|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
APW Prostitution and Human Rights
Asia Pacific Women's Meeting Declares: Recognize the Work, Dignity and Human Rights of Women in Prostitution
The Asia Pacific Women's Consultation on Prostitution held in Bangkok concluded last week with the forging of a commitment to support the recognition of prostitution as work and the promotion and protection of the human rights and dignity of women in prostitution.
"Much of women's work in the domestic and reproductive spheres
has been invisible and devalued", the statement read. "As such,
there is an urgent need to recognize the reproductive labor of women
as work in various sites", including women's work in prostitution.
"The acceptance and recognition of prostitution as work is to
recognize and validate the reality of women who are working in
prostitution", the statement read. To this end, the statement also advocated for the "decriminalization
of prostitutes as workers and of prostitution as a site of work".
The statement rejected the view that sex work is per se
exploitation. "Sex work is not the problem' abuse, violence and
criminality are the social problems", the statement read. Fifty participants from 20 coutnries in Asia and the Pacific also
criticised governments for "failing to recognize the rights of all
women to work under safe and humane conditions", including those in
the sex industry. "We hold governments accountable for ignoring the
abuses and exploitative conditions under which women must work in
the sex industry", the statement read. The statement also pointed out that "stigmatisation of women
working in prostitution has kept their legitimate concerns,
including situations of abuse, in the shadows, away from the
attention of mainstream human rights organizations, feminist groups,
and society and general. The participants further said that society's stigmatisation of
women in prostitution as immoral and evil women pits "good" women
against "bad", deterring all women from recognising their common
vulnerability and the manner in which they are actually or
potentially labeled as "whores". Participants therefore committed to
work to erase the "stigmatisation of women engaged in prostitution
and to have their full dignity, integrity and rights recognised as
workers and citizens or civil society. Nelia Sancho, women's rights activist and coordinator of the
Asian Women's Human Rights Council-Manila who participated in the
meeting, said the stigma largely attached to women in prostitution
only mirrors the low status and opinion society confers on all women
in general. Sex workers receive some of the most extreme forms of
degradation, abuse and violence that all women are vulnerable to,
said Sancho, by virtue of social, political and economic structures
that generally devalue, or render invisible women's work,
individuality and contributions. Sancho said prostitution must be situated within the realities of the intensification of powerlessness, especially among women and girls, and the widening poverty and marginalization of people and communities brought about by the growth of a global market economy. As big business corporations manipulate the world's economies for bigger and bigger profits for themselves, the lives and human rights of more and more people living in the fringes of society as well as poor communities are sacrificed. In this situation, more and more women are incorporated into work in the sex industry, largely in situations of abuse, violence and criminality aggravated by the non-recognition of the work and dignity of women in prostitution.
|
|
|
|
|
Copyright © SOS Schipperskwartier 2006