more than half of those arrested
(230) were women, and most were never implicated in trafficking at all.


Of the
406 real arrests,
153 had been released weeks before the police announced the success of the operation:
106 of them without any charge at all and
_47 after being cautioned for minor offences. Most of the remaining
253 were not accused of trafficking:
_73 were charged with immigration breaches;
_76 were eventually convicted of non-trafficking offences involving drugs, driving or management of a brothel; others died, absconded or disappeared off police records.

Although police described the operation as "the culmination of months of planning and intelligence-gathering from all those stakeholders involved", the reality was that, during six months of national effort, they found only
_96 people to arrest for trafficking, of whom
_67 were charged.

_47 of those never made it to court. Only
_22 people were finally prosecuted for trafficking, including two women who had originally been "rescued" as supposed victims.

__7 of them were acquitted [freigesprochen].





The end result was that, after raiding 822 brothels, flats and massage parlours all over the UK, Pentameter finally convicted of trafficking a grand total of only 15 men and women.

Police claimed that Pentameter used the international definition of sex trafficking contained in the UN's Palermo protocol, which involves the use of coercion or deceit to transport an unwilling man or woman into prostitution. But, in reality, Pentameter used a very different definition, from the UK's 2003 Sexual Offences Act, which makes it an offence to transport a man or woman into prostitution even if this involves assisting a willing sex worker.





Internal police documents reveal that 10 of Pentameter's 15 convictions were of men and women who were jailed on the basis that there was no evidence of their coercing the prostitutes they had worked with. There were just five men who were convicted of importing women and forcing them to work as prostitutes. These genuinely were traffickers, but none of them was detected by Pentameter, although its investigations are still continuing.

Two of them — Zhen Xu and Fei Zhang — had been in custody since March 2007, a clear seven months before Pentameter started work in October 2007.

The other three, Ali Arslan, Edward Facuna and Roman Pacan, were arrested and charged as a result of an operation which began when a female victim went to police in April 2006, well over a year before Pentameter Two began, although the arrests were made while Pentameter was running.

The head of the UK Human Trafficking Centre, Grahame Maxwell, who is chief constable of North Yorkshire, acknowledged the importance of the figures: "The facts speak for themselves. I'm not trying to argue with them in any shape or form," he said.

He said he had commissioned fresh research from regional intelligence units to try to get a clearer picture of the scale of sex trafficking. "What we're trying to do is to get it gently back to some reality here," he said.

"It's not where you go down on every street corner in every street in Britain, and there's a trafficked individual.

"There are more people trafficked for labour exploitation than there are for sexual exploitation. We need to redress the balance here. People just seem to grab figures from the air."

Groups who work with trafficked women declined to comment on the figures from the Pentameter Two police operation but said that the problem of trafficking was real.

Ruth Breslin, research and development manager for Eaves which runs the Poppy project for victims of trafficking, said: "I don't know the ins and outs of the police operation. It is incredibly difficult to establish prevalence because of the undercover and potentially criminal nature of trafficking and also, we feel, because of the fear that many women have in coming forward."

The internal analysis of Pentameter notes that some records could not be found and Brain, who is chief constable of Gloucestershire, argued that some genuine traffickers may have been charged with non-trafficking offences because of the availability of evidence but he conceded that he could point to no case where this had happened.

He said the Sexual Offences Act was "not user friendly" although he said he could not recall whether he had pointed this out to government since the end of Pentameter Two.






Parliament is in the final stages of passing the policing and crime bill which contains a proposal to clamp down on trafficking by penalising any man who has sex with a woman who is "controlled for gain" even if the man is genuinely ignorant of the control. Although the definition of "controlled" has been tightened, sex workers' groups complain that the clause will encourage women to prove that they are not being controlled by working alone on the streets or in a flat without a maid, thus making them more vulnerable to attack.

There are also fears that if the new legislation deters a significant proportion of customers, prostitutes will be pressurised to have sex without condoms in order to bring them back.


Original ohne Hervorhebungen:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2009/oct/2 ... uiry-fails





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Heftige Debatte - 6 min video

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Sexarbeiterin und Sexwork-Advokatin Nicki Adams stellt Politiker in TV-Talk zur Rede,
der die hochfrisierte Zahlen über Menschenhandel zirkuliert hat,
als Grundlage für Razzien und Gesetzesverschärfungen gegen Sexwork.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/n ... 318629.stm


Nicki Adams
English Collective of Prostitutes (ECP)
www.prostitutesCollective.net

former minister for Europe, Dennis McShane, MP





________________





Like the "war on terror", trafficking has become a conveniently unquantifiable phenomenon that allows governments to violate human rights, most often of non-citizens, in the name of "protecting" them. By linking trafficking with a particular industry, in this case prostitution, rather than looking at more complex factors which are causing people to be trafficked into the UK, the government is failing to address severe exploitation within its borders.

Mehr:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree ... nts-labour






Who is controlled for gain? Anyone who uses a booking agent. Not pop stars or after-dinner speakers or concert pianists, of course. Just any sex worker with a booking agent. Anyone who shares the rent on a flat with someone else in the trade. Practically anyone who isn't working in absolute isolation, where she is most vulnerable to assault and least accessible to support services. Obviously, forcing women to work alone makes the legal activity of selling sex a much more dangerous business.

Mehr von Buchautorin of "Wisdome of Whores" Elizabeth Pisani:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree ... ex-workers





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Beitrag von Arum »

@ Marc

Das Wichtigste steht aber hier:

. The end result was that, after raiding 822 brothels, flats and massage parlours all over the UK, Pentameter finally convicted of trafficking a grand total of only 15 men and women.

Police claimed that Pentameter used the international definition of sex trafficking contained in the UN's Palermo protocol, which involves the use of coercion or deceit to transport an unwilling man or woman into prostitution. But, in reality, Pentameter used a very different definition, from the UK's 2003 Sexual Offences Act, which makes it an offence to transport a man or woman into prostitution even if this involves assisting a willing sex worker.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2009/oct/2 ... uiry-fails

Das ist ja gerade das Problem: was möchte man unter 'trafficking' verstehen, und wozu soll eine solche Definition dienen? Es geht letztendlich um den politischen Missbrauch der Prostitution.

Auch nicht unwichtig ist in diesem Sinne auch nächstes Zitat:

"There are more people trafficked for labour exploitation than there are for sexual exploitation. We need to redress the balance here. People just seem to grab figures from the air."

Es sieht fast so aus, als wäre die Prostitutionsbekämpfung ein Vorwand zum Schutz anderer...
Guten Abend, schöne Unbekannte!

Joachim Ringelnatz

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Beitrag von Lycisca »

Arum hat geschrieben: Es geht letztendlich um den politischen Missbrauch der Prostitution [...] als wäre die Prostitutionsbekämpfung ein Vorwand
Letzlich scheint es um die Bekämpfung der Migration mit (untauglichen) polizeistaatlichen Mitteln zu gehen: Die Polizei kann bei den meisten Bereichen aus politischen Gründen nicht eingreifen. (Stellt euch den Aufschrei der Öffentlichkeit vor, wenn die Polizei die ausländischen Betreuerinnen von pflegebedürftigen Senioren als Menschenhandelsopfer - vgl. den Gesetzeswortlaut, nur ohne Sex - "befreit" und die Infrastruktur zur Pflege als kriminelle Organisation zerschlägt ... da wurden in A stattdessen ad hoc Maßnahmen zur Legalisierung eingeführt.) So bleibt SW als politisch ungeschütztes Segment für alle möglichen polizeiliche Interventionen übrig. Wie die Studie zeigt, kann die Polizei aber im Sexbusinness keine Menschenhändler entdecken, weil die natürlich auch nicht dumm sind und so versorgen sie ausschließlich die "ungefährlichen" Wirtschaftszweige mit freiwilligen ArbeiterInnen und eventuell auch ArbeitssklavInnen (sicher auch generell eher ein kleines Problem - es geht mehr darum, dass die Migranten freiwillig schlechte Arbeitsbedingungen akzeptieren).

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Wissenschaftler mit Sexworkern solidarisch

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Gemeinsamer Brief unterschrieben von über 20 Wissenschaftlern:

Sex trafficking is more than a numbers game



Original mit Links:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2009/ ... crime-bill


As academics, writers and health practitioners we have long argued that the trafficking figures quoted in government reports were debatable and were ramped up by vested interests (Sex, lies and trafficking, 20 October). The people and organisations in Nick Davies's article have often refused to allow their work to be subject to usual forms of academic, political, or media scrutiny. Further questions follow. Why did the government continue funding reports after we pointed out their intellectual and methodological shortcomings? Why have organisations resorted to threats of legal action over articles which questioned the credibility of the trafficking figures in the past? Why did it take two freedom of information requests and a whole year for the Home Office to send us its internal trafficking report?

We have argued that the figures are based on questionable methods and that most are unreliable. While Home Office reports use an apologetic tone and many caveats to excuse the "poor" data and high margins of error, ministers, MPs and prohibitionists seized on the figures as indicative of a serious problem. The confusion and misinformation leads to the diverting of resources from other victims, increasing police power to invade ordinary workers' lives, and the further stigmatising of sex workers. The intensive surveillance and repeated raids justified by the exaggerated claims directly threaten the safety of sex workers by forcing them to be more clandestine. They also make it difficult for non-coerced sex workers, and indeed their clients, to collaborate in the exposure of traffickers for fear of arrest and possible deportation.

The policing and crime bill's clause on premises closure orders is particularly insidious. These allow gross intrusion into ordinary women's lives and power to turn homeowners out of their homes on mere suspicion that sex work may take place in the future, in conjunction with the seizure of sex workers' hard-earned money. Clauses 13-20 of the bill are based on reports by the same organisations Davies writes about. All have been complicit in ramping up trafficking and sex-work scare stories. These clauses should not stand.

Belinda Brooks-Gordon
Reader in psychology and social policy, Birkbeck, University of London

Helen Ward
Professor of public health, Imperial College,

Rosie Campbell
Senior researcher, University of Loughborough

Nick Mai
Senior research officer, London Metropolitan University

Jane Scoular
Reader in law, University of Strathclyde

Helen Self
Independent historian

Anthony Grayling
Professor of philosophy, Birkbeck, University of London

Petra M Boynton
Lecturer in international health services research, UCL

Michael Goodyear
Asst professor of Medicine, Dalhousie University, Canada

Marina Della Giusta
Senior lecturer, University of Reading

John Davies
Visiting research fellow, Sussex Centre for Migration Research

Katie Hickman
Author

Graham Scambler
Professor of medical sociology, UCL

Nicola Smith
Senior lecturer of political science, University of Birmingham

Ruth Morgan Thomas
European board member, Global Network of Sex Work Projects

Chris Ashford
Principal lecturer in law, University of Sunderland

Michele Farley
Service manager, SHOC (Sexual Health on Call)

Jane Pitcher
Postgraduate researcher, University of Loughborough

Kate Hardy
Doctoral researcher

Hilary Kinnell
Author and past Chair, UK Network of Sex Work Projects

Mark Cowling
Professor of criminology, University of Teeside

Coleen Moore
Principal lecturer in criminology, Anglia Ruskin University





• Nick Davies is correct to point out that the data on trafficking is unreliable and inconclusive. However, he is in danger of creating an alternative ideology. The central issues are coercion, exploitation and the definition of "trafficking". Academics are aware that trafficking involving overt forms of coercion is much less widespread than once believed and that most of the women trafficked are involved in some form of debt bondage. Others are victims of deception and find that they have to work in the sex trade for longer than anticipated, or under conditions that they did not expect.

However, the main point of this debate is the protection of vulnerable women. Most of the women I have interviewed over the past 20 years, in this country and abroad – trafficked and non-trafficked – have experienced different levels of coercion, exploitation, violence, deception, and other forms of persuasion from pimps, partners, punters and brothel owners. Thus, rather than make spurious claims that the current policies will "encourage working women to have sex without condoms", a responsible position would be to contribute to the debate about limiting coercion, outlawing deception, and removing exploitation. The bill going through parliament is an attempt to do just that.

Professor Roger Matthews
London South Bank University


• The figures Nick Davies reports throw into sharp relief the Home Office's shameful refusal to make policy on the sex industry based on evidence. Since the inception of the current bill, frontline projects, academics and sex workers have been decrying the harmful impact and increased dangers that will result from further criminalisation, particularly brothel closure orders, which effectively remove the protection of the law from the indoor sex industry. Our voices have consistently been ignored. The Lords has a final chance to make policy that does not do harm by throwing out these dangerous provisions.

Catherine Stephens
International Union of Sex Workers
www.iusw.org


• Nick Davies suggests trafficking is a myth because there are few convictions. There aren't many convictions for rape, or child sexual abuse, but we don't pretend they don't exist. The response to his suggestions is to improve policing and tackle wider social issues of poverty, unemployment, the inequality of women and the presumed "natural" demand of men for a ceaseless supply of women and children in prostitution. There is the hope that if this bill deters a significant proportion of "customers", then the shameful blot on our humanity that is prostitution will become a thing of the past.

Finn Mackay
Feminist Coalition Against Prostitution


• Not all feminists support the policing and crime bill. We have been campaigning alongside sex workers against workers being driven into clandestine situations where they face more dangerous and exploitative conditions. The government's trafficking policy, putatively concerned with women's rights, is really about migration. It serves not only to victimise migrant women, but also to criminalise migrant men. Moral panic over trafficking has created a smokescreen behind which the state has intensified its policing of all migrant workers, particularly women. Increasing police powers to raid workplaces and enforce inhumane migration controls can hardly be in the interests of any woman.

Mary Partington & Gwyneth Lonergan
Feminist Fightback





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Stockholm Prozess

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

On the occasion of the EU Anti-Trafficking day, 18 October 2009,
NGO Statement with clear recommendations
to the European Commission
to address trafficking in human beings seriously.

The statement was co-signed by:
- Amnesty International, EU Office
- The International La Strada Association (La Strada International)
- Anti Slavery International
- CCME - The Churches´ Commission for Migrants in Europe
- GAATW - Global Alliance against Traffic in Women
- Save the Children, Europe Group
- Terre des Hommes International Federation
- ECPAT International

http://www.amnesty-eu.org/static/docume ... tement.pdf
(2 pages)





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Unsere Kunden im Visier

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Statement der Prostitutionsgegner EWL an die EU-Kommission:
Womenlobby fordert Freierbestrafung



EU Anti-Trafficking Day 18 October 2009

Issuing Organisations:
European Women's Lobby (EWL) and its
European Policy Action Centre on Violence Against Women (EPACVAW)



Increased Trafficking in Women Due to EU Tolerance for the Prostitutional System

According to the UN, 79% of trafficking in human beings is for sexual exploitation. Unsurprisingly therefore, more than 80% of these victims are women.

To mark its third Anti-trafficking Day, the EU will hold a Ministerial conference on 19-20 October which will focus on global partnerships from a European security and justice perspective.
Commenting on this upcoming event, Brigitte Triems, President of EWL/EPACVAW, says: 'The European Women's Lobby (EWL) and its European Policy Action Centre on Violence Against Women (EPACVAW) regret that the conference will not address trafficking in human beings from a gender equality perspective and tackle the real root causes of trafficking in women for sexual exploitation.'
'It is time for the EU and its Member States, to examine the factors that make them attractive all over the world for trafficking in women for sexual purposes', declares Colette De Troy, EPACVAW Director. 'The EU must recognise that its tolerance for the prostitutional system in Europe, coupled with the persistence of historically unequal power relations between women and men, leads to an amplified acceptance of men's use of and control over women's bodies and therefore an increased intensity of male violence against women'.

'It is therefore not surprising that the lack of EU policy against violence against women has led to an increase in procuring and fuels trafficking in women into Europe for sexual purposes and sex tourism' explains Brigitte Triems. 'In order to ambitiously tackle trafficking in women for sexual purposes, the EU must uppermost tackle the demand side of the phenomenon through awareness raising, education to equality and effective sanctions to prostitute-users and procurers.'

As the EU seeks to strengthen its role as a key actor on the international stage, the EWL and EPACVAW call on the EU to affirm its strong commitment to eradicate all forms of male violence against women within its borders, as well as outside its territory. 'We hope that the EU Ministerial Conference will be the momentum for a concrete strategy to counteract trafficking in women at international level, founded on a strong European commitment to women's rights to physical, moral and sexual integrity', concludes Brigitte Triems.


For more information, please contact:

Colette De Troy, EPACVAW Director,
T: (+32) 2 210 04 24, detroy ät epacvaw.org or

Leanda Barrington-Leach, EWL Communications and Media Officer, T: (+32) 2 210 04 41, barrington ät womenlobby.org

European Policy Action Centre on Violence Against Women (EPACVAW)
www.epacvaw.org

European Women's Lobby (EWL)
www.womenlobby.org





Anmerkungen

1.) The citation is missing, where the UN states 79% of trafficking in human beings is for sexual exploitation.

1.1) Is that figure evidence based? I don't think so:
Im Posting #1 steht der Link zur IOM: "75% of trafficking is related to forced labour and domestic servitude, while the least common one has to do with sex exploitation".


2.) EU violence against male violence seems not so clever and sustainable.

2.1.) Please make sure, that only violent perpetrators are affected by the law and prosecution.


3.) Self determined sex workers do not want to loose their clients and income to secure their livelihood.

3.1.) Poverty is violence too.


4.) What is the Prostitutional System? Is that the Berlusconi System or Siemens System or Shadow Banking System? ;-)





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