Trafficking in Australia;
“Vigilante approach is wrong,
Prevention is key.”
say Sex Workers
*taken from Scarlet Alliance Media Release 11th October 2011

_

Sensationalist media
Over the last week Australian media has been flooded by sensationalised reports regarding the issues of trafficking and regulation in the Australian sex industry, but more specifically in Melbourne and NSW.  In the 5 day period from the 8th October up until today the 13th October 2011 these media articles have included:

http://nothing-about-us-without-us.com/why-did-abraham-papo-die-the-sydney-morning-herald-08-10-11/

http://nothing-about-us-without-us.com/terrible-price-of-a-trade-in-misery-the-sydney-morning-herald-08-10-11/

http://nothing-about-us-without-us.com/human-trafficking-prompts-raids-on-brothels-the-sydney-morning-herald-08-10-11/

http://nothing-about-us-without-us.com/legal-brothels-linked-to-international-sex-trafficking-rings-the-sydney-morning-herald-10-10-11/

http://nothing-about-us-without-us.com/licensing-law-to-tighten-screws-on-brothel-chiefs-the-sydey-morning-herald-11-10-11/

http://nothing-about-us-without-us.com/never-a-game-the-sydney-morning-herald-11-10-11/

http://nothing-about-us-without-us.com/brothel-firebombing-linked-to-turf-war-the-sydney-morning-herald-11-10-11/

and of course the Four Corners program which can be found at this link:

http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/stories/2011/10/06/3333668.htm

The above articles were cross published in The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Brisbane Times, WAToday and on the ABC website.

The articles and Four Corners program included the sensationalist terms:
“hundreds of legal brothels…..thousands of women ….. brutal industry….lives in danger… sex slavery….. sexual servitude”

_
FLESH TRADE: Four Corners teaser and cross promotion of media
Along with the articles listed above, each appeared with what the newspapers named “FLESH TRADE: Four Corners teaser”. This “FLESH TRADE teaser” was a video that included hidden camera footage of workers in brothels being filmed without their knowledge or consent; a “journalist” driving around in his car stopping out the front of licensed brothels in VIC and brothels in NSW who have DA consent to operate, pointing out that they were brothels and would more than likely have illegal workers in them working in sexual servitude; commentary on how the next Four Corners program would blow the lid off the Flesh Trade in Australia and expose sexual servitude, sex slavery, trafficking, contract workers and that they were run by gangs, murderers and other criminals in huge numbers and how this behaviour is the norm in the Australian sex industry.

Examples of these Flesh Trade Teasers can be found here:

http://media.theage.com.au/news/national-news/flesh-trade–four-corners-teaser-2676045.html

http://www.smh.com.au/national/the-flesh-trade

http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/legal-brothels-linked-to-international-sex-trafficking-rings-20111009-1lfxs.html

The Age newspaper and The Sydney Morning Herald were in partnership with Four Corners and running a cross promotion where all three media were able to promote each other and benefit by sensationalising the same issue. By doing this not only is this promotion and awareness achieved, but the issue can be seen by the public to gain more credibility and the ability to sensationalise an issue and make it larger than life is multiplied three fold.

_

NOTE: In the 2 months leading up to this media coverage, Scarlet Alliance did over the phone interviews with the journalists involved with producing theses articles for Fairfax media (SMH, The Australian) and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (for the Four Corners program). However, Four Corners chose not to interview Scarlet Alliance, it’s members, NAUWU, or anyone from the asian sex worker organisations for this particular edition of the show. The Farifax media journalists chose not to use any of Scarlet Alliance’s material in their written coverage.

_

The response
The sex working community was appalled. People responded by writing blogs, commenting on the articles as they were published by each media group, discussing the issues on forums, Twitter campaigns, directly contacting the media groups who published and aired the material, press releases were put out by sex worker organisations, website campaigns were launched and complaints made to the Press Council. Please see below for examples.

Media releases:
Scarlet Alliance media release in response_ Trafficking in Australia; “Vigilante approach is wrong, prevention is key” say sex workers_11th October 2011

SWOP media release_Brothel Licencing and Illegal Safe Sex_October 2011

The Australian Sex Party Media Release_Sex Slavery Caused by Failure of Moral Policy

 

Sex worker comments:
“4 corners… use to be a childhood memory of ‘good journalism’.. now a stain in my consciousness… sad but true…”
R********

“…Now is the time to come together as a community. 4 Corners should have outraged us with the appalling one sided representation not given people permission to judge. 4 Corners should bring us together as a powerful lobbying community. You should be outraged!”
Dora Explorha

“…the show could have been on Today Tonight instead of Four Corner’s”
QueerRTchoke

“…did anyone pick up on the fact they actually took hidden cameras into the line ups, rooms etc and video’d woman without their knowledge or permission?! And they preach how evil it is these very woman they were videoing are being taken advantage of, used and abused for other people’s gain and given no choice. Disgusting hypocrits.”
IGP

“One of the main points about all these articles an even the program itself is that they are high on speculation and very low on fact. The unsafe sex in Sydney brothels article is a prime example where their only evidence is that say so of one brothel owner that other brothels in her area (not her own) may practise un safe sex.

I would add the results of the LASH project – we have the evidence that voluntary STI checks undertaken in consultation with individual’s medical practitioner as to how often, if at all, an individual sex worker ought to submit to a sexual health screen is best practice and works.  According to the LASH project, NSW has best outcomes in terms of sexual health and access by representative bodies such as SWOP. Until the LASH Report to NSW Government is in the public domain, one of the papers produced from the study ‘Improving the health of sex workers in NSW: maintaining success’ says it all. Abstract from published paper Vol. 21(3-4)2010 NSW Public Health Bulletin Donovan et al

“NSW has a diverse sex industry that is limited in its size by modest demand. There is no evidence that decriminalisation in 1995 increased the frequency of commercial sex in NSW. Though the largest sector, female brothels, is now mainly staffed by Asian women, condom use for vaginal and anal sex exceeds 99% and sexually transmissible infection rates are at a historic low. These gains are attributable to the long-term support of the NSW Department of Health in collaboration with the community-based Sex Workers Outreach Project and sexual health services, facilitated by the removal of criminal sanctions without the expense and access barriers of licensing systems”
Julie

 

Websites:
http://www.sexparty.org.au/index.php/news/media-releases/1229-sex-workers-say-anti-trafficking-crusaders-are-not-our-friends

http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/slavery-in-australia-goes-beyond-the-sex-trade/

http://www.sexparty.org.au/index.php/news/media-releases/1218-no-one-is-listening-to-us-sex-workers

NGO Delegation to the UNAIDS PCB_Trafficking truth and lies_it’s time to decriminalise

 

Sex worker blogs:
http://becauseimawhore.wordpress.com/2011/11/08/stop-the-traffic-the-car-crash-you-cant-look-away-from/

http://ryrysparkleby.tumblr.com/post/11267692856/sex-trafficking-rant

http://ashaaaa.wordpress.com/2011/10/10/migrant-exploitation-and-labour-trafficking-is-not-exclusive-to-the-sex-industry/

 

Meetings attended and representation given:
Sex Party NSW_Migrant Sex Workers Myth and Misconception

http://www.sexparty.org.au/index.php/videos/1245-sex-workers-andrew-patterson-

http://www.sexparty.org.au/index.php/videos/1244-sex-slavery-elena-jeffreys-fiona-patten

 

Radio:
ABC Radio Australia_Australian sex worker group opposes moves to police industry

 

Government Organisations:
PLA In Touch Newsletter_Issue 64_December 2011

_

Where to now and what can you do?
NAUWU is taking further action to hold Fairfax Media and The Australian Broadcasting Corporation accountable for their inaccurate and biased media coverage. Since this page was first published, there has also been media from different sources including Channel 10 and print media that NAUWU is concerned about. We will continue to lobby, advocate, and educate on the issues of trafficking and sex work and the need for Australian media to represent the issues in a fair and accurate manner. We will continue to work with sex workers including sex worker peer based organisations to address these issues.

If you’d like to help, we’d love it if you could…
- Get onto internet forums and give your feedback to the media articles
- Share the above media release
- Contact the media outlets whose reporting is most biased and sensationalist
- Tell us your opinion!- place a comment after this article
- talk about the issues on Twitter and Tweet this page
- send us an email to nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com
- join NAUWU by sending us an email
- write a blog discussing the issues
- talk with other sex workers

We will keep you informed of any updates and with further information!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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  .

Contributions on  http://www.nothing-about-us-without-us.com  have been made by NSW Sex Workers and other concerned parties of NSW Sex Industry; site design and maintenance by nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com ; Copyright Nothing About Us Without Us  2009 – 2020

 

Never a game

Maris Beck
The Sydney Morning Herald
October 11, 2011

Flesh Trade - CCTV of brothel arson (Video Thumbnail) 

CCTV footage shows the arson of a Melbourne brothel.

Arson, a killing, sex slavery. This is the reality of Melbourne’s sex industry.

AS SMOKE enveloped the brothel across the road from his Tope Street shop on August 13 last year, a South Melbourne fruiterer who counted many of the women working there among his customers frantically dialled 000. In doing so he set in train an investigation that escalated to a magnitude neither he nor the firefighters who responded to his call could ever have anticipated.

Brigade commander Wayne Garrard, one of the first on the scene, described the fire at the Top on Tope as dramatic – flames surged through the roof, smoke engulfed the city’s inner south – but otherwise unremarkable. As no one was injured, it seemed tragedy had been averted.

There was an abundance of bedding to fuel the blaze – thought to have been started by a fan heater on the top floor – and it ignited quickly. But as arson detectives worked on the site, a different picture started to emerge. What they discovered would shed light on the brutal dealings in Melbourne’s brothel scene, exposing an intricate network of vendettas, alliances and rivalries linked to a turf war between alleged crime syndicates in the city’s lucrative sex trade.

Beautiful women, terrible tales ... A brothel on South Melbourne's Tope Street sex strip.
 
Beautiful women, terrible tales … A brothel on South Melbourne’s Tope Street sex strip.

A year later, it is clear that the fire’s real significance lies in what the investigations reveal about the state’s regulatory agencies and the lack of oversight that enables brothels to renew their government licences each year – despite the accumulation of police intelligence on Victoria’s licensed brothel industry, sex slavery raids, suspected firebombings, a killing and widespread standover tactics.

Someone is making a lot of money – and it is not the women selling the sex.

In this world, friendship and enmity are often entwined, and relationships turn sour over sex and money. So it seems the friction that sparked the South Melbourne fire may have begun years ago among enemies who once were friends.

Brutal dealings ... Fire crews put out the Top on Tope brothel fire.
 
Brutal dealings … Fire crews put out the Top on Tope brothel fire.

Top on Tope, known for its beautiful Korean women, was only one of many brothels in South Melbourne, which contains one of the busiest and most profitable brothel strips in the country – an area where competition for custom has always been fierce.

One of the managers at Top on Tope was Mae Ja Kim, also known as ”Mimi”.

Detective Leading Senior Constable Glen Hatton, of the arson squad, says investigators have now ruled out electrical faults and say the blaze was not an accident. Nor was it likely to be an insurance scam – the costs of a recently added extension meant owners had lost money because of the fire.

But the owners were not the only ones who lost out when Top on Tope – one of Melbourne’s busiest brothels – was boarded up and closed.

Police believe Kim was well connected in the area, with an interest in the brothel next door, 39 Tope Street, also known as Oriental Dolls, and stakes in a string of other brothels around Melbourne, to which she “introduces” women but does not appear on the books.

Of all the city brothels, sex industry sources say Top on Tope, with its prime location near the casino, and its beautiful women, was on the top tier. If anyone wanted to hurt Kim, says Hatton, they would have done it by burning the place down. The question is, who would want to and why?

A witness told police a man in a puffy ski jacket and a cap was seen nearby at the time of the blaze. Now, a joint investigation between The Age and Four Corners has unearthed another crucial piece of evidence – grainy closed-circuit television footage that shows a man in a cap and light-coloured jacket walking down the hallway of Top on Tope shortly before the fire.

He walks out of frame and hurries back a while later, as the flames flare behind him.

Arson detectives are investigating the involvement of De Jun ”Kevin” Zheng.

Zheng’s journey, through numerous legal and illegal brothels in South Australia, Queensland and Victoria, also implicates Victorian regulators, who have failed to stop his involvement in the state’s licensed premises, despite more than five years of documented criminal activities.

Zheng, also known as Fatty or Fat Boy, has been linked to illegal brothels interstate and was charged with keeping a woman as a slave in his Adelaide brothel. The case didn’t proceed, but Zheng has bragged to an associate that he intimidated the prosecution witness. He is again under investigation for sex slavery and has been questioned by federal police.

In February 2009 he also bashed to death 27-year-old Abraham Papo outside the South Melbourne Top on Tope brothel after Papo tried to help his girlfriend, a Korean prostitute and alleged sex slave. Zheng has claimed self-defence and has never been charged.

A federal police witness told Melbourne Magistrates Court in August that Zheng forced her into prostitution at two licensed Melbourne brothels. One of the brothels she named was Madam Leona’s, which was then managed by Lin Gao, also known as Lisa. (That address is now licensed to a different sex work provider and the licensee of Madam Leona’s has moved location.)

In a sworn statement, the witness described mould growing on the walls at Madam Leona’s, which was also infested with mice.The first time she was there, she said: “I felt like I was a corpse walking into sex work, that I was going down the hall without a soul.” She said wanted to vomit so many times, she started keeping tissues next to the bed when she was with clients.

The witness said she lived in an apartment with other women, and that Zheng prevented her from leaving it. She described him as “tall and strong with a shaved head” and “looked like a very rough, angry, unfriendly kind of person. He usually spoke to me with an angry face, which made me feel scared.”

She said Zheng sometimes watched her while she was in the shower and on one occasion she woke to find him groping her. She described another woman in the brothel crying after being submitted to rough anal sex. The witness said the woman did not receive medical attention and told her that “this job is not for humans”.

The witness was interviewed after Madam Leona’s was visited by federal police and immigration officers in September 2009. She told police that Gao had taken her to another licensed brothel, Regarding House, in Heidelberg, after she was questioned.

Yet despite the raids and despite her witness statement made in November 2010, which became public in court in August, both Regarding House and Madam Leona’s remain open for business.

And in May 2010, less than six months after Madam Leona’s was visited by authorities, the government-registered manager, Lin Gao, was granted a full licence to run the Candy Club brothel in Richmond.

Regarding House is also one of many sites police believe are connected with an illegal-brothel syndicate allegedly operating across the northern suburbs.

Six people have been charged over alleged bribery and illegal prostitution following raids across the northern suburbs in November last year, including a council worker who pleaded guilty to accepting bribes in August and alleged brothel kingpin Xue Di ”Jenny” Yan, who formerly owned the property that hosts Regarding House in partnership with the current licensee.

The Age‘s investigations have revealed that a string of licensed brothels that have repeatedly drawn attention from police have yet to face any consequences from regulators, including the lead regulator, Consumer Affairs Victoria.

In November 2008, federal police removed two Korean women from Oriental Dolls following allegations of sexual slavery, allegations that were denied by the licensee when he was contacted by The Age. After the police raids, the brothel stayed open. The police case did not proceed, but the women were accepted into the federal government’s support program for victims of trafficking.

The repeated raids – along with the 51 trafficking victims rescued in Victoria since 2003, most of them from licensed brothels – have sparked little action from state regulators, although regulators accompany police on many operations involving brothels.

A spokeswoman for Consumer Affairs Victoria says serious criminal offences such as under-age sex work, sexual servitude, drug-related offences or immigration offences are referred to state and federal law enforcement bodies.”In circumstances where Consumer Affairs Victoria obtains solid, court-admissible evidence of brothel licensees or approved managers participating in serious or organised criminal activities, CAV may apply to the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal for an inquiry to determine if there are grounds for taking action against licensees.”

The spokeswoman says Consumer Affairs acted on all received intelligence but would not jeopardise ongoing law enforcement investigations. “A number of the premises in question are the subject of ongoing inquiries and it would be inappropriate for Consumer Affairs Victoria to make any comment that could jeopardise these inquires.”

Police superintendent Pauline Kostiuk, who heads a new intelligence-sharing committee between relevant agencies about illegal brothels, says law enforcement has been hampered because little information was shared between agencies.

”There [has been] no provision for that to happen. I think they would benefit from a closer relationship and data-sharing.”

Detective Sergeant Murray Aldred, one of Victoria’s most experienced police officers involved in investigating the sex industry, recalls watching intelligence files on brothels shredded when the vice squad was disbanded in 1999.

When he took over the crime desk in 2006, he tried to rebuild some of those files, but was working mostly by himself. He says the state government’s intelligence-sharing taskforce would improve the situation only if it was given enough resources.

One brothel owner told The Age he voluntarily photocopied sex workers’ passports and sent them to the Immigration Department. He believes this is uncommon but should be mandatory, as it would help authorities detect illegal immigration and investigate possible cases of sex trafficking.

The Coalition criticised the current regulatory system when it was in opposition, and after taking office re-committed to putting police back in charge of brothel regulation.

Before last year’s state election, the opposition released its plan for Consumer Affairs’ role in regulating the sex industry: “The legalisation of prostitution in Victoria was intended to drive out criminal elements associated with the industry.

“Clearly, this has not occurred. Street prostitution continues openly, while unlicensed brothels and escort agencies advertise in newspapers, seemingly without fear of prosecution. Sex slavery and other human rights violations have occurred in Victoria.”

A government spokeswoman says laws will be introduced shortly to make Victoria Police the lead agency in enforcing sex industry laws affecting illegal brothels. But for now, the licensees keep ticking over, in one name or another, and the discreet doorways stay open as regulators fail to act. One exception is the charred entrance to Top on Tope. Police investigations into identifying who burnt it down are continuing.

 

Licensing law to tighten screws on brothel chiefs

Tom Reilly, Anne Davies
The Sydney Morning Herald
October 11, 2011

Flesh Trade - CCTV of brothel arson (Video Thumbnail)

CCTV footage shows the arson of a Melbourne brothel.

THE NSW government is to introduce a licensing system for brothels, tightening controls on who can run them, in an attempt to prevent the exploitation of women and the involvement of criminal gangs in the sex trade.

Under current regulations, once a council approves a development application for a building to be used as a brothel, there is no registration process or background checks carried out on those running the business.

As revealed in yesterday’s Herald, a number of legal Sydney brothels have been linked by police to the trafficking of Asian women who are kept as sex slaves, while others are alleged to be linked to organised crime.

Outside Stiletto, a brothel at 82 Parramatta Road in Camperdown.
Outside Stiletto, a brothel at 82 Parramatta Road in Camperdown. Photo: Domino Postiglione

The legislation, which may be introduced to Parliament before the summer break, comes more than two years after a brothel taskforce recommended a regulatory system to investigate suspected “illegal brothels and assess the suitability of potential brothel operators”.

A government source told the Herald a new licensing authority would be set up: “We’re very concerned about issues in brothels; whether that be trafficking, girls held in debt bondage or those being forced to have unprotected sex with clients. One of the main aspects of this legislation will be to try and tighten up who is running these places and prevent criminals, or those known to associate with criminals, from being in charge.”

In Victoria and Queensland, owners and managers of brothels need to undergo background checks, though there are still issues with trafficking and crime within the industry in those states.

One investigator, who has raided Sydney brothels in search of women being held as sex slaves, said the change in legislation was necessary. He said: “The current situation is a legacy of the decision by the then NSW Labor government to decriminalise prostitution in 1995. Although the intention was to provide a safe working environment for sex workers the reverse has occurred in that pimps and brothel operators were empowered and enriched.

“Police were cut out of the equation and organised crime infiltrated the brothel and massage parlour industry.”

Greg Woodhams, environmental services director at Willoughby Council, where one brothel linked to an international sex trafficking ring before the courts is located, said the current system was not “foolproof”.

“When we receive a development application for a brothel we go to the local police and ask if there are any issues with the person making the application,” he said. ”But this is far from foolproof as sometimes it’s an architect making that application.”

The Scarlett Alliance, which represents Australian sex workers, is against any licensing regime. “There’s no policy work or research that would support the NSW government moving in that direction,” said its president, Elena Jeffreys.

A spokesman for the government said: “The government is currently developing options for the delivery of its commitment to close down illegal brothels and properly regulate approved operations through the creation of a Brothel Licensing Authority, and will progress these matters in the near future.”

 

Sex worker speaks on taboo subject

29 Sep 2011
PENELOPE BRADLEY
Inner West Courier

Rachel Wotton with a client featured in an upcoming SBS documentary.

Rachel Wotton with a client featured in an upcoming SBS documentary.

Sex worker Rachel Wotton

Sex worker Rachel Wotton

SEX worker, activist, loving girlfriend and school dux; a unique documentary about the life of Newtown sex worker Rachel Wotton is sure to debunk a few stigmas.

Due to be screened on SBS later this year, the film documents the work of Touching Base, an organisation based in Sydney’s inner west which connects sex workers with people with a disability.

Ms Wotton, a sex worker of 17 years, speaks with candour about her work during the film, which is a finalist at this year’s Sydney Film Festival for the Foxtel Australian Documentary Prize.

Independent director Catherine Scott, who met Ms Wotton a decade ago through mutual friends, shot the documentary over three years.

The film captures poignant footage of Ms Wotton and client Mark Manitta, who lives with cerebral palsy and whose 46th birthday wish was to have a woman stay overnight.

“People with disabilities deal with touch all the time, being washed and dressed and bathed,” she said.

“But they crave a different type of touch; they crave tenderness and I believe that people with disabilities have a right to express themselves sexually just the same as anyone else in society,” Ms Wotton said.

The Newtown resident, who has a background in psychology and is completing a masters degree in sexual health, is a co-founder of Touching Base and said its set-up in 2000 was only made possible by decriminalisation in NSW.

Ms Wotton said she wouldn’t have consented to filming the documentary if she lived within the Marrickville local government area of Newtown, which restricts sex workers from operating from home without a development application.

“The City of Sydney council has an inclusive sex industry policy which allows me to work safely and discreetly from home.”

Ms Wotton said she was not affected by mainstream disapproval of her cause. “People have sex all the time … it happens every day behind closed doors.”

“(My work) is no different; all we are doing is negotiating how long that interaction goes for.

“We can negotiate what we will and will not do, and it’s an interaction between two mutually consenting adults,” she said.

http://inner-west-courier.whereilive.com.au/news/story/sex-worker-speaks-on-taboo-subject/

 

Legal brothels linked to international sex trafficking rings

Nick McKenzie, Maris Beck, Tom Reilly, Anne Davies
October 10, 2011
The Sydney Morning Herald

LEGAL brothels in NSW and Victoria are operating unchecked despite police investigations implicating them in human trafficking, sex slavery and organised crime.

Two federal police investigations, Operations Elixation and Raspberry, have identified at least two Sydney brothels and three Melbourne ones linked to an international human trafficking and sex slavery ring. The syndicate allegedly convinces Asian women to come to Australia to study. They are then forced to work as sex slaves in brothels.

But the state and local authorities responsible for approving legal brothels have taken no action, despite court documents in August detailing federal police allegations of the brothels’ – or their managers’ – involvement in organised crime.

A joint investigation by the Herald and the ABC program Four Corners can reveal that the brothels include the Five Star in Woolloomooloo, which was approved by the City of Sydney, and the Candy Club in Melbourne, licensed by the Victorian government.

A syndicate member, De Jun Zheng, was also involved in the killing in 2009 of a Melbourne man, Abraham Papo, outside a brothel linked to sex trafficking.

Evidence suggests Papo was killed trying to help a Korean prostitute he thought was being harmed or held against her will by the syndicate in Sydney. Papo’s parents, Deanna and Marco, are calling on state and federal authorities to crack down on brothels linked to sex trafficking.

In addition to the legal parlours identified in federal police operations, the Herald can reveal other legal brothels operating unchecked despite alleged links to organised crime. They are:

Nadira in inner-city Sydney, which specialises in Korean prostitutes. It is closely linked to the Comanchero outlaw motorcycle club and senior Asian organised crime figures;

Regarding House, in Heidelberg, Melbourne, where a sex slave allegedly worked in 2009. The owner of the premises is linked to a Chinese syndicate that runs illegal brothels;

39 Tope Street in South Melbourne, from which authorities removed two women in late 2008 due to sex slavery allegations which the licensee later denied;

Senior police sources said the links between organised crime or sex trafficking syndicates and legal brothels highlighted the need for stronger state regulation, better information-sharing between police and regulators – including across state borders – and discussion of the need for uniform prostitution laws in Australia.

An federal police spokesman told the Herald the agency “continually explores ways to increase the sharing of information and collaboration” in the illegal sex industry.

Since 2003, the federal police’s human trafficking teams have undertaken more than 308 investigations and assessments of trafficking allegations, identifying 181 victims, including 147 women forced to work as sex slaves.

Senior state police sources in NSW and Victoria acknowledge that the policing of organised crime in the legal brothel sector is patchy and the regulation of brothels in both states often woeful.

Operation Raspberry has gathered testimony from two witnesses who allege that Lin Gao, the licensed manager of Candy Club, is part of a syndicate which in 2009 forced two women to work as sex slaves at Five Star in Woolloomooloo and at a second Sydney brothel, which is under new ownership, and at two other Melbourne brothels.

In witness statements to a Melbourne court hearing in August, two Chinese women alleged they were forced to engage in unsafe sex practices in these legal brothels and work up to seven days a week, servicing dozens of men. Every dollar they earned was allegedly returned to the syndicate that sent them from Asia to Australia.

“I did not know how much money I made or how much money I had paid off my debt. My mind was blank. I was just counting down the days,” one alleges.

The statements identify Ms Gao as an alleged “big shareholder” and decision-maker connected to the trafficking syndicate’s Australian operations, although she told the Herald through a lawyer that she was not involved in any impropriety.

The federal police court documents contain a large amount of information implicating Ms Gao and several of her Sydney and Melbourne associates in sex trafficking or other crimes, but only one syndicate member has been charged. At least three of these associates are still involved in running legal brothels in Sydney or Melbourne.

In NSW brothels are regulated by local councils under planning laws.

The City of Sydney’s acting manager of the safe cities unit, Rebecca Martin, said issues of organised crime were beyond the scope of council officers, whose role was only to ensure brothels complied with their development consents.

”If we have any concerns about the treatment of sex workers, or illegal activity or immigration issues, we refer them to the NSW Police,” she said. ”We work closely with the local area command.”

Do you know more? investigations@smh.com.au


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/national/legal-brothels-linked-to-international-sex-trafficking-rings-20111009-1lfxs.html#ixzz1aIOXYVgG

 

Human trafficking prompts raids on brothels

Tom Reilly, Anne Davies, Maris Beck
October 8, 2011
The Sydney Morning Herald

A TASKFORCE of police and immigration inspectors have raided Sydney brothels in the past month as part of a wide investigation into Asian women being trafficked into the sex industry.

Properties in Gladesville and Eastwood were targeted by a team of 18 investigators in a night operation on September 22. Both businesses – where at least 15 women worked – are suspected to have links to an organised crime gang based in Hong Kong.

The raids, which are part of an ongoing inquiry, come as figures obtained by the Herald show the issue of trafficking is a particular problem in NSW.

Raids ... brothels have been raided in Sydney in what has been described as a wide investigation into Asian women trafficking.
 
Raids … brothels have been raided in Sydney in what has been described as a wide investigation into Asian women trafficking. Photo: Reuters
_

Of the 148 women in a federal government support program for those trafficked into the sex industry in Australia since 2004, 119 (80 per cent) have been discovered in this state.

However, those numbers are believed to be only the tip of an iceberg, with most women being kept as sex slaves or in debt bondage – a practice where women are forced to work as prostitutes until a large sum is paid off – going unreported. Other victims identified by police choose to leave Australia immediately.

The federal Minister for Women, Kate Ellis, who oversees the government’s program for victims, admitted trafficking was ”a crime that goes unreported, undetected far too often”.

She told the Herald this week: ”We don’t know whether the problem is growing or we are just being more effective in finding victims, but we do know we are coming across more and more women that are being trafficked into the sex industry. ”The majority of the Australian population would be shocked if they knew that human trafficking was occurring not just in our nation, but often in our neighbourhoods.

”This is one of those issues that Australians don’t like to think about … But it is really important that we open our eyes.”

An Australian Federal Police commander, Chris McDevitt, who spoke to the ABC’s Four Corners as part of a joint investigation with the Herald, said trafficking was an issue his force was trying to address.

”The more that we look, the more that we find,” he said.

”Since we’ve started out in 2003 we’ve now had 305 investigations or assessments of human trafficking in Australia, and out of that we’ve had 184 victims – and that’s 184 victims way too many. So it’s very important that we address this, and the AFP are right onto it.”

He said that most people trafficked to Australia are sent to work in brothels.

”About 70 per cent of those victims are women for sexual exploitation, sexual servitude and the other 30 per cent for labour trafficking,” Mr McDevitt said.

Last month’s operation was part of a crackdown on brothels and massage parlours being led by an inter-agency taskforce supported by a specialist local government investigator.

At the licensed brothel in Gladesville one male employee in his late 20s, who was wanted by police in relation to several crimes as well as bail breaches, was taken into custody.

During the raid at the illegal brothel in Eastwood, another man in his late 20s was arrested for possession of drugs, while a large quantity of suspected amphetamines were also found on the site on Rowe Street.

That brothel has now been closed.

The Herald understands officials from the Department of Immigration are trying to establish whether women working at both properties are the victims of trafficking or debt bondage.

• Tip-off the AFP about sex slavery or human trafficking on– 131 AFP (free call)

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/national/human-trafficking-prompts-raids-on-brothels-20111007-1ldmz.html#ixzz1aIMdv7DW

 

Police confirm Craig Thomson’s signature on credit card

  • by: Ean Higgins
  • From:The Australian
  • September 09, 201112:00AM
Craig Thomson

MP Craig Thomson is set to make a ‘comprehensive statement’ to defend allegations he misused a union credit card. Source: AdelaideNow

LABOR MP Craig Thomson is expected to rely on the disappearance of financial records and slack union rules when he makes a “comprehensive statement” to defend allegations he misused his union credit card in a $100,000 splurge on prostitutes, cash withdrawals and air tickets.

But he faces a dilemma over his claim that another person forged his signature on the card dockets for a brothel, after NSW police determined they were genuine.

“We are satisfied that the person who used the card was the person whose name was on the card,” a senior police officer told The Australian.

“It would have been deception if someone else used it; that would have been a crime.”

Mr Thomson, who holds the marginal NSW central coast seat of Dobell, yesterday claimed vindication after NSW police issued a statement saying they had no basis to launch an investigation.

“I have always rejected claims of wrongdoing in these matters,” he said in a media release.

“I will make a comprehensive statement in the near future.”

Mr Thomson’s office would not say when he would make the statement, but the Coalition called on him to do so in parliament when it resumes on Monday.

Union sources said they thought Mr Thomson would revert to explanations he made to a Health Services Union investigation, after its national executive found in 2008 alleged irregularities in the use of his union credit card while national secretary between 2002 and 2007.

The Australian can reveal that Mr Thomson was interviewed by forensic accountants BDO Kendall and lawyers Slater and Gordon, who had been commissioned by the HSU to investigate the matter.

Mr Thomson is understood to have claimed he had kept precise records and chits of how he had spent cash withdrawals totalling tens of thousands of dollars on union business. But these, like many other records, had gone missing, Mr Thomson had said.

He told the investigating team the executive had known of, and thus approved, his use of the credit card to purchase air tickets for his then wife, Christa.

But it is not known how Mr Thomson would deal with the brothel allegations.

In an interview on Sydney radio station 2UE last month, Mr Thomson said: “The union reached a settlement with another gentleman who paid back $15,000 in relation to the use of credit cards at an escort agency.”

Former HSU Victoria No 1 branch secretary Jeff Jackson has said he was the person who repaid $15,000 to the union — but said the payment had nothing to do with credit cards used at escort agencies, a statement supported by union sources.

The senior NSW police officer said the fact there were “very loose restrictions” on the use of the union credit card under HSU rules made it difficult to prove the union had been deceived.

And while “the union co-operated with us to the extent they could”, many financial records from the time were missing.

The officer said that for most of the period when Mr Thomson was HSU national secretary, he had been based in Melbourne, where the financial management was carried out.

The matter had, therefore, been referred to Victorian police.

“It comes down to an accounting procedure, which is Victorian,” the police officer said.

Attention will also focus on the continuing twin Fair Work Australia investigations into whether industrial laws governing union financial reporting had been breached by the Victoria No 1 branch, or the national union.

The Australian understands the FWA investigation into the national branch is examining how union financial records, including a computer terminal with the union’s electronic book-keeping program, could have gone missing.

Additional reporting: Lauren Wilson

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/police-confirm-craig-thomsons-signature-on-credit-card/story-fn59niix-1226132654746

 

Former sex slave to sue

Natalie Craig
The Sydney Morning Herald
September 4, 2011
Victim ... Jetsadophorn Chaladone, of Thailand, who was forced into prostitution in Surry Hills when she was aged just 13.
Victim … Jetsadophorn Chaladone, of Thailand, who was forced into prostitution in Surry Hills when she was aged 13. Photo: Simon O’Dwyer
_

A FORMER child sex slave from Thailand is preparing to sue a Sydney man who she says prostituted her at a Surry Hills brothel in 1995, when she was 13.

Jetsadophorn Chaladone, known as Ning, was trafficked to work at a Surry Hills brothel, where she was forced to have sex with more than 100 men. After 10 days, she was picked up in an immigration raid and deported. No one in Australia has been convicted or prosecuted for the crimes against her.

But now, with the help of a former Australian Federal Police detective, Chris Payne, and a filmmaker, Luigi Acquisto, she plans to sue the brothel operator.

Ning, now 29, has briefed a barrister, Fiona McLeod, SC, to prepare a civil action against the Sydney man.

In 2007 The Age, published by Fairfax Media, reported how Ms McLeod, Mr Payne, Mr Acquisto and his wife, Stella Zammataro, helped Ning become the first person in Australia to be compensated as a victim of sex slavery, winning the maximum $50,000.

Speaking to The Sun-Herald from Thailand through an interpreter, Ning says that while the compensation has improved her family’s living conditions, she believes that the man who enslaved her ”should know what it’s like to be a prisoner or to be punished”.

Mr Payne and Mr Acquisto identify and name the man they believe to be the brothel operator in their film Trafficked – The Reckoning, which will screen on SBS on September 20. Their film is the product of an eight-month investigation to find the man. It follows a 2005 film, Trafficked, which documents Ning’s ordeal in Sydney and her difficult life since repatriation.

The investigation began in June last year in Thailand, where Mr Payne, now a Canberra public servant, took a statement from Ning in a form that would be admissible in court. ”It’s remarkable that that wasn’t done 15 years ago by police,” he said.

In her statement, Ning described the brothel operator at the time as a short man of Chinese appearance who dressed in shorts and T-shirts. She could not remember his name.

But in a statement she made to Thai police, when she was 13, she referred to the brothel operator by his first name. It has been corroborated by the landlord of the property, who also provided a last name.

Mr Payne and Mr Acquisto then conducted weeks of ”DIY surveillance”, photographing people coming in and out of the brothel. They sent photographs of a man they believed to be its operator to the former landlord of the property. The landlord said that the photographs were of the brothel operator who he dealt with in 1995. The landlord said the man in question had managed the staff and paid the rent, sometimes in cash.

Sources of Mr Payne’s also confirmed that the same man continued to operate the brothel until January, when it was forced to shut after the landlord did not renew its lease.

Mr Payne has confronted the man on film with the allegation. The man said he was only the brothel operator since 1999, and that ”I don’t know that girl”. The Sun-Herald has not been able to contact the man.

Mr Payne has sent a brief of evidence to the NSW police, and Ms McLeod has been instructed to prepare a civil action.

Ms McLeod said Ning could sue the brothel operator for statutory rape, abuse and false imprisonment. A claim would require Ning to establish the man was responsible for the assaults on her.

Regardless of the success of the action, Mr Payne said he hoped a degree of reckoning would be achieved. ”He’s never going to be free of this … I hope he feels a little uneasy about it.”

 
“I can hardly speak what vitriol … need to catch my breath and consider what to say, such incitement to hatred..”

_
The above statement was made by a sex worker in response to an article which appeared in The Sunday Telegraph (article can be found below). The tone and language used in the article was over the top and biased which sex workers find insulting and fear it carries the very real potential for inciting hatred and violence.

Sex workers would also appreciate if journalists could make the effort to get their facts straight. It is not illegal for a sex worker to solict on the streets in NSW unless it is done “near or within view from a dwelling, school, church or hospital…” (see – Summary Offences Act 1988 No 25: 19   Soliciting clients by prostitutes). NAUWU feels The Sunday Telegraph should print an apology to the Daily Telegraph readers for failing to research yet another article properly and again printing misinformation about the legality of this activity.

Members of NAUWU and other sex workers are now involved in a campaign to try and get an apology printed by The Sunday Telegraph including writing letters, leaving comments under the article and responding on the author’s Twitter. So far we have had no response and only 1 comment pointing out the correct legal facts and asking for fair an unbiased reporting has been approved and published.

Below you will find the article, responses sent to NAUWU by sex workers who had tried to leave a comment on the article which were not approved and the contact details of the “journalist” who wrote the article. NAUWU would like to encourage you to either contact the author, leave a comment under this post or send us an email with your comment to: nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com

 

Underbelly: Razor’s myth hides the ugly truth

  • Claire Harvey
  • From: The Sunday Telegraph
  • August 28, 2011 12:00AM
 
Underbelly Razor

The gorgeous actors in Underbelly Razor make prostitution look a lot of fun. Picture: Channel Nine. Source: The Sunday Telegraph

SEEN the gorgeous hookers in Underbelly: Razor?

Silk-satin dressing gowns, rosebud lips popping with bright red colour, pin curls, those elegant little kitten-heeled bedroom slippers I’ve always wanted a pair of those. They make prostitution look pretty nice.

What a great big fib that is and how galling that the horrible lie of glamorous sex work persists into 2011.

This week, as scandal hung like a 1930s soot cloud over federal Labor MP Craig Thomson and Prime Minister Julia Gillard, I’ve been baffled by the way the debate’s been framed.

If you listen to the political commentary on this affair, Thomson’s greatest alleged wrongdoing which he denies is supposed to be the misuse of union funds.

I think there’s another, much more serious and damaging element of the allegations that Mr Thomson’s credit card was used by someone other than him to pay for the services of prostitutes and escorts.

 I think using prostitutes the most exploitative and damaging commercial transactions anyone can undertake. Sex workers are the most vulnerable people in the Australian economy. There is nothing glamorous about their work or their lives.

Craig Thomson deserves the presumption of innocence. He has denied the claims against him, which boil down to this: while he was working for the Health Services Union, he allegedly used his union credit cards to pay for prostitution and other services.

Thomson has previously claimed someone else, whom he refuses to name, used the cards and forged his signature. He has not revealed how that person got access to his drivers licence, which was listed on some of the card receipts.

On the request of the union, and after much urging from the federal opposition, police are now investigating whether there is any case to be made from the alleged fraudulent misuse of union funds.

The Health Services Union represents the working underclass of Australia   hospital cleaners, aged-care staff, disability support workers.

Somebody – and Craig Thomson won’t tell us who – used their money to pay for prostitutes. That, I believe, is the real scandal here.

Let me be clear: I am not suggesting prostitution laws should be changed.

In NSW it is no longer a criminal offence to conduct paid sex work in brothels or private homes, although it is still illegal to solicit on the street.

I think that’s the right balance -  it’s inevitable that sex work will go on regardless of anyone’s attempts to ban it. You know the old cliché, prostitution is the oldest profession.

Prohibition generally does little except create a new and wealthier class of criminal, as author Larry Writer so eloquently demonstrated in his book Razor, upon which the present Underbelly series is based.

One of the star characters is Ellen “Nellie” Cameron, a beautiful and fiery prostitute who, according to common myth of the 1920s and`30s, loved sex so much she abandoned her privileged Sydney life to become a hooker. I heard an acquaintance repeat this myth just the other day as we sat chatting a bar He thought Nellie sounded pretty cool.

The cold truth, as Writer documented, was that Cameron lived a sad and violent life, full of drugs, cruelty and intimidation that characterised wild Razorhurst.

She was repeatedly beaten, shot and stabbed by clients, loversqland enemies.  At least five of her lovers and husbands were murdered in gang hits. Cameron herself committed suicide at the age of 43.

Today the organisations that represent sex workers, including the Scarlet Alliance, say NSW’s legal framework helps encourage safe sex and fair employment conditions, helping reduce the risk of abuse by clients or police intimidation.

Despite that, sex workers are still at a much higher risk of sexual assault than the rest of the community, with perpetrators including clients, employers and people in their everyday lives who believe that because they sell sex for a living they have no right to say no.

Study after study, including the research of Dr Antonia Quadara of the Australian Centre for the Study of Sexual Assault, reveals up to 60 per cent of prostitutes have been raped  and many feel police do not take their complaints or fears seriously.

I am not suggesting that the person who used Mr Thomson’s credit card raped, assaulted or abused anyone.

I have every sympathy for the sex workers themselves, and I’m grateful we live in an age when they are no longer at risk of criminal charges for their work.

But legality does not make prostitution any less dangerous or exploitative. It does not make it right or fair. It certainly doesn’t make it glamorous.

No man would want his daughter to become a sex worker  but it’s rare to hear anyone saying it’s morally reprehensible, or hypocritical, to pay someone else’s daughter for emotionless sex.

So I’m saying it. I think visiting prostitutes is wrong. I hate the idea union members’ funds were used to pay for such services.

And I hope Underbelly goes on to tell the true story of Nellie Cameron and her fellow prostitutes: they were raped and abused and mistreated, the pawns in a violent criminal game that goes on today.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/opinion/underbelly-razors-myth-hides-the-ugly-truth/story-e6frezz0-1226123524269

 

Sex worker responses
Other sex worker have sent their response to NAUWU after they read the article and tried to post a response on The Sunday Telegraph’s comments section. Their comments were not published, however we are proud to be able to give all sex workers a voice here: 

Comments on this article apart from ****’s are disgusting. Took me 10 minutes and a shower to calm down enough to write a rational response.

After reading the Razor editorial in the “TERROR” today , I am perplexed as to why the journalist employed at the Telegraph are in such denial of the fact that their employer is also living of the earnings of PROSTITUTION .
The daily Telegraph Adult Services section is a very lucrative business , and after doing the math , I’m sure the revenue earned by this section would  keep the many journalist employed at news.com.
Perhaps  the  Labor  MP Craig Thompson found the Tiffany advert in Telegraphs Adult Services section  ???,such HYPOCRISY  ” People in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones” .
_
“You say you have sympathy for sex workers, yet you write with a tone that perpetuates hate.You’re sorry we have to deal with you?”

 _

_

If you would like to contact the author of this article, her contact details follow:
Claire Harvey
9288 3329 or 0424 359 879
@chmharvey (Twitter)

Australian Christian Lobby
Just on a final note, we thought we’d mention that Claire Harvey’s article also featured on the website for the Australian Christian Lobby…..
http://australianchristianlobby.org.au/2011/08/pick-of-the-news-%E2%80%93-monday-august-29-2011/

 

 

 

 

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  .

Contributions on  http://www.nothing-about-us-without-us.com  have been made by NSW Sex Workers and other concerned parties of NSW Sex Industry; site design and maintenance by nothingaboutuswithoutus@gmail.com ; Copyright Nothing About Us Without Us  2009 – 2020

 

 

 

 Father-to-be ‘in brothel rampage’

  • Jeremy Pierce
  • From: The Courier-Mail
  • August 25, 2011
 

A MAN who allegedly went on a violent drunken rampage at a Gold Coast brothel while his 38-week pregnant partner waited at home has been denied bail.

Stephen Leslie Wilson, 32, faced Southport Magistrate’s Court this morning charged with attempted armed robbery and two counts of willful damage over the incident at Luv Asian brothel in the early hours of Monday morning.

After being denied bail, he will miss the birth of his own son.

Police allege Mr Wilson and another unidentified man attended the brothel and were shown to a waiting room before becoming ‘aggressive and abusive’.

Mr Wilson allegedly punched the male manager in the face and threw an Eftpos machine at his head before trying to smash down a CCTV camera.

He also alleged showed off a knife and said he would leave if given money.

Brothel staff forced him outside before he smashed a window and threw a chunk of concrete through the manager’s car window.

He surrendered to police after footage of the incident was shown on television news programs.

In seeking bail, defence lawyer Mark Williams said Mr Wilson had moved to the Gold Coast from NSW for a fresh start.

He said Mr Wilson, a powder coater by trade, was working hard to support his two step-children and his heavily pregnant partner.

Magistrate Brian Kilmartin said Mr Wilson had a strange way of supporting his family.

“That is a curious way to show support for a 38-week pregnant partner,” he said.

“His presence there (at the brothel) doesn’t exactly give the court a lot of confidence.”

Mr Wilson was refused bail and will reappear at Southport Magistrate’s Court on September 30.

http://www.couriermail.com.au/ipad/man-accused-of-drunken-brothel-rampage-while-pregnant-partner-waited-at-home-will-miss-birth-of-his-son/story-fn6ck51p-1226122020476

© 2011 nothing-about-us-without-us.com Campaigning to address the emerging issues related to the NSW sex industry Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha