Phoebe's Story: Why We Need International Sex Workers Rights Day

March 3, 2011 | by

When you awoke this morning, you may not have realized that March 3 is International Sex Workers Rights Day. If you live in a country where sex work is criminalized, you might be surprised to hear that sex workers have rights. You might even think that they should not have rights, though if that’s the case, I suspect you’ve never spoken with a sex worker.

The fact is, everyone has rights, but around the world sex workers face a wide range of human rights abuses, often as a result of the laws, policies, and practices of the very governments tasked with their protection. Even in countries where sex work itself isn’t illegal, sex workers suffer from inappropriate and sometimes illegal policing tactics, including physical and sexual violence, extortion, and false arrest. Sex workers are often afraid to report crimes committed against them for fear they will not be taken seriously or their reports will lead to further violations.

Despite the obstacles, sex workers around the world are organizing to claim their rights. Take Kisumu, Kenya, for example, where a woman named Phoebe lives and works. One evening around midnight she met a client at a local bar, agreed on a price of 400 Kenyan shillings (about 5 dollars), and went back to his place. Once they got inside he became violent, forced her to have sex without a condom, and then demanded his money back. When she refused to give him a refund, he held a knife to her chest, took her money, and threatened to kill her if she reported him. There’s no question that what Phoebe experienced was horrible, but what makes it all the more shocking is that the man was a police officer.

In a survey conducted by Kenya’s Federation of Women Lawyers in Kisumu in 2007, sex workers reported that they suffered more abuse at the hands of police than from any other source—including clients.  Many sex workers believed that because their work was illegal there was nothing they could do to address abuses.  It was a climate in which a sex worker who went to the police to report being raped risked being told that “prostitutes can’t be raped” and then arrested on other grounds.

Once in custody, sex workers experienced further abuse, including being made to crawl on their hands and knees on rough surfaces, being forced to clean police stations and mop the floors of their cells with water mixed with urine, and being locked in police officers’ houses for more than four days at a time, where they were forced to provide sexual services and perform domestic chores until other sex workers could be arrested as replacements.

The situation in Kisumu changed when sex workers joined forces with the organization Keeping Alive Societies Hope (KASH) to combat police abuse. KASH gained the support of the provincial police chief and conducted workshops for sex workers about their rights and for law enforcement about their responsibilities. KASH selected 10 police officers and 10 sex workers to train as peer educators, and tasked them with working together to develop a data collection system to document ongoing abuses and positive interactions between sex workers and police. The police then organized meetings for fellow officers while the sex workers conducted workshops for peer groups they’d formed, giving the project a viral effect in its reach. The 20 peer educators met every other month to discuss the data they had collected and strategize on how to address patterns of abuse.

Phoebe shared her awful story at a meeting organized by one of the sex worker peer educators and, to her surprise, several others described similar experiences with the same officer. The situation was discussed at the next meeting between sex workers and police and the offending officer was removed from his post. What’s so striking is that two years ago Kisumu’s sex workers felt they had no recourse when crimes like these were committed against them. Now, there is a mechanism for them to go straight to the top, and for action to be taken to defend their rights.

Even in contexts in which sex work is illegal, Phoebe and all sex workers have rights which must be protected.  Research has demonstrated that the criminalization of sex work is associated with violence against sex workers, decreased access to health care, barriers to reporting human rights abuses, and disempowerment in condom negotiation. Governments should recognize and address the relationship between laws criminalizing sex work and the human rights violations that result from these laws.

International Sex Workers Rights Day isn’t just about securing the rights of sex workers; it’s about securing human rights.

NCAA upholds decision to penalize Florida State; College football.(Sports)

The Seattle Times (Seattle, WA) January 6, 2010 Byline: The Associated Press TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- The NCAA has upheld its decision to vacate up to 14 victories from former coach Bobby Bowden as part of Florida State's penalty in an academic-cheating scandal.

Bowden, 80, retired with 389 victories after Florida State's 33-21 Gator Bowl victory over West Virginia on Friday. Penn State's Joe Paterno tops the major-college list with 394 career victories.

Florida State officials said they were surprised and disappointed by the NCAA decision.

"We believed that our administration did everything it possibly could to ferret out any and all improprieties in this matter," athletic director Randy Spetman said.

The NCAA could take victories away in as many as 10 Florida State athletic programs, including possibly stripping the Seminoles of one of three consecutive NCAA track-and-field championships won from 2006 to 2008.

The NCAA Infractions Appeals Committee said Tuesday the cooperative efforts of the university in the academic-cheating scandal involving 61 Florida State athletes failed to outweigh the aggravating factors in the case. site florida state college

"The case also included impermissible benefits, unethical conduct by three former academic support services staff members and a failure to monitor by the university," the NCAA statement said.

Twenty-five football players were among the athletes who cheated on an online test in a music-history course in 2006 and 2007 or received improper help from staffers who provided them with answers to the exam and/or typed papers for them. web site florida state college

Notes * Former Auburn coach Tommy Tuberville, 55, is checking out the coaching vacancy at Texas Tech. Chris Cook, Tech athletic department spokesman, said Tuberville was expected to meet with university and athletic-department administrators. Tuberville stepped down at Auburn in 2008 after going 85-40.

Athletic director Gerald Myers said he could decide on a new coach by the end of the week. He also said interim coach Ruffin McNeill will be strongly considered for the permanent job.

McNeill took over after Texas Tech suspended and later fired Mike Leach amid allegations of mistreating receiver Adam James after the player suffered a concussion. McNeill coached the Raiders to a 41-31 victory over Michigan State in the Alamo Bowl on Saturday.

Leach has denied he mistreated James, son of ESPN analyst and former NFL player Craig James.

* Players who announced they are leaving school early to enter the NFL draft include Penn State linebacker Navorro Bowman, Oklahoma cornerback Dominique Franks, Ohio State defensive end Thaddeus Gibson and Georgia safety Reshad Jones.

* Players at Texas and Alabama will compete in Thursday's BCS National Championship Game in Pasadena, Calif., for the chance to be called national champs and for a crystal trophy to be placed outside their locker room. Their coaches have more at stake.

Texas coach Mack Brown will make $450,000 if the Longhorns win. If Alabama wins, coach Nick Saban would get $200,000 on top of the $200,000 he has already earned by getting to the BCS title game.

Brown recently had his salary permanently increased to $5.1 million a year. Saban signed an extension that makes his deal worth $4.7 million annually.

Saban said critics of high salaries often forget to mention how coaches lived while working their way up the ladder, making $8,000 a year, eating grilled-cheese sandwiches with tomato soup for dinner and when "getting meatballs with your spaghetti was a big deal."

4 Comments to “Phoebe's Story: Why We Need International Sex Workers Rights Day”

  1. There is a false dialogue perpetuated on issues of "transactional romance."All too often attacks on sex workers are rationalized as an effort to curb human trafficking. Dehumanizing treatment of sex workers should no longer be tolerated by any civil society. Human trafficking is more complex problem, involving very powerful slave masters, organized crime etc. So all too often law enforcement at the behest of political leaders cracks down on low hanging fruit to make it look like they are dealing with the more serious problem. If we truly love, respect and value our women, end the moral judgments, leave sex workers alone and focus on the real criminals.

  2. On March 3rd, 2011 at 1:30 pm, Bruce Elniski said:

    I agree that sex workers should have equal rights to all other citizens. It should be no more acceptable to harm a sex worker than to harm a judge or a cop. Equality means that we are all entitled to equally fair and good treatment from society. By protecting and campaigning for the rights of sex workers we are really campaigning for the rights of all.

  3. On March 3rd, 2011 at 1:37 pm, Chitra said:

    Every poeple have humanrights but as like poor country nepal respect of humanright of sex worker is not respected .cops rape them and took them custudy while they working so this type of program should be in practise to save them and educate them about health be safe them as like hiv

  4. They should be respected,educated,directed,represented and eve preached to in order to leave those acts and engage in small business to sustain them.The act is very dangerous because many of the have families after their marriages broken,so they end up in the grave leaving behind their families which end up also in prostitution

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Rachel Thomas

Rachel Thomas is a Program Officer with the Sexual Health and Rights Project of the Open Society Public Health Program.

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