Sex worker reveals industry truth

Alex McKinnon
Geraldton Newspapers
February 17, 2012, 9:52 am
 
Exclusive: A working Geraldton protitute lifts the lid on just how big and dangerous the sex industry has become since the resources boom.
THINKSTOCK ©

Prostitutes are having sex without condoms or appropriate protection more than 200 times a day in Geraldton, according to a veteran sex worker who spoke exclusively to The Guardian this week.

Julie (not her real name) said customers who were largely fl yin, fl y-out resource industry workers now regularly demand multiple forms of sexual intercourse and oral sex without condoms, dental dams or protective sanitary lubricant, and all for $80 an hour.

According to investigations and interviews conducted by The Guardian, more than 90 per cent of the business is being conducted by Chinese, Thai and Korean girls.

It is estimated there are more than 20 Asian girls working in Geraldton today.

Based on the volume of sex work, the turnover is estimated at between $15,000 and $25,000 per day, with the bulk of the profits going to pimps.

Julie said the Asian girls had no identification and she believed they were trafficked in and out of Geraldton on two to three week rotations, from the Gold Coast and other Eastern States locations.

“I have run into them a few times and sometimes they try to run interference with my business,” she said.

“I picked up two of them late last year walking home from a job they had been thrown out of in Waggrakine.

“They were trying to walk all the way home to Mahomets Flats. They had no identification and spoke no English.

“I take all the proper precautions and I look after myself, but these girls all use the same razors, they would all have hepatitis and the blokes don’t care.

The level of education of the men is frightening.

“They are becoming demanding, they want everything with no protection.

“They don’t even understand that the mouth is one of the worst areas for catching disease, and they think they are special, that the girls don’t do it for other guys. Well they need to wake up.

“They think it is okay to hammer a girl for 30 minutes for $80, they expect it, and if they don’t get it, they get angry.”

Julie, who charges up to $280 per hour, has round-the-clock protection and manages her own operation.

During our interview she received her 84th phone call for the day.

She explained to the man inquiring that she did not kiss on the mouth and would not have sex without a condom.

The man was not interested. He knew he could call another agency and get what he wanted for a third of what Julie was charging. He hung up.

“There you go, I get that more and more now,” Julie said, shaking her head.

“And the other scary thing is that I am now getting calls from Nigerian and Somali men wanting to run girls here in Geraldton.

“These girls are also making fake bookings for me to try to stop me getting their business.

It is just out of control here and nobody is doing anything about it. There is no help either for these girls.”

Julie said there was no way the Asian girls could be making any money at $80 an hour.

“It is a $20 fare each way for the taxi, then accommodation,” she said.

“These girls are bonded, they are in a master-slave relationship.

I feel sorry for them, they are uneducated and they can’t speak English.”

Julie said it was mostly men running the women now.

“I look after my customers properly, I treat them well and they treat me well,” she said.

“When they order these girls they turn up looking nothing like the pictures they have been shown. ”

Julie said the only way to make the industry safe was to allow brothels to open officially and under police supervision with a proper register of the girls.

“Then these girls can be safe, the brothel operators would have to be licensed like they are in Perth or Port Hedland,” she said.

The law is very grey in regard to police being able to bring the booming trade in Geraldton under control.

Mike Hayter, a lawyer in Geraldton with Mid West Lawyers, said there was presently a Prostitution Bill 2011 in the Legislative Assembly with the second reading on November 3, 2011.

“Briefly, the purpose of the Bill is to prohibit prostitution in residential areas with strict licensing requirements,” he said.

“Operators, managers and self-employed prostitutes will need to comply with strict licensing requirements.

“A manager is defined in the Bill as simply being a person who manages a prostitution business.

“There is no reason for us to conclude that a manager or operator of an escort agency or prostitution business cannot be a male — and this is said without taking into account the fact that for a number of years the police have operated a containment policy that is not the subject of legislation.”

Julie said she was registered with the Geraldton police as a sex worker.

She does not believe any other sex workers are registered.

Geraldton police detective Tony Longhorn said they used to keep a register but it was no longer current.

ALEX MCKINNON

Full report in today’s Geraldton Guardian.

http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/a/-/news/12936946/sex-worker-reveals-industry-truth/

 

 

Note: the original article this article was posted in response to, was taken down off the newspapers website as soon as this article was posted. In the orginial article one of the local “legal” sex industry owners was quoted bagging fly-in fly-out sex workers for local increase in syphilis.  Thank you Dr Menon – you helped dispel some myths and not only held the media accountable, you made them retract a bad article!!!

Townsville sex claims ‘rubbish’

16 Feb, 2012 08:26 AM
The North West Star
 
ABSOLUTE total rubbish, was the response from Sexual Health Services specialist Dr Arun Menon to a story in the Townsville Bulletin that the rise in syphilis cases in the North West was due to dubious sex practices in illegitimate brothels in Mount Isa.”The problem isn’t with sex workers or brothels; it’s with young people aged 15 to 30.”That’s where most of the cases are,” Dr Menon said.

The problem wasn’t just in Mount Isa but across the region, he said.

So far this year, to February 9, five cases of syphilis have been reported in the Mount Isa Health Service District, sparking an education and information campaign about sexually transmissible diseases in the North West.

People under the age of 30 and sexually active should get themselves tested, Dr Menon said.

“Babies can become infected in the womb, and for the infected adult, it can lead to problems with the heart, brain and the spinal cord.”

Because the disease was asymptomatic people might not realise they were infected until much later in life, hence the need for testing now.

There was a confidential blood test for syphilis and it was easily treated with antibiotics.

Dr Menon urged young people to see their GP or visit the Sexual Health drop in clinic in Doreen Street, next to the hospital.

Queensland Health’s senior director of Communicable Diseases, Dr Christine Selvey, also took exception to the article in the Townsville Bulletin, saying it was “wrong”.

In a letter to the editor, Dr Selvey said the outbreak was widespread in North Western communities and had nothing at all to do with either the “illegal prostitution trade” or the mining industry.

“There have been NO cases of syphilis involving the sex trade industry, illegal or otherwise, or indeed the mining industry workforce,” she wrote.

http://www.northweststar.com.au/news/local/news/general/townsville-sex-claims-rubbish/2457630.aspx

 

Seoul asks for help to stem sex slavery

February 5, 2012
The Age
 

THE South Korean government is working with Australian police to crack down on organised-crime gangs bringing women here as sex slaves.

The Koreans have met top foreign affairs and immigration officials, along with the Australian Federal Police, to discuss better ways to put a stop to Korean women working in the Australian sex industry. They are particularly concerned about ”debt bondage or trafficking” scams.

A spokeswoman for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade confirmed that a meeting ”late last year discussed a range of bilateral issues”.

A senior Korean official told The Sun-Herald the sex trade was ”a very significant issue” for them and that several investigations were in progress into Korean syndicates operating in Australia.

”It is very difficult to find the number, but our assumption is 1000 Korean nationals are working here,” he said. ”We know prostitution is legal in some parts of Australia but it is illegal in Korea. But, if the women are victims of trafficking, or in slave-like conditions, then it is illegal under both countries’ laws.”

Korea also wants the Australian authorities to help catch and prosecute these criminals in Korea.”We want to stop Korean sex workers doing sex business in Australia and to stop the organisations associated with this activity,” he said.

An AFP spokeswoman confirmed they were working with the Koreans to combat trafficking.

Ilya Gridneff

Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/national/seoul-asks-for-help-to-stem-sex-slavery-20120204-1qyng.html#ixzz1n1WtrEOm

 

Brothel owner charged with human trafficking

Rachel Olding
The Sydney Morning Herald
February 2, 2012

The owner of a Sydney brothel has been charged with human trafficking offences after the Salvation Army discovered three woman allegedly being held as sex slaves.

A 42-year-old Chinese-Cantonese man allegedly trafficked the young women from Thailand to work at his brothel in Guildford in Sydney’s west.

The Australian Federal Police will allege the women were told they were travelling to Australia on student visas but upon arrival had their passports confiscated and were taken to the brothel where they were held against their will.

It was “an abhorrent situation”, said the AFP’s national co-ordinator of human trafficking operations, Glyn Lewis.

“It’s our general experience [that] these women live under very harsh conditions,” Superintendent Lewis said.

“Their freedom’s restricted, they may be forced in various ways coercively, threatened with deportation by the owners [and] lied to. They often have difficult language skills so they’re really in a very frightened state when we get to meet them.”

The Salvation Army, which operates a safe house for victims of human trafficking, received a tip-off that the women were being held against their will.

The women chose to speak to police and a federal police investigation allegedly discovered they had been illegally trafficked and detained in sexual servitude.

Five search warrants were executed last night at the brothel as well as residential and business addresses in Cabramatta, Casula and Canley Heights.

The brothel owner was granted bail and will face court later this month on several charges.

Superintendent Lewis said it was too early to say what would happen to the three women, who have been referred to the Australian Red Cross for a three-month intensive program to recover from their trauma.

They may be granted witness protection (trafficking) visas and be able to remain in the country.

“By its very nature, this crime type involves people who are often reluctant to come forward to authorities,” he said.

“Human trafficking … is a heinous crime that impacts not only the victims, but their families and communities.”

The maximum potential penalty for the brothel owner is 25 years’ imprisonment.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/brothel-owner-charged-with-human-trafficking-20120202-1qurx.html#ixzz1n1AUXC00

 

Are cops the boss of the Cross?

Heath Aston
January 29, 2012
The Sydney Morning Herald
EXCLUSIVE

Trouble-prone ... World Famous Show Girls.

Trouble-prone … World Famous Show Girls. Photo: Wolter Peeters

SHOULD Sydney police be in the business of deciding who runs a strip club in Kings Cross? The liquor regulator thinks not.

The Casino, Liquor and Gaming Control Authority has slapped down a bid by the NSW government to grant local police officers veto power over the appointment of managers at the trouble-prone World Famous Show Girls.

The authority warned giving police the unprecedented power to influence hiring at the Darlinghurst Road establishment may ”potentially compromise” officers and reopen the door to ”official corruption” in Sydney’s vice district.

The grab for extra powers by the police appears to be part of a renewed push against licensed venues in Kings Cross, with another Darlinghurst Road licensee, Dominic Kaikaty, of Eye Bar, failing in his appeal this month against a five-year ban for a string of offences under the Liquor Act.

Before last year’s state election, Barry O’Farrell and Mike Gallacher, who went on to become the Police Minister, warned of a Coalition government crusade against nightclub owners in the Cross, particularly in relation to illicit drugs.

The move against Show Girls – which is owned by the Kings Cross identity Michael Koutra – stemmed from the arrest last year of the strip club’s manager and bouncer for allegedly dealing cocaine from the premises.

The former manager John Gabriel (also known as Khaled Mohamad Harmouch, Kevin Hawa and Kolid Hammoshe) was arrested last May when police allegedly found 30 grams of cocaine in his office. Police allege he had been selling drugs from the premises for a year. Mr Gabriel, who faces five counts of supply, is due to appear at the District Court on February 3. His co-accused, the Show Girls doorman Scott Robert Lavers, will face Downing Centre local court the same day.

According to the Casino, Liquor and Gaming Control Authority, in the past 12 months three dancers at Show Girls were found with drugs, including ice, in their possession. Two have been convicted. Police reported finding another dancer ”apparently on drugs convulsing in the toilets”, said the report by the authority chairman, Chris Sidoti.

Last year, Show Girls attracted more bad publicity after an Australian Defence Force court martial heard allegations of credit card fraud carried out at the venue on a young naval officer. It was revealed during proceedings that Kings Cross police had received complaints from patrons alleging theft of property and being charged for services they do not remember.

In the aftermath of the cocaine arrests, Kings Cross police moved to slap 14 new licence conditions on the Show Girls licensee, Cathie Downie, a single mother from western Sydney who police say is on the premises just three nights a week, from Sunday to Tuesday.

Show Girls is licensed to trade 22 hours a day Monday to Friday and 24 hours on Saturday and Sunday.

The club accepted new conditions that called for a management plan to be lodged with police but rejected condition no.8 – to give police the power of veto over hirings. The condition, imposed by Barry Buffier, the deputy director-general of the Department of Trade and Investment – which oversees the Office of Liquor, Gaming and Racing – stated: ”At any time … the licensee is not present on the premises, then the licensed premises must be under the supervision of a person who has been approved as a supervisor by NSW Police.”

But Ms Downie’s solicitor, Tony Schwartz, argued that no condition giving police the power to approve employees under the licensee had ever been imposed in NSW.

”The role of the police under the act is to bring matters to the attention of the authority, not to make final decisions on licensing matters,” Mr Schwartz told the authority.

”Previous inquiries into liquor regulation in NSW, including the [1997] Wood Royal Commission … have identified the potential for police corruption to arise from the administration of liquor and gaming legislation.”

”While no allegation is made against the current officers of the Kings Cross local area command, were condition eight to stand it would lead to an environment that offers a temptation and opportunity for police corruption in Kings Cross.”

In his findings, Mr Sidoti agreed, saying: ”A condition that renders the appointment of the supervisors or managers of any licensed premises to be the subject of local police ‘approval’ would seem, on its face, contrary to the separation of licensing and enforcement functions that is provided by the act.

”The scope for official corruption to arise in a licensing context, particularly in a late-trading entertainment precinct like Kings Cross, has been well-documented.”

The authority has determined that Ms Downie can choose her own supervisors as long as they have 12 months’ experience managing a late-trading premises and have passed standard police checks.

When contacted by The Sun-Herald, Mr Schwartz declined to comment.

Police said any moves against venues in Kings Cross were ”targeted”.

”This is about targeting repeat offenders,” a spokeswoman said.

 

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/are-cops-the-boss-of-the-cross-20120128-1qmyg.html#ixzz1koGGtZBs

 

More than 500 Sydney prostitutes are offering unprotected sex to clients in brothels

Exclusive by Nick Tabakoff
The Daily Telegraph
January 10, 201212:00AM

brothel

Girls at the legal brothel ‘Liasions’ in Edgecliff. Pic. Kristi Miller Source: The Daily Telegraph

MORE than 500 Sydney prostitutes are offering unprotected sex to clients, raising fears they may be contributing to the spread of sexually transmissible infections.

The trend, revealed in a survey of online advertising and adult forums, has alarmed some brothels which want any commercial sexual activity without a condom to be illegal.

The study by sex industry consulting firm Brothel Busters has found 507 sex workers are offering oral sex with no protection at both legal and illegal premises in Sydney.

About two-thirds were identified as Asian, while one-third were Caucasian.

The manager of legal Edgecliff brothel Liaisons – who identifies herself as “Helen” – said laws governing unsafe sex practices at commercial premises needed toughening.

“It should be illegal because you’ve got to practise safe sex. If you’re not, you can spread disease and you’re putting sex workers and clients at risk,” she said.

“What should my girls do to protect themselves? It’s not like clients walk in with a health certificate.

“The only way we can combat that is with compulsory use of condoms.”

NSW has no legislation specifically banning unsafe sex. There are only guidelines issued by NSW Health and WorkCover recommending the use of condoms.

The laws in other states are much tougher. In Victoria and Queensland, for example, it is against the law for prostitutes and owners of licensed premises to offer unsafe oral sex.

The differences have prompted Brothel Busters boss Chris Seage to argue that NSW should fall into line with Victoria and Queensland.

Mr Seage said he was concerned the spread of disease could rise if the level of unsafe oral sex was left unregulated.

“The 507 prostitutes identified could be seeing up to 10 clients a week, which means up to 5000 Sydney men each week could be exposed to STIs,” he said. “The question is, are these punters then going home to their wives and girlfriends and potentially spreading the problem further?”

Professor Basil Donovan, head of the sexual health program at the federal government-funded Kirby Institute, said he was “concerned” about evidence of a rise in unsafe oral sex.

But he argued that making unsafe oral sex illegal was no silver bullet: “No law will ever stop unprotected sex. (But) I would like to see WorkCover inspectors conducting investigations regularly.”

Another brothel owner, Frank James of Black Cat at Surry Hills, said his own investigations had found “one place in Crows Nest that’s basically a $2 shop – it’s not even a sex premises – but out the back anything goes.”

Mr Donovan said council regulations meant that some premises were operating “under the radar”.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/sydney-nsw/more-than-500-sydney-prostitutes-are-offering-unprotected-sex-to-clients-in-brothels/story-e6freuzi-1226240239728

* Note: NAUWU has deactivated the direct link to the brothel mentioned 3 times in the article including a picutre as we do not condone advertising on this site. Nick Tabakoff has no such issue in advertising a brothel by providing a direct link to the brothel’s website in his article however. We have also deactivated links to Wikipedia and the suburbs mentioned in the article.

 

Pay heed to those who know

Elena Jeffreys
January 1, 2012
Sydney Morning Herald
Opinion
_

Illustration: Reg Lynch.
 
Illustration: Reg Lynch

NEW Year’s Eve is a busy time of year for the hospitality trades – bars, clubs, restaurants, hotels and, yes, sex workers. Like any other business, sex workers worldwide were prepared to meet customer demand. And like any business transaction, it can be hoped both parties walked away happy.

Sex is exchanged for money every day, in brothels, homes, hotels, on the street and in the back seat of cars all over Australia, regardless of legal status, persecution, social stigma, discrimination and expense to the client. Is there anything to be gained by prohibiting it?

Sex workers (most commonly women) make money from sex work. The clients (usually men) pay for sex work. This is a relationship, this is negotiation and this is a system in our culture. Yet our laws, social mores and the morality police tell us it’s scandalous – a one-way ticket to hell. Or jail, if you live in Sweden. All this assumes that sex workers and clients are supposedly doing something wrong.

But what makes it wrong? The government, even when it legalises or reforms laws in favour of sex workers, does not want to be seen to be endorsing sex work – just regulating it for those who are in it and need ”protection”.

What are we being protected from? Why should it be reasonable to criminalise the negotiation of financial arrangements for sex? Rape is criminal. Violent assault is criminal. But consensual sex with a dollar figure attached to it is not. In NSW sex work is decriminalised and workers, clients and health advocates believe it should stay that way.

We are talking about 30 minutes or so of massage, sex, nakedness, talking, showering, then getting on with your life. Is that evil or wrong? Negotiate, pay or be paid, have sex, see ya later.

As sex-worker activist Debby Attenborough put it: ”One million Australian men are prepared to work for days and days in mind-numbing jobs to pay for a single sexual interaction with a woman whom they haven’t even met yet, and will never meet again.” About 20,000 Australian women bypass other careers and risk the social flak associated with sex work to be there to make that money when those men appear.

Now I know what you are thinking. It’s OK for me. I’m articulate, educated. I get articles published by newspapers. I’ve been president of the Australian Sex Workers Association. I can see what you might prefer to imagine: a typical downtrodden, desperate sex worker without any choices or an education, struggling on the streets with pimps breathing down her neck and unable to use condoms. Facing violence. Facing addiction. Facing a personal hell prescribed to her by men who want to pay for quick sex.

Let’s examine some facts. Sydney’s Kings Cross street-working area was the first site of condom use in Australia for sex and oral sex. Why? Because street-based sex workers knew about HIV and didn’t want to catch a life-threatening disease. In the brothels down the street, owners were stopping sex workers from using condoms, threatening sacking, and worried about losing business. But because street-based sex workers were demanding condom use, it made the brothel workers more able to stand up for themselves and demand condom use also. The sex workers who made it a broad campaign actually won the fight against HIV in the sex industry.

Street-based sex workers are organised about their rights in ways that go unnoticed on night-time TV cop shows. With the general obsession in the mainstream media with finding street workers’ corpses in dumpsters, you would think there would be a mirrored concern among law enforcers. But this is not the case.

Street-based sex workers are often imagined as victims; however, the stereotype works against us gaining recognition when violence happens. In fact, street-based sex workers are victimised by laws, police and lack of access to justice. Not by clients who spend money to have sex with us.

The same applies to sex tourism. According to the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, about 15 per cent of Australian men have paid for sex. In a population of more than 22 million, with two-thirds old enough to do so, we can estimate there are 1 million Australian men having sex with sex workers.

The population of Thailand is more than three times that of Australia (65.5 million). Even if ALL 1 million Australian clients travelled to Thailand for sex tourism, Thai men even at the conservative estimate of 15 per cent visiting sex workers, STILL outnumber potential Australian clients 3 to 1. This gives some substance to the claim by Thai sex workers that their bread-and-butter income is from local clients and that travelling Anglo men make up only a small – but consistent and welcome – clientele. What’s more, it is our racist Western attitudes when we see a Thai sex worker with a white, fat, old Western man that lead us to believe she is being victimised by him. We shudder at the sight of a small, slight, fresh-faced woman holding hands with a large, sweaty and sunburnt tourist. But as the sex workers in the Chiang Mai offices of EMPOWER say: ”Many fat old men are very respectful, kind, entertaining, generous and polite customers. We don’t discriminate.”

In the words of author and sex worker Juliet November, ”Sometimes sex work is about being gentle with someone’s need for touch; sometimes it’s about being kind toward a man who’s ashamed of his body; sometimes it’s about being friendly and fun with someone who’s lonely; sometimes it’s about holding someone’s vulnerability very lightly in your hands; sometimes it’s about making someone feel desired … sometimes it’s about sharing intimacy, cigarettes and a laugh.”

So let’s rid ourselves of our prejudices and preconceptions and repeat after me: IT’S OK TO PAY!

Elena Jeffreys is a sex worker and former president of the Scarlet Alliance.

Binge Thinking is a journal of contrarian and controversial ideas found at thoughtbroker.com.au.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/society-and-culture/pay-heed-to-those-who-know-20111231-1pg4e.html#ixzz1jmtRvetI

 

Health boss calls for legalised brothels

ABC News
Updated December 13 2011

Tasmania’s Director of Public Health is putting pressure on the State Government to overhaul the sex industry.

Tasmania’s Director of Public Health has spoken out against legislation banning brothels, arguing the state’s sex industry laws are failing.

Dr Roscoe Taylor says the law banning brothels puts sex workers at risk.

Dr Taylor says it fails both the industry and the public.

“From a public health and a human rights perspective,” he said.

Last year the then Attorney-General Lara Giddings announced her intention to overhaul the 2005 legislation that outlawed brothels.

A year on, she is the Premier and her successors are yet to follow up on her agenda.

Doctor Taylor says an industry overhaul is long overdue.

“I don’t see any reason for delay at this point in time.”

The Attorney-General Brian Wightman says he intends to release a discussion paper on the issue next month.

 

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-12-12/20111212–brothel-laws/3727320/?site=hobart

 

CONGRATULATIONS

Scarlet Road!

 

Scarlet Road has won the Sydney Morning Herald’s The Couch Potato Award for 2011

Here is an excerpt from the page announcing the award:

“Local documentary feature
Winner Scarlet Road (SBS)
Readers’ choice 50 Years Four Corners (ABC)

There has been a tendency for the winner in this category to have screened in the weeks before judging, suggesting recent memory is stronger than long-term memory. And this year’s winner is no exception, having screened just days before our meeting.

It is, however, a deserving winner for its gentle strength and persuasiveness in the cause it promotes. Scarlet Road (SBS) is a courageous, sensitive program about a woman who provides sexual services and intimate therapy to the disabled. It is tastefully told, both from her perspective and that of her clients.

Online reaction was favourable but a minority insisted it was prurient, depraved and sordid. This suggests some viewers prefer denial to reality and expect their denial should apply to those deprived of sexual intimacy because of a physical disability. Or perhaps it’s simple envy.

We also saw merit in Mrs Carey’s Concert (ABC), Trafficked – The Reckoning (SBS) and 50 Years Four Corners (ABC). Doug Anderson”

For details on all the awards, please check this page here:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Note: NAUWU makes every effort to ensure the quality of the information available on this website. Before relying on the information on this site, however, users should carefully evaluate its accuracy, currency, completeness and relevance for their purposes, and should obtain any appropriate professional advice relevant to their particular circumstances. NAUWU cannot guarantee and assumes no legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, currency or completeness of the information.

Disclaimer: Images used on this site have been used with the permission of all parties pictured. If you happen to find an image of yourself and do not wish for it to appear on http://www.nothing-about-us-without-us.com please let the webperson of this site know by contacting nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com  .

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NAUWU has decided to take further action to hold The Australian Broadcasting Corporation accountable for their inaccurate and biased media coverage of the Four Corners program which aired on Monday 10th October 2011.

The link to the broadcast can be found here:
http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/stories/2011/10/06/3333668.htm

NAUWU and the wider sex working communities response to the program can be found here:
http://nothing-about-us-without-us.com/media-campaign-trafficking-and-regulation-in-australia/

NAUWU, its members and other sex workers we have spoken to are outraged by the program because the ABC’s actions have been DAMAGING! We have therefore actioned the complaints process to hold The ABC accountable. By submitting complaints we do not expect an immediate apology as the sex working community were ignored and submissions from peer based organisation to provide The ABC with accurate information rejected.

We feel strongly however that The ABC should at the very least realise the impact of what they’ve done and better, we intend to assist them to realise they need to make amends.

We are also concerned since the program went to air, there has been media from different sources including Channel 10 and print media that follows the same logic, uses the same analogies the Four Corners program did and has sourced Four Corners in their coverage. The ABC went into parntership with FairFax media to initially promote the Four Corners program and this seems to have had a flow on effect to the wider media.

NAUWU submitted a complaint to The ABC and Four Corners outlining just a few of the key issues we had with the program. Please see below for a copy of our initial complaint and the emails that followed between NAUWU and The ABC:

NAUWU Complaint to 4 Corners_Final_25.10.11

26 Oct 2011
 
A complaint to 4 Corners
 
Nothing About Us Without Us is an unfunded, volunteer, loose collective of sex workers who formed to ensure a sex worker voice in maintained in the efforts to keep, defend and create the decriminalisation of sex work in NSW.
 
We believe your reporting of trafficking for sex work in Australia was unethical, without conscience, against the best interests of migrant workers in Australia, shortsighted and incredibly damaging to the sex worker community in Australia.
 
1) Police corruption and DIAC harassment of sex workers as a result of your story.
 
We do not believe that you “uncovered” “trafficking” in the course of your “investigation.”
 
We believe the incidents alleged to be “trafficking” by you were not actual cases of trafficking. We know that you know that these particular incidents were about as far from trafficking as anything could be in Australia; with the only commonality with actual trafficking cases t in Australia being that they involved individual sex workers of Asian backgrounds on work visas who identify as female. Yet since the 4 Corners program sex workers in a number of jurisdictions have alleged to us that Australian Federal Police are conducting raids on sex worker workplaces asking to find “sex slaves” and “trafficking” — knowing that there is none going on.
 
Let us rephrase.
 
We know that corrupt police, allegedly those within the Australian Federal Police, are taking advantage of the media hype and political uncertainty following the 4 Corners “investigation,” to harass, pressure, and conduct spoof raids on premises that they know, as a result of their own intelligence, are not linked to any such activity, but that they know they can get away with because of the momentum as a result of the 4 Corners reporting.
 
We also know that DIAC have, as a result of your show, taken advantage of the political climate, and moved in on hundreds of workplaces to check and cancel Visa’s if people are even one step out of line with the arbitrary visa conditions under which they are travelling.
 
Do you understand that we always see a spike in corrupt activity following sensationalist high profile media coverage of these issues?  Do you understand that we always see a spike in aggressive DIAC targeting of sex work workplaces following sensationalist high profile media coverage of these issues?
 
Was this your intention as a result of your report?
 
We demand an apology from 4 Corners for unwittingly contributing to police corruption and sex worker harassment by DIAC.
 
2) Support for the criminalisation of sex work and the expansion of police powers as a result of your story.
 
Decriminalisation is the best legal framework for sex work, it has created a landscape of transparency and access to justice for sex workers in New South Wales and the ACT that is unmatched across the rest of Australia. You did not investigate this in your report.
 
Regardless, in the wake of the 4 Corners reporting, the increased criminalisation of sex work and increased police powers proposed in Victoria and New South Wales have all been announced, under the cover of the unfounded “allegations” made by 4 Corners.
 
4 Corners interviewed a sex worker who was in contact with an abolitionist anti-sex work group in Taiwan. That sex worker had wanted to come to Australia to do sex work, and has a legal right to migrate here and do so, but was deceived about their work conditions and exploited while they were here. This is not evidence of the need for criminalisation of sex work or increased police powers in Australia. It is evidence of increasing need for sex worker peer education services to be expanded to reach even more sex workers and let migrant sex workers know about their human rights.
 
4 Corners did not interview VIXEN or RhED in Victoria, SWOP NSW, SWOP NT, SWOP ACT, Magenta in WA, SIN in South Australia, Respect Inc in Queensland or Scarlet Alliance (national and in Tasmania). 4 Corners did not approach the Sex Workers Union and did not approach us. 4 Corners instead interviewed a tiny abolitionist, anti-sex work group in Melbourne, and a discredited Greens local politician, who ran through a series of trafficking “figures” that we all know are bullshit. This biased reporting is not evidence of the need for criminalisation of sex work or increased police powers in Australia.
 
4 Corners did not interview COSWAS in Taiwan, Zi Teng in Hong Kong, Giant Girls in South Korea, Empower in Thailand, or any of the other sex worker groups in Asia. This is further evidence of your biased reporting. This is not evidence of the need for criminalisation of sex work or increased police powers in Australia.
 
4 Corners interviewed the parents of a man who died in a murderous crime committed in relation to brothel violence in Victoria. We are sorry that man was killed. No one should be murdered. However, this is not evidence of the need for criminalisation of sex work or increased police powers in Australia. In fact, police already have massive powers in Victoria. To expand them would be totally ludicrous.
 
Yet Governments in Victoria and NSW are now responding to public pressure as a result of the 4 Corners program and using it to excuse their (already formulated) policies to increase police powers, criminalise sex work, and strip us of our human rights in those states.
 
Does 4 Corners intend to sit by and watch while our rights as sex workers are drained from each state and territory on the basis of your report?
 
We demand 4 Corners make a public statement that they did not intend to provide political support for Victoria or New South Wales in either the repeal of decriminalisation or increasing police powers, as this was not in the scope of your “investigation” and not an outcome that could be linked to the “findings” of the 4 Corners program.
 
3) “Bad” whore vs “Good” victim dichotomy.
 
Your show was not saved by the rhetorical intellectual bullshit sprouted by Mr Kerry O’Brien at the beginning of the show. In fact is simply exposes your lack of leg work on this issue. His introduction implied that it was ok to only take the abolitionist point of view because you weren’t talking about whores, you were only talking about victims. We feel sorry that someone wrote such a script for Kerry, perhaps he didn’t realise he was being the political patsy to your biased reporting and the political fall out that was about to ensue.
 
Let us educate you.
 
There are no “good” victims. There are no “bad” whores.
 
Perhaps you have missed the last 25 years of the sex worker rights movement but there is more academic deconstruction of this myth than there is evidence in all the schlock reporting ever done in Australia on mythical trafficking victim stereotyping.
 
We are not a species to be catalogued and separated in test tubes as a result of your prejudices and whorephobia.
 
A sex worker who faces bad work conditions and exploitation is still a sex worker deserving of human rights and dignity.
 
The incessant pathologisation of individuals who have experienced trafficking-like work conditions has poisoned Australian trafficking policy to the point and created serious human rights barriers to those who are brave enough to come forward and report trafficking crimes. Yet Kerrys introduction purpetuates this “good victim” “bad whore” myth and the bad policies it props up.
 
For example, magistrates making their witness protection visa’s conditional on them not doing sex work while awaiting a trial.
 
Or people affected by trafficking like situations being told that the stamp in their passport makes it illegal now for them ever to return to Australia to do sex work.
 
Or migrant sex workers being told by Dept of Immigration that due to Australian trafficking law migrants cannot legally work here.
 
All of these actions by authorities in Australia are based on the myth that Kerry so confidently trotted out at the beginning of your show.
 
This logic is like telling a person who got held up in a bank robbery that they can never legally have a bank account again.
 
Or telling a person who was injured during a car crash that for their own good they can now no longer legally have a drivers license. Or ever travel again in a moving vehicle.
 
Or, as New Zealand has done, criminalise ALL sex workers who are not New Zealand citizens. For “their own good.”
 
Your show, its ridiculous promotions, shady re-dramatisations of imaginary events, exploitation of a dead mans parents’ grief and hopeful imaginations of their “heroic” son, use of quotes from Jennifer Burns on the advertising saying that most Australians don’t realise the extent of slavery when Jennifer was talking about slavery that does not occur in sex work yet you used to quote as if to say that she meant sex work, spooky music, your use of a spokesperson who has been discredited so many times we can’t even believe you bothered to interview them in the first place (and we all know who that is) and the fact that you couldn’t even fit into the story ONE counterpoint of view, leads us to demand:
 
That you remove the promotions, text, and full copy of your 4 Corners program on trafficking for sex work from the ABC website in an effort to prevent further damage and misinformation on this issue.
 
And that
 
Sally Neighbour and Kerry O’Brien be required to undergo a full weeks training on sex worker human rights issues, including trainers from Empower Foundation in Thailand, at the ABC’s expense, to ensure that this misguided “helping” of sex workers, which has actually irrevocably damaged migrant sex worker human rights and any possible useful trafficking policies in this country, doesn’t happen at the ABC again.
 
Yours sincerely,
 
A group of very angry sex workers
 
On behalf of Nothing About Us Without Us
nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com
http://www.nothing-about-us-without-us.com
 
CC: Consumer Affairs Victoria
CC: VIXEN
CC: RhED
CC: Scarlet Alliance, Australian Sex Workers Association
CC: CopWatch Melbourne

 

After submitting the complaint NAUWU waited two weeks for a response and when one was not forthcoming we contacted The ABC again requesting a response. We received this reply:

From: ABC Corporate_Affairs5 <Corporate_Affairs5.ABC@abc.net.au>
Date: Tue, Nov 8, 2011 at 3:11 PM
Subject: Sex worker rights and Trafficking media
To: “nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com” <nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com>

Dear nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com
 
I refer to your email below.
 
Your complaint is being investigated and you can expect a substantive response in due course.  The ABC has 60 days in which to investigate and respond to complaints alleging a breach of its editorial standards.  We do endeavour to respond to complaints within 30 days, but occasionally the sheer volume of correspondence received by the ABC means it may sometimes take longer.
 
Regards
 
Audience and Consumer Affairs

 

NAUWU on the 16th November received this response from The ABC

On Wed, Nov 16, 2011 at 11:33 AM,
ABC Corporate_Affairs11 <CORPORATE_AFFAIRS11.ABC@abc.net.au> wrote:

Dear Nothing About Us Without Us collective

Thank you for your email concerning the Four Corners program “Sex Slavery”.

As your correspondence raised concerns of a lack of accuracy and objectivity, your email was referred to Audience and Consumer Affairs for consideration and response. The unit is separate and independent from ABC program areas and is responsible for investigating complaints alleging a broadcast or publication was in contravention of the ABC’s editorial standards. In light of your concerns, we have reviewed the broadcast and assessed it against the ABC’s editorial requirements for accuracy and impartiality, as outlined in sections 2 and 4 of the ABC’s Editorial Policies: http://www.abc.net.au/corp/pubs/edpols.htm. In the interests of procedural fairness, we have also sought and considered material from ABC News.

Four Corners advises that the material that the program drew upon was based on sworn evidence before the Melbourne Magistrates Court where Mao Ru Zhang has been arrested and charged with placing two women in debt bondage and sexual servitude. In Taiwan, the program talked to a Ministry of Justice prosecutor who had gathered evidence based on intercepted phone calls and documented examples of illegal smuggling of Chinese women between Taiwan and Australia. Four Corners stands by the accuracy of its program and that the trafficking cases described in the program, were actual cases of trafficking. 

If you have any evidence of corrupt police or immigration officials hassling sex workers, the program would be very happy to receive this information and investigate it further.

On review the program did not “support for criminalisation of sex work and the expansion of police powers”. It investigated examples of where women were being exploited against their will and raised legitimate questions as to how and why such a situation exists in Australia today, especially when the sex industry has been widely decriminalised and regulated for people’s safety and enjoyment?  There is nothing in the program to suggest that the program makers are anti-sex workers.

Four Corners advises that it researched this story extensively and spoke to many organisations, academics, investigators, politicians, brothel owners and sex workers, including the Scarlet Alliance. Links to various organisations are found on the program’s website. http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/stories/2011/10/06/3333668.htm

Accordingly, while noting your concerns, Audience and Consumer Affairs are satisfied the broadcast was in keeping with the ABC’s editorial standards for accuracy and impartiality. Nonetheless, please be assured that your comments have been noted and conveyed to ABC News management and the producers of the program.

Thank you for taking the time to write; your feedback is appreciated.

For your reference, the ABC Editorial Policies are available online at http://www.abc.net.au/corp/pubs/documents/codeofpractice2011.pdf
 
Should you be dissatisfied with this response to your complaint, you may be able to pursue your complaint with the Australian Communications and Media Authority, http://www.acma.gov.au .
 
Yours sincerely
Mark Maley
Audience & Consumer Affairs

 

NAUWU was dissatisfied with this response from The ABC so we sent the following reply:

From: Nothing Without <nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Nov 17, 2011 at 2:32 PM
Subject: Re: Trafficking for Sex Work in Australia
To: ABC Corporate_Affairs11 <CORPORATE_AFFAIRS11.ABC@abc.net.au>

We do have evidence of police corruption and if your show had done its research without first taking an anti-sex work slant, you too would have already reported on it. This case has been reported on for over 6 months:

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/more-news/council-worker-jailed-for-brothel-bribes/story-fn7x8me2-1226196513238

Yarra Council, the very council that your 4 Corners ‘talent’ Kathleen Maltzan served upon, implemented am anti-trafficking approach actually has materially that promoted corruption, and has now resulted in the JAILING of an operator in their area (see above link). That 4 Corners uncritically promoted the voice of this anti-sex work campaigner, and overlooked the corruption charges IN THE VERY POLICIES SHE IMPLIMENTED AS A COUNCILLOR  is illustrative of the lazy jounalism that characterised that episode of 4 Corners.

The interviews you did show cased Kathleen Maltzhan as if she both had knowledge and advice about trafficking policy. In actual fact HER VERY COUNCIL has been instrumental in the very corruption that has arisen from ANTI TRAFFICKING POLICIES, the policies your show did nothing to critically expose.

There have been closures of brothels EVEN THIS WEEK still as fall out resulting from the false reporting of 4 Corners. Sex workers in Melbourne, Surry Hills, Sydney, Angel Town and Enmore Road Newtown have all faced violent immigration raids and closures of their workplaces on the basis of harsh anti-immigration policing.

Will 4 Corners take responsibility for the harsh law and order response that they priviledged, leading to more sex worker harrasment and no consideration of expanding migrant sex workers rights?

In both the show and your response to our complaint you are continueing to illustrate a complete lack of understanding of sex worker approaches to trafficking prevention. People who have experienced sex trafficking are not for media to pathologise or sensationalise. Your show has had a direct negative impact on migrant sex workers rights, and have contributed to harsh negative law and order approaches that have materially reduced sex workers access to justice or anti-trafficking preventions since you aired the show.

We are incredibly dissapointed at your response. Our committee will consider your response and acknowledge the time period that passed since we sent you our complaint; this may have an impact on whether the Press Council will accept us to submit this to arbitartion or not.

We are dissapointed and feel that this discussion is not over; we don’t feel like 4 Corners has effectively addressed our complaint, and your refusal of all of our suggestions is unacceptable.

The anti-sex work nature of your show was palpable, the reporting was biased, and NAUWU is totally not happy with your response.

Please explain how your show chose an anti-trafficking spokesperson without critically investigating her own history and involvement with failed harsh criminal approaches to trafficking

NAUWU
nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com
http://www.nothing-about-us-without-us.com

 

What now?
NAUWU and the sex working community is furious with the ABC’s response. Our next step is to make an appeal to the Press Council, however we have to ask them to waive the 30 day limitation on the complaint because the ABC took longer than usual to respond to NAUWU’s complaint.

The Press Council arbitration means signing a document to agree not to sue the ABC in other ways in the future. NAUWU believes this program was incredibly damaging and so has no problem signing such a document to take the complaint to the next level and believe The ABC and the Four Corners program needs to be judged by a third party,

Even if The Press Council finds in favour or 4 Corners, the fact that we have pursued the complaint is meaningful. At the end of the year the Press Council writes a report about who was complained about and why, so even if our complaint is turned down or isn’t successful it will be worthwhile having made the complaint.

We will keep you informed.

If you have any comments you can leave them in the comments section on this page, or please feel free to contact at us nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com

 

 

 

 

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