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Archive for December, 2010

Press Release
Senior police officer calls for review of law on prostitution
The International Union of Sex Workers
Tuesday 28th December 2010 Immediate Release

Contact: Catherine Stephens on 07772 638748 or Amy on 07510 575903

The IUSW welcomes the statements by ACPO’s lead on prostitution and sexual exploitation, Assistant Chief Constable Simon Byrne, that it is time to look again at the laws around prostitution.

Law surrounding the sex industry are complex, confusing and ineffective in targeting harm. In fact, it makes sex workers’ lives more dangerous. There are already general laws to target violence, coercion and abuse, which sex workers are prevented from accessing through fear of the police, as there is an inherent contradiction between the police roles of protection and prosecution.

3,000-22,000 of the estimated 80,000 people who sell sex in the UK do so on street and are criminalised under the Street Offences Act of 1959 if they loiter or solicit; the Sexual Offences Act 1985 penalises kerb-crawling. The Policing & Crime Act 2009 tweaked existing legislation: the requirement for persistent behaviour by kerb-crawlers was removed and a definition of “persistence” for soliciting or loitering was given: twice in three months. That gives this profoundly vulnerable group of women the opportunity to have contact with the police four times a year without fear of arrest.

Over the past 50 years, this legislation has entirely failed to solve the problems associated with street prostitution. The most “successful” outcomes, resulting from expensive long term enforcement, are displacement (for example, street sex workers moved to Norwich as a result of increased police action in Ipswich).

Indoors, it is possible to work entirely legally, but the only way to be free of the risk of prosecution is to work for yourself in complete isolation. Two people working together fulfils the legal definition of  a brothel, so the law builds in isolation at the most fundamental level; the owner or tenant is liable to up to 7 years imprisonment.

“Controlling for gain” – legislation on “pimping” – explicitly includes people who are working of their own free will and covers almost every way of working with or for a third party.

Prosecution requires no evidence of coercion, violence or abuse; there have been several recent successful prosecutions where it was accepted in court that the defendant offered a safe, fair and honest working environment to women who freely chose to be there.

Likewise, our legal definition of trafficking fails to meet the standard of either the UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking (commonly called the Palermo Protocol) or the Council of Europe Convention on Trafficking. It refers to knowledge and intent, not coercion, deception or abuse.

Catherine Stephens, activist with the International Union of Sex Workers says, “The law doesn’t just fail to target violence and exploitation, it actually facilitates it. Would we be safer working together?  Yes.  Is that legal?  No.”

A community’s worth is measured by the way it treats the most vulnerable. It is time to treat people who sell sex with respect and to prioritise our rights and safety. It is time to decriminalise sex work so people who sell sex have the full protection of the law.

——-
The International Union of Sex Workers:
For our human, civil and labour rights.  For our inclusion and decriminalisation.
For freedom to choose and respect for those choices, including the absolute right to say no.
For the full protection of the law. For everyone in the sex industry.
ONLY RIGHTS WILL STOP  THE WRONGS.

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I mentioned in my festive greeting that the UK government are engaged in a review of best practice with relation to sex work. They effectively are carrying our a review into local practices in the UK with the resolve to implement what they presume to be best practice nation wide.
This is not sadly at the moment a total review of the UK legal situation with regard to sex work and they have not yet given any indication that they intend to make changes to existing legislation. Although this is disappointing, the fact that they are carrying out this review is a small but significant step in the right direction.

The coalition government is still working with the intention of reducing demand, (which was the objective of the previous Labour administration which led them to adopt some very dangerous and repressive legislation) but this review indicates at least a willingness to listen. There is every reason to hope that this review will lead to an adoption of policies that are based on evidence rather than prejudice and ignorance and worst the emotionalised hysteria that was taken as fact by previous Labour ministers.
David Cameron the Prime Minister has indicated that he has not dismissed looking at decriminalisation and the Liberal party, who are part of the coalition, have traditionally been sympathetic toward decriminalisation. Nick Clegg the deputy prime minister has also still to present his much talked of freedom bill, so there is still hope of positive legislation in the future.

So what can we all do now?

The government has asked projects to:

1. To identify the range of models and approaches for responding to prostitution within England and Wales

2. To identify which approaches are the most effective in reducing levels of prostitution, reducing harmful incidents including instances of exploitation and crimes committed against , those involved in prostitution

3. To engage practitioners in reviewing effective practice, and to ensure all relevant organisations and individuals have an opportunity to contribute to the project and provide appropriate information, and that issues affecting particular groups, communities or sections of society are considered

4. To ensure the review reflects the multiplicity of approaches, and the different local contexts in which prostitution exists

5.To produce and publish an effective-practice guide in order to catalyse local areas who have not taken a multi agency strategic approach to prostitution, and encouraging other areas to evaluate, and where appropriate, improve their response to prostitution based on the guidance.

The government are also visiting 12 areas within the UK to speak first hand to projects.

Sex Workers (and interested parties) can:

Send written submissions. The only requirement is that those submissions express how local policy affects you as a sex worker. So if your local police authority for example has an excellent liaison officer who listens to your concerns and acts positively with out you having any fear of legal recriminations, then that is something positive which the government should hear about.
Similarly if you have a local project who is supportive, like projects in Liverpool, who positively report hate crimes and work closely with the local police to achieve convictions, then please write and explain to the government how such relationships helps you by making you feel safer.

When making a submission there is no reason why you cannot remind the government how the law as it is, makes you vulnerable.

An example. Here in the North East of England, despite an excellent police liaison officer many sex worker remain frightened to inform the police for fear of legal repercussions, such as arrest for brothel keeping. This is because the law prevents sex workers from working together for safety. This is a law enforced by the local police who actively discourage brothels. The result of this local policy of implementing vigorously national law is that sex workers are placed in great danger from violence, not from clients but from criminals who target sex workers knowing that they are unlikely to report crimes against them to the police.

There is also no reason why when sending your submission; that you may not point out that the very best review would be for the government to look again at New Zealand and at decriminalisation and to point out that speaking directly to sex workers is the only way to learn about the reality of our work and that is the best way to tackle criminal involvement and to alienate traffickers.

If you want further information about the review contact Alastair Noble at the Home Office on; Alastair.Noble@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk Also please make sumissions to this address.

This is our opportunity to be involved to to do something positive to push the government in the right direction. The government report will be published by Spring 2011 so we have only a few months. Please make any submissions as soon as possible.
Issues of violence and trafficking are the most sensitive within the UK context. Submissions from overseas examples of good practice would also be very welcome. Examples from Germany, Holland and of course New Zealand would be very positive in giving examples of good practice.

Douglas Fox

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FESTIVE GREETINGS

I would like to offer all of our readers and authors a very Merry and joyful festive season. A big thank you for all of your contributions through out the year. I am very pleased at the small contribution that Harlots and our readers and our fans make to the world wide struggle for justice. To win the battle for sex workers rights is also to win an important battle for universal justice for all minority groups and for individual liberty of conscience for all consensual adults. Liberty is so important but we often do not value it highly enough until we losse it.

I hope you like the image I have chosen. It represents a virgin (in its original sense of a strong independent woman) holding a child that represents hope. I thought that this was not only a seasonal representation for those who are religious but also an image suggesting that 2011 will be a year everyone can look forward to with anticipation.
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I will be posting very soon for example about ways in which sex workers can contribute to a review being carried out by the UK government and of course we have all read about the possibility of exciting things happening in Canada and even Taiwan.
All over the world the struggle for sex workers rights go on.
Over the years sex workers have learned to accept the good and the bad and to never to give up hope. We are survivors and a tenacious group who have always been able to adapt to what ever situation society throws at us. This is why our enemies will never win.

So please everyone have a wonderful festive break and look forward positively to a new year.

Be safe and Bright Blessings to everyone
Douglas and all the authors on Harlots Parlour.

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I was angry when I read this article from the Telegraph and Argus a Bradford newspaper.   I was not angry with the reporter, by the commander of the police force. The commander shows a complete lack of understanding of street prostitution and the way it adapts.  The policies are dangerous and will cause the death of more sexworkers by ensuring they are unable to report dangerous criminal psychopaths who prey on sex workers.

Quotes attributed to the Bradford police commander.

Bradford South Superintendent Angela Williams said: “In Bradford we do not have a tolerance zone for prostitution and our focus continues to be around reducing the harm associated with this behaviour.

The women involved are able to sign up to a wide range of specialist services to help them address these issues.

“Those who refuse to engage willingly with the specialist services available, are tackled by the Vice Team who utilise the laws available to their full extent to ensure their engagement.

“In the last month alone, our operations have seen 40 men arrested for kerb crawling offences in the city centre and we will continue to target those who purchase the services of women.”

You might take time to read the Bradford article and the recent articleby Esther Addley in the   Guardian.

The effect of the Bradford police action will cause more street sex workers to be criminalised when the don’t cooperate with the police.  The trust between the sex workers and the police will be completely destroyed, how can they now report problems to the police.  A street worker  can have contact with the police no more than four times a year without risk of arrest for “persistent” soliciting, which is defined as twice in three months.  The outreach agencies will not be able to help these street workers when they become dispersed.

Cari Mitchell of the ECP agrees that rather than making women safer, the effect of the bill, in toughening the response to customers, has been to make sex workers less safe. “Crackdowns just drive women further underground,” she says. “Any sensible person will know that if you’re driven underground you’re going to be less safe.” The bill, she said, had been “a green light to violent men to attack women”.

“Violence is not that common, but when men know you are not going to report it, men try to get away with it. Men will try to rip women off to any level, and when you’re criminalised and working on the streets and people know you may be desperate, women will take risks.”

Bradford appears to be enforcing laws and procedures in total contradiction to more enlighted forces such as Liverpool. Liverpool had a very high instance of abuse against sex workers has seen a great success with its enlightened policies.

While creative approaches to policing prostitution, such as in Liverpool, can have striking results, the national response, according to Kinnell, is “patchy at best”. The Association of Chief Police Officers provides no guidance on interpretation of the prostitution laws, and a spokesman said it was up to individual chief constables to set the priorities for their forces. One officer working with sex workers who have been victims of rape acknowledged that the approach of vice officers and that of those attempting to support victims are often in tension.

The arrest of kerb crawlers will only disperse prostitution into many areas, sex work will move around the city as the police clamp down on the new areas.  The article does not throw light on the view Bradford police  take on indoor sex work, which is acknowledged to be safer for sex workers.

“Although there were changes in the law after Ipswich, they were certainly not in the direction of decriminalisation,” says Kinnell. “The police have more powers to close down properties [in which women are working], to arrest, to do practically anything, but the argument was they would only do it in the women’s interest. That is such an unrealistic expectation.”

The police use these new laws to close down properties because it is easy and is profitable.  They are able to take the cash found on the premises and keep it and then go after the brothel operators for proceeds of crime.  Whether the brothel is exploiting women, or providing women with a safe work place, the result is the same.  They lose their work place.  There is an incentive to the police to victimise women working in safe indoor environments, its profitable and an easy  crime statistic to clear up.

Arresting kerb crawlers  will not protect street workers from a psychopath like Stephen Griffiths.  Stephen would have still been able to operate in that environment, (he lived in the area and did not have to kerb crawl), he was a psychopathic killer, not a punter.  Allowing sex workers to operate indoors, or in monitored tolerance zones would have seen him arrested far more quickly, shortly after the first sex worker had gone missing.  Enforcing the anti kerb crawling laws and solicitation laws removes the safety the sex worker has in vetting the client, and the security of being in a group of other sex workers.  Enforcing these laws ensure no sex worker will talk to the police about their suspicions, cause the sex workers to operate individually and not give them time to vet the client.

It is time the Government reviewed the laws and removed the outdated laws concerning sex work.  It would be a vote winner.  This country is ready for a positive change to sex laws allowing sex workers to legally work in brothels.  An economist poll showed 77% of respondants were in favour of accepting prostitution.  An Ipsos Mori poll found, (the poll was phrased to elicit the most negative results)  almost six in ten (59%) agree with the statement that “prostitution is a perfectly reasonable choice that women should be free to make”, while a quarter (27%) disagree.

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Via “Dr Michael Goodyear”. I came across a link to this excellent article on a blog by David Edy which discusses the extent that the Canadian government is prepared to go to thwart one of the most disadvantaged groups of people (street sex workers) from obtaining justice.
The Canadian government has almost unlimited resources from which to draw (tax payers money) and with which to pay for the very best legal advice. The government are using these resources to create costly and unnecessary legal obstacles in the hope (no doubt) of bankrupting the small non profit lobby group that is representing the street sex workers who recently won an amazing “victory”. in the Canadian province of Ontario after years of exhausting representation to the supreme court.
David Edy suggests in this piece that perhaps lawyers may work for free or at reduced rates to stop this travesty of justice from taking place. Lets see what happens.

By David Edy:

How law pushes people to the margins, and keeps them there

Our federal government’s lawyers are doing the best they can to shut a small but determined group of survival sex workers out of court. At least tens of thousands of tax dollars, but likely far more, are paying a team of talented government litigators to exhaust the financial and legal resources of this group of the most marginalized members of our society.

This group of desperate women would like to tell the court that Canada’s sex work laws put them at serious health and safety risks. Instead they’ve spent years arguing for their right just to be in court.
Canada’s lawyers have just served their legal notice to the non-profit Sex Workers United Against Violence society, saying that they’d like the sex workers to prove to the Supreme Court of Canada that they have a right to be in court. Because apparently the legal point about access to justice for everyone isn’t quite obvious enough.

Never mind that the sex workers are the poorest and most desperate residents of B.C., never mind that their lawyers are working for free and giving up hundreds of hours of paid work to do so, never mind that the highest court in B.C. just finished telling the government that the sex workers have a right to be in court.

Read rest of article “HERE”.

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International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers

International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers

A group of sex workers, including representatives of the International Union of Sex Workers held a vigel on the 17th December outside the Bradford courthouse on the International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers.  Today Stephen Griffiths starts a life sentence after being convicted in that same courthouse for the murder of three sex workers. Stephen Griffiths admitted to killing Suzanne Blamires, 36, Shelley Armitage, 31, and 43-year-old Susan Rushworth.

Our Government learnt little from the deaths of the Ipswich sex workers. These three deaths in Bradford were totally avoidable.  The following press release was released today by the IUSW.

The International Union of Sex Workers
Tuesday 21st December 2010
Immediate Release

Stephen Griffiths starts life sentence for the murder of three sex workers.

International Union of Sex Workers calls for policies that prioritise safety:

December 17th, International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers, was marked by an IUSW vigil in Bradford. Sex workers and allies from the local community gathered with candles and red umbrellas – symbol of the international sex workers’ rights movement – in commemoration of the harms done to people who sell sex, by individuals and by society.

How the law harms sex workers

Since the Policing & Crime Act 2009, people who sell sex on street – like Suzanne Blamires, Shelley Armitage and Susan Rushworth – can have contact with the police no more than four times a year without risk of arrest for “persistent” soliciting, which is defined as twice in three months.

People who sell sex indoors – male, female, and transgender, though the law is overwhelmingly enforced against women – are criminalised if they work together: any building used by more than one sex worker can be raided as a brothel and legislation on “controlling for gain” covers almost every way of working with or for a third party.

Decriminalisationis an essential step in order to give sex workers the full protection of the law – while we are criminalised for working together, we can never be safe. Catherine Stephens, an activist with the IUSW says, “The law builds in vulnerability and isolation at the most fundamental level. Would we be safer if we could work together? Yes. Is that legal? No.”

In addition, the IUSW calls for the “Merseyside Model” to be adopted nationwide. In Liverpool, crime against sex workers is treated as hate crime: there is a 68% detection rate for rapes committed against street sex workers and 90% of violent cases that went to court resulted in convictions. This shows that, with the political will, we can tackle violence against people in the sex industry.

Further action to increase safety would be for the government to fund a proposed UK wide “Ugly Mugs” scheme, managed by the UK Network of Sex Work Projects, to enable earlier detection of perpetrators of crimes against sex workers. “Ugly Mugs” information sharing was created by sex workers as a response to the absence of police protection – many members of the UK Network of Sex Work Projects have developed such schemes but there is currently no mechanism for them to share information and there are some areas of the UK with no scheme at all. The Association of Chief Police Officers supports the introduction of a UK wide “Ugly Mugs” scheme.

Notes:

International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workerswas created by sex workers as a way to speak out against those who would silence us, whether by direct violence, the violence of the state or those who would rather speak for or about us than listen to us. This day has been marked by sex workers to commemorate the harms done to our community since 2003, in reaction to the comments of the “Green River Killer” who murdered at least 71 women. “I picked prostitutes as victims because they were easy to pick up without being noticed. I knew they would not be reported missing right away and might never be reported missing … I thought I could kill as many of them as I wanted without getting caught.”
A partial list of the global events marking December 17 can be found at

http://www.swopusa.org/dec17/locations.htm

The red umbrella, symbol of the international sex workers’ rights movement, originated in Italy in 2001. Red for our strength and our pride, it represents both the literal shelter from the weather needed when working on the street, and a symbolic protection from the prejudice, discrimination and abuse still endured by sex workers everywhere.

http://www.sexworkeurope.org/icrse/index.php/en/campaigns-mainmenu-190/red-umbrella-history

How “Ugly Mugs” works.

Sex workers can report crimes against them to the local sex work project, providing detailed descriptions of the incident. With permission, this information is passed by the project to local police with no risk to the victim of the crime.  For more details http://www.uknswp.org/news.asp?id=59

——-
The International Union of Sex Workers:
For our human, civil and labour rights.  For our inclusion and decriminalisation.
For freedom to choose and respect for those choices, including the absolute right to say no.
For the full protection of the law. For everyone in the sex industry.
ONLY RIGHTS WILL STOP  THE WRONGS.

Pictures courtesy

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The Global Network of Sex Work Projects (NSWP) is marking the 17th of December (International day to hightlight and stop violence towards sex workers) with the release of the “Sex Work and Violence” issue of the NSWP journal Research for Sex Work and with the launch of a brand new NSWP website “HERE”. .

The new “Research for Sex Work” is a not an academic journal but rather a journal that that centers on the voices and experiences of sex workers and of sex worker activists, and contains articles that document sex workers’ struggles against violence. You can download the whole journal for free “HERE”.

This is a brilliant article written by Rosie Campbell and Shelly Stoops. It is a little longer than normal for this blog (where necessity sometimes requires shorter articles) but it is worth reading. Enjoy.

Over the last decade sex work projects, the police and other agencies in Liverpool (United Kingdom) have been addressing violence against sex workers, encouraging reporting and taking crimes committed against sex workers seriously. In recent years Armistead Street, a sex work outreach and support project in Liverpool, has worked with Merseyside Police to continue to build on this legacy. This partnership has led to unprecedented increases in the number of street sex workers reporting crimes committed against them to the police, the number of active investigations of such crimes, and the numbers of people being charged, brought before the courts and convicted of crimes. Key to this success is the practice in Liverpool of treating crimes against sex workers as hate crime.

Liverpool is a city in the North West of England. The majority of women involved in street sex work in the city experience problematic drug use, with high levels (over 90 percent) of heroin and crack cocaine use. They also experience social exclusion including homelessness. Research in the city, and frontline project work, has for over a decade reported high levels of violence against street sex workers, 80 percent of them reporting they have experienced violence in the course of their work. These studies showed there was noticeable under-reporting of incidents to the police. The key reasons identified for not reporting were: sex workers believing they would not be taken seriously or would not be treated with respect by the police; a lack of trust in the police; poor previous experience with law enforcement; fear of revenge from attackers; fear of arrest for soliciting; anxiety about court cases and fear that involvement in sex work would become public.1

Groundbreaking Move
Liverpool has had more than its share of tragic loss of lives amongst sex workers in the UK, with eight women who were involved in street sex work murdered since 1990, of which five cases remain unsolved. The most recent murder of Anne Marie Foy in September 2005 led to a debate in the city about how to manage street sex work, resulting in strong support to address violence against street-based sex workers. During the murder investigation, Merseyside Police acknowledged that relationships with agencies and sex workers were ad hoc, that there were difficulties contacting and maintaining contact with vital witnesses, and that there was a continued lack of trust in the police amongst sex workers.

In a groundbreaking move in late 2006 Merseyside Police agreed a policy that all crimes against sex workers be treated as hate crime. They were the first, and at the time of writing, the only force in the UK to do so. In this country, the hate crime model has been developed for dealing primarily with racially motivated and homophobic crime. In policing policy, if a reported crime is classified as a hate crime, it will receive an enhanced response with more attention and police resources being allocated to it. The hate crime approach implicitly recognises that violence against sex workers is shaped
by discrimination and attitudes of hostility and prejudice.

In the same period of time, Armistead Street was the first sex work project to secure government funding for an Independent Sexual Violence Advisor (ISVA) located within the project.2 ISVA’s were introduced as part of the national government strategy to address rape and sexual abuse. Armistead Street’s ISVA is a specially trained member of staff who co-ordinates initiatives in the sex work project to address violence and safety, liaises with the police, offers training and awareness-raising sessions to other agencies and last but not least, supports sex workers who have been victims of crime to ensure all their holistic health and social care needs are met. This includes advocacy and intensive support if cases are progressing through the criminal justice system. Key concerns in this regard have been, first, to improve the quality of evidence, and second, to support sex workers in getting their cases to court. The approach used is victim-centered and low-threshold (see below). The ISVA works closely with the Sexual Assault Referral Centre (SARC) which opened in Liverpool in 2008. SARCs are regional centres that provide holistic care – including the collection of forensic evidence – for victims of rape and other forms of sexual violence.

Ugly Mugs
One of the tasks of the ISVA is to coordinate the ‘ugly mugs’ (‘bad date’) scheme. After each incident, sex workers are encouraged to make formal reports to the police as well as fill out an ugly mugs form. An ugly mugs report describes the incident, characteristics of the perpetrator, e.g., clothing, hair, accent, approximate age and height, and descriptions of his car or the location where the incident took place. Not only does the report serve to warn other sex workers of dangerous individuals, it can also be (anonymously) shared with the police to aid investigation and in some cases, support evidence.

In 2007/2008, 65 ugly mugs reports were made to the project, 2 for robbery, 29 for rape and other serious sexual offences, and 16 for assaults. The rest covered a range of offences such as being held against one’s will, verbal abuse and threats of violence. Ugly mugs reporting forms and processes have been developed with advisory input from Merseyside Police. There is a formally agreed process for the processing and analysis of ugly mugs reports by the police. For instance, the information is used in the official investigation of the incident it reports on, as well as shared with police officers in areas where street sex work takes place. Further, the forms are used for monitoring and analyzing incidents related to sex work.

Supporting Cases
Getting to Court
Armistead Street has adopted an approach which puts the victim of violence first and tries to eliminate all barriers that make it difficult for him or her to access justice. For instance, early evidence can be taken by outreach staff (including the ISVA), who carry early evidence kits. Further, the ISVA can be present when a police officer interviews a victim, using video. This interview can also take place at the project’s premises as Armistead has its own video interview equipment. Normally, two police officers will conduct such interviews but as the ISVA has had specialist training from the police on interviewing vulnerable witnesses, she can replace one of them. Outreach staff assist victims of violence from clients in filling out an ugly mugs form.

If a sex worker wants to press charges, the ISVA will support him or her in filing an official complaint with the police. If a particular case is going to court, the ISVA will apply early for ‘special measures’, so witnesses can give evidence from behind screens or via a video link to protect their identity and avoid having to face their attacker at court. She will also work with the courts to avoid where possible that the victim has to spend a long time at court waiting to give evidence. If someone is on a methadone prescription, the ISVA can liaise to arrange for people to collect the medicines before court and if someone is homeless, accommodation can be arranged during trials. The work in Liverpool has seen tangible outcomes. The proportion of sex workers giving permission to share their ugly mugs form and full details with the police and willing to make a formal report, increased almost fivefold, from about 20 to 95 percent. Of the eighteen people who have been brought before the court since 2006, fifteen have been found guilty, a conviction rate of 83 percent. Since the Sexual Assault Referral Centre and Rape Support Unit opened, 98 percent of all sex workers experiencing sexual offences have gone to the SARC for full forensic medical examination. No sex workers supported by Armistead have withdrawn their formal statement or refused to proceed. News of success travels fast. Recently, Armistead Street’s example has been followed by other organisations: a further five sex work projects secured funding for an ISVA located in their service in 2010.

Gaining T rust
Building confidence in the police amongst sex workers and gaining trust has been very important in creating these achievements. Strong partnership work with ongoing liaison and communication between Merseyside Police, the sex work project and sex workers has been key. Since 2006, the police have appointed a sex work liaison officer. Linked to this has been a commitment to getting the message out that crimes against sex workers will not be tolerated in the city, hence challenging attitudes that such violence is acceptable. For instance, senior police officers have engaged with the media to communicate the message that sex workers are part of the community and will get the full protection of the law.

The police have also worked at building trust with sex workers providing ‘friendly faces’, routes for reporting, and information and reassurance via leaflets and the media, as well as utilising the intermediary role of the Armistead Street project. Information about cases brought to court and the successful outcomes are shared with sex workers via outreach work and mechanisms such as the ugly mugs newsletter.

All this has seen a real shift in the relationship between street sex workers and the police in terms of violence against sex workers. Many sex workers now expect that the police will take them seriously and many will independently report to the police as well as to the project, through ugly mugs forms. There has been a real shift in balance within wider policing policy of street sex work. The safety of sex workers and collecting evidence are now priorities, and whilst a degree of law enforcement in response to community complaints regarding soliciting does take place, there is continuous contact with Armistead Street. The police now consider the impact of each planned action on the safety of sex workers. Sex workers are also encouraged to work in areas covered by video surveillance for their security.

There is still a long way to go. For example, the police policy applies to sex workers in all sectors of the sex industry but proactive work building trust with indoor sex workers is underdeveloped. Nevertheless, the work in Liverpool shows that real in-roads can be made into enabling reporting, investigating and prosecuting crimes against sex workers if there is commitment and resources are dedicated to do this. Indeed this can happen even within a challenging and problematic framework in which street sex work is criminalised. This highlights that addressing actual violence against sex workers needs to be a strategic and operational priority in all legal settings.

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The 17th December, 2010 marks the ‘International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers’. In particular on this day, we remember men and women who have been lost through violence and our thoughts are with their families.

Merseyside Police is currently investigating five unsolved murders of sex workers and these women will not be forgotten and the crimes against them are still being investigated.

In 2006, Merseyside Police was the first police force in the country to treat crimes against sex workers as ‘hate crime’.

Since then we have continued to work with support networks both nationally and locally, in particular with the ‘UK Network of Sex Work Projects‘ and with outreach staff and the Independent Sexual Violence Advisor from Armistead (Street) to build trust and confidence amongst members of that community.

The partnership has seen unprecedented benefits in relation to protecting vulnerable people, with increases in conviction rates and some dangerous individuals who would otherwise have posed a significant risk to sex workers, being brought to justice. Indeed, in 2010 alone we have seen ten men convicted of rape and have a number of ongoing cases scheduled for hearings before the courts.

Additionally, to improve the service we provide to victims of sexual violence we have in the past twelve months, introduced the specialist ‘Unity’ team to investigate offences of rape. This is the only co-located joint police and CPS team, dedicated to the investigation of such offences in the country and it’s introduction is very much in line with my aim to improve the service we provide following such incidents. We also work in partnership with the Primary Care Trust, who together with Merseyside Police jointly fund ‘Safe-place Merseyside’ (Sexual Assault Referral Centre) where specially trained staff provide quality care to victims of rape / serious sexual assault as well providing sexual health advice to victims.

Sex work is a challenging issue for some communities and the police, but what is clear is that our duty of ‘public protection’, includes sex workers. People involved in sex work are members of our community they are; daughter’s, mothers, sisters, sons & brothers. Sex workers have the right to protection from violence. We encourage people involved in sex work to come forward and report crimes committed against them. We will take you seriously and treat you with respect.

We will protect those most vulnerable within our community in partnership with other agencies and deliver a proportionate response to the issue.

On the ‘International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers’, I would like to reinforce that Merseyside Police will not tolerate such violence and that every effort will be made to ensure that offenders are tracked down and face the full force of the law.

Anti-Violence against sex workersThe 17th December, 2010 marks the ‘International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers’. In particular on this day, we remember men and women who have been lost through violence and our thoughts are with their families.Merseyside Police is currently investigating five unsolved murders of sex workers and these women will not be forgotten and the crimes against them are still being investigated.In 2006, Merseyside Police was the first police force in the country to treat crimes against sex workers as ‘hate crime’.

Since then we have continued to work with support networks both nationally and locally, in particular with the ‘UK Network of Sex Work Projects’ and with outreach staff and the Independent Sexual Violence Advisor from Armistead (Street) to build trust and confidence amongst members of that community.

The partnership has seen unprecedented benefits in relation to protecting vulnerable people, with increases in conviction rates and some dangerous individuals who would otherwise have posed a significant risk to sex workers, being brought to justice. Indeed, in 2010 alone we have seen ten men convicted of rape and have a number of ongoing cases scheduled for hearings before the courts.

Additionally, to improve the service we provide to victims of sexual violence we have in the past twelve months, introduced the specialist ‘Unity’ team to investigate offences of rape. This is the only co-located joint police and CPS team, dedicated to the investigation of such offences in the country and it’s introduction is very much in line with my aim to improve the service we provide following such incidents. We also work in partnership with the Primary Care Trust, who together with Merseyside Police jointly fund ‘Safe-place Merseyside’ (Sexual Assault Referral Centre) where specially trained staff provide quality care to victims of rape / serious sexual assault as well providing sexual health advice to victims.

Sex work is a challenging issue for some communities and the police, but what is clear is that our duty of ‘public protection’, includes sex workers. People involved in sex work are members of our community they are; daughter’s, mothers, sisters, sons & brothers. Sex workers have the right to protection from violence. We encourage people involved in sex work to come forward and report crimes committed against them. We will take you seriously and treat you with respect.

We will protect those most vulnerable within our community in partnership with other agencies and deliver a proportionate response to the issue.

On the ‘International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers’, I would like to reinforce that Merseyside Police will not tolerate such violence and that every effort will be made to ensure that offenders are tracked down and face the full force of the law.

Published by the Merseyside Police

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What better way to celebrate international day to end violence against sex workers than to present on Harlots the new extended version of this protest video against the violence committed against sex workers in Cambodia. Enjoy

This video is also available on the “Asia pacific network of sex workers web site”. which I highly recommend

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I found this report of violence toward sex workers in Cambodia written by Elaine Pearson and reported on the “><Human Rights Watch". web site.

The full story is on the Human Rights Watch web site with links to

Off the Streets Arbitrary Detention and Other Abuses against Sex Workers in Cambodia

Published July 19, 2010

This 76-page report is based on more than 90 interviews and group discussions with female and transgender sex workers in Phnom Penh, Battambang, Banteay Meanchey, and Siem Reap. It describes how sex workers face a wide range of abuses, including beatings, extortion, and rape at the hands of authorities, particularly in Phnom Penh.
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As told by Elaine Pearson

Large bruises were still visible on Nika’s face and body. The week before, she had been brutally beaten by municipal security guards in a public park. She had been talking on her cell phone and didn’t hear them when they told her to “move.”

One guard kicked her, then three others joined in – two held her hands, while two beat her with bamboo sticks and their radio. Nika tried to fight back, but was overpowered. Police officers walked by and did nothing. Her clothes were ripped. The flogging lasted for about 30 minutes.

Nika, 28, is a sex worker. She sounded both fiery and frustrated as she told me how a legal aid organization said it couldn’t help her if she didn’t have witnesses. Plenty of people – other sex workers and motorcycle taxi drivers – witnessed the attack, but they feared police retaliation if they came forward.

Human Rights Watch recently spoke with more than 90 female and transgender sex workers who said that police had beaten them with their fists, sticks, and electronic shock batons. Several said officers raped them while they were in police detention. Every single sex worker we spoke with said the police demanded bribes or stole money from them. Some officers demanded sex.

“I feel sad and disappointed,” said Nika, whose only experience with the police or municipal guards has been officers beating or chasing her. “I was seriously beaten [by the guards]. I know no one will help me. I was scared. I want to tell you this because I want to make every effort to stop abuse.”

In 2008, Cambodia passed a law on “The Suppression of Human Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation.” While the intention was to protect people who have been forced into sex work, Human Rights Watch found little evidence that this has happened, or that prosecutions for trafficking have been pursued. Instead, officers were more likely to use the law as a convenient excuse to continue to exploit and abuse sex workers, many of whom entered sex work because of poverty and lack of economic opportunities.

For example, provisions like the one outlawing “solicitation” make it possible for corrupt police officers to harass nearly all sex workers who ply their trade, without facing prosecution.

The law’s definition of what constitutes procurement of women is so vague that it could lead to criminalization of advocacy and outreach activities by sex worker groups and those who support them.

Many sex workers are arrested in regular police sweeps of Phnom Penh’s streets and parks. Some are released; some, including children or those who have been trafficked, are sent to a government office for processing.

But some sex workers are forced into an abysmal government-run center, Prey Speu, or others like it. In 2008, Cambodian rights groups and the United Nation’s human rights office in Phnom Penh documented suspicious deaths, rape, and torture in Prey Speu. The Cambodian government responded by saying it would stop sending sex workers there. But as recently as last June, sex workers reported being detained – and abused – in Prey Speu.

On top of these abuses, fear of arrest and detention forces sex workers underground, making outreach to find those who have been trafficked or on issues such as HIV/AIDS more difficult.

Since releasing our report, Human Rights Watch has held meetings with the US State Department, select members of the US Congress and Senate, and USAID, as the United States is one of Cambodia’s largest donors and a major supporter of its anti-trafficking efforts. We want countries that finance anti-trafficking activities in Cambodia, such as police training, to pressure Cambodia to hold their police forces accountable, and to stop the abuse.

We ultimately want the Cambodian government to suspend the legal provision on solicitation, until the issue of police abuse is resolved. Officers who abuse sex workers should be held accountable, and the government should close abusive detention centers like Prey Speu.

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