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Monday, October 26, 2009

From Niki Adams, English Collective of Prostitute in response to Denis MacShane MP

From Niki Adams, English Collective of Prostitute in response to Denis MacShane MP

The “war” with Denis MacShane on Newsnight was not about statistics but about the policies the statistics were invented to justify. New Labour legislation would increase police powers against both sex workers and clients. Now that the figures have been discredited, MacShane calls them ‘futile’.

Paxman was not “hostile”; he was Paxman. But MacShane was confronted with experience and arguments he could not answer.

He now admits that, “I don’t know how many girls [women, please, MacShane] are trafficked into Britain.” Why didn’t he say that in the Commons? He mentions Amnesty International as a possible source for the statistics that 25,000 women have been trafficked into the British sex industry. Where is Amnesty’s research saying that?

Rahila Gupta did not “demolish” the Nick Davies Guardian report. There is no parallel between figures of trafficking and “other subterranean issues such as domestic violence or rape”. Statistics on rape are based on serious (both independent and Home Office) research over years; all had similar results. The problem Nick Davies documents is that trafficking research (like the Iraq dossier on weapons of mass destruction) was “sexed up” to produce the “right” results, i.e. invented. With rape, police aren’t recording thousands of crimes; with trafficking Davies found 122 were made up.

And if rape research was based on proving that all sex with men is rape, as seems to be the position on prostitution of feminists like MacShane, would its findings be credible? We have always said that in rape as in prostitution consent is the issue. But feminists are now on a crusade alongside Christian fundamentalists who even oppose sex outside of marriage. Once again women are a source of evil, and women who support our families by prostitution are vilified.

We have never heard of the “Esso outfit” which claims that “only 2% of women choose freely to work in the sex industry”. We’d be glad to know where their statistic comes from and what they mean by “freely”. Are we “free” when we lack money to feed children and pay rent?

We have always campaigned for safety and economic support so no-one is driven into prostitution by poverty or other violence. We started in 1975, taking our lead from prostitutes who went on strike all over France after the police responded to a series of murders by arresting the women. In 1980 we picketed the Old Bailey to highlight the discriminatory conduct of police and prosecution in the Yorkshire Ripper case (the then attorney general famously said that “Most of the victims were prostitutes but sadly some were not”). In 1981 we conducted an academically structured and monitored survey which uncovered how criminalisation made sex workers vulnerable to attack. In 1982 we took sanctuary in a King’s Cross church for 12 days after the police responded to a rape by arresting the woman’s Black boyfriend and targeting Black sex workers. In 1995 with Women Against Rape and Legal Action for Women, we helped two sex workers to bring the first successful private prosecution for rape – one woman was supporting her children, the other her disabled husband. In 2003 we pressed the government to give victims of trafficking the right to stay so they could report violence. No takers. In 2008, in the aftermath of the Ipswich murders, we initiated the Safety First Coalition which brought together the Royal College of Nursing, anti-rape and anti-poverty advocates, probation officers, prison and drug rehabilitation projects, church people and Ipswich residents, and others.

We work with organisations which oppose immigration and welfare laws that impoverish women to the point of destitution. They agree with us that anti-trafficking laws are being used as immigration control.

When I mentioned on Newsnight that “safety has been our priority from the start”, MacShane replied “And that’s why so many get killed.” Typical of “gutter tactics”, as Gary McKinnon's mother called them. But this time he didn’t get away with it.

He now complains about Newsnight’s “self-appointed experts indulging in a futile war of statistics in which the victims are voiceless”. Why did he agree to go on? He’s certainly no “expert”. We can introduce him to many voiceless victims, including of trafficking: the women and men drafted into agricultural and domestic work under conditions of slavery. Why reduce trafficking to sex work?

We organised for MPs and peers to meet with mothers working to support disabled children who are institutionalised in prostitution by a criminal record; immigrant women who send money home to their families; rape victims dismissed by the authorities; nurses and church people who work directly with prostitute women (and men). We invited the government to hear from New Zealand’s five-year successful experience with decriminalisation, and how it has increased, not trafficking or prostitution, but women’s health and safety. Neither MacShane nor anyone in government was interested. It didn’t fit their repressive criminalising agenda.

What seems to upset MacShane is that we are an independent women’s organisation, not a Home Office front. Unlike the Poppy Project we’re not funded by the government to the tune of £9.5m. And unlike those professional feminists who reduce prostitutes to victims so they can tell us what’s good for us, the Wages for Housework Campaign (WFH) makes a way for all grassroots women and believes that we have a lot in common whatever work we do.

Selma James, widow of CLR James, was our first spokeswoman – she was happy to listen, learn and represent those of us who could not be public. As an anti-racist working class housewife, she felt strongly that women were not to be punished for the ways we find to support our families. She agreed with Virginia Woolf that brain prostitutes were more dangerous than body prostitutes.

It will be news to the Internationalist Marxist Group that they gave birth to WFH and the ECP. Another false claim. Is it not conceivable that we are just a women’s organisation? Do we need to have men behind us to be successful?

MacShane’s track record doesn’t bear scrutiny. He strongly supported the Iraq war and was against an inquiry into the war. (Has he shown any concern that prostitution in Iraq has skyrocketed since his invasion?) As a Foreign Office minister he welcomed the military coup against Venezuela’s democratically elected president Hugo Chavez. (The coup was reversed and the British government had to backtrack.) He is a known apologist for Israel, equating criticism of its war against Palestinians to anti-Semitism. (So much for concern for victims of violence.) And of course he over-claimed on expenses…

Finally, on the Policing and Crime Bill. Why are MacShane and the government only mentioning the clauses in the Bill that criminalise clients? What about those that target street workers for arrest and ‘rehabilitation’ under threat of prison, and encourage raids on premises so our hard won earnings can be seized and kept?

And what about the Welfare Reform Bill being pushed through Parliament at the same time? It abolishes Income Support, the only benefit single mothers and other carers have been able to rely on. We know from experience that most prostitute women are mothers, especially single mothers. How many will be driven into prostitution with benefit cuts? How about telling the whole story, MacShane, of driving women onto the streets with one bill, and arresting them with another?

Hopefully the House of Lords will be more scrupulous with the facts.

2 comments:

James Higham said...

So, having read that, what's the main point they're trying to make?

Unknown said...

I think the main point is that women who try to escape poverty and feed their children should not criminalised. The New Zealand decriminalisation of prostitutes and prostitution is a great precedent.

What MacShane was pushing on Newsnight was the repressive agenda the government is trying to implement with the new law on prostitution.

What Niki Adams said made me think of something which happened to me.

On a sunny and warm Saturday afternoon last year in Harlesden, London, with hundreds of people milling about, I was approached by an Asian woman in her 40s who asked me if I wanted to do business. I looked at her like I had not understood and she added “Sex?”. I said no thank you and she asked me whether I could give her a pound. I gave her a pound and wished her good luck.

I have no idea whether she had children to feed, a drug habit or what. But who am I to judge? Who is anyone to judge? Should I have called the police because she was soliciting against the prostitution laws? Or should I run the risk of being arrested because I could have been at least a potential client? How poor that woman must have been to be so quick to cross the line between offering sex for money and begging?