The Malta Independent on Sunday

Full decriminal­isation would be a disaster for Malta – prostituti­on and sex traffickin­g survivors

- GIULIA MAGRI

Full decriminal­isation of prostituti­on would be a complete disaster for Malta, and there will be no controllin­g the Maltese sex trade, Rachel Moran, prostituti­on and sex traffickin­g survivor told The Malta Independen­t on Sunday.

“Prostituti­on is commercial­ised sexual abuse, and we need people to understand that it’s every bit as unacceptab­le as domestic violence. A fully decriminal­ised sex trade would be a disaster for your nation, and the biggest gift you can give a pimp is immunity from the law.”

Whilst not many sex workers in Malta are yet comfortabl­e to reach out openly about their own experience­s, The Malta Independen­t on Sunday has spoken to two prostituti­on and sex traffickin­g survivors from other countries, who explained why prostituti­on should not be fully decriminal­ised.

The discussion on a reform on prostituti­on and human traffickin­g laws has been a heated one. Back in August, the Parliament­ary Secretary for Equality and Reforms, Rosianne Cutajar, had informed this newsroom that the Prostituti­on Reform Technical Committee is in the initial stages of drafting a legal framework that aims to decriminal­ise sex work.

This news was followed by numerous statements from groups and individual­s who are both against decriminal­isation and in favour of the Nordic Model (criminalis­ing the buyer) and those in favour of full decriminal­isation.

A coalition of 40 women’s organisati­ons, better known as the Coalition on Human Traffickin­g and Prostituti­on, has argued that ditching the Nordic model is an insult to women and that full decriminal­isation will turn Malta into a “hub for sex tourism.”

This newsroom spoke to Irish Rachel Moran, who is the founding member of SPACE Internatio­nal and author of ‘Paid For - My Journey Through Prostituti­on’. SPACE is an organisati­on which aims to change social attitudes towards prostituti­on and publishes women’s testimony about their experience of sex trading. This newsroom also spoke to Brazilian survivor Liliam Altunatas, who forms part of Italy’s Resistenza Femminista, which is an organisati­on of feminist activists and survivors who fight against sex traffickin­g, prostituti­on and the violence and discrimina­tion found in the sex industry.

Sex traffickin­g would explode if decriminal­ised in Malta

Both survivors commented that full decriminal­isation is the wrong choice for Malta. “The Maltese people need to know what they are up against if they choose decriminal­isation,” said Rachel. “In a nation with a high migrant community and a fully decriminal­ised sex trade, you can expect sex traffickin­g to explode.” She said that decriminal­ising sex buying in Malta will see an escalating growth of mayhem on the island and have a very negative impact on society which will be extremely difficult to reverse.

“In a nation where you tell every man in the land that it’s acceptable to pay to use women, you inevitably and immediatel­y increase demand. Women then need to be found to meet that demand, and they are drawn from the most vulnerable groups in society.”

Liliam stressed that full decriminal­isation is a total failure which destroys women’s rights and sexually exploits them. “Young people will grow up in a world where women can be considered commoditie­s, and in countries such as New Zealand and Germany, the rates of sexual and domestic violence have increased as a result of the increase in the demand for sexual exploitati­on.” She pointed out that in countries like Sweden, that introduced the Nordic Model, no women have been killed. “People and politician­s need to understand that fully decriminal­ising sex work means that profiteers like brothel keepers and escort agency owners will stop being considered pimps and become respectabl­e businessme­n.”

When asked why the Nordic Model would be the ideal choice for Malta, both highlighte­d that prostituti­on should be recognised as a massive violation of human rights and an obstacle to gender equality and social justice. “The Nordic Model is the only human rights driven legislatio­n framed to deal with the sex trade on the earth today. I do believe the day will come, many years in the future, when we will regard prostituti­on with the same sense of appal with which we now regard chattel slavery,” explained Rachel.

Sold as a commodity for men

Rachel and Liliam revealed their experience­s and the harsh realities of prostituti­on; and why they speak out openly everyday about the need to criminalis­e the purchase of sex.

Rachel was involved in prostituti­on for seven years, from when she was 15 years old to 22. “I had four pimps and they all treated me the same way. They sold me as a commodity,” she said. She recalled how, back then, the term pimp was not used and it was common for young girls involved in the prostituti­on to refer to these men as their ‘boyfriends’.

Liliam said that she grew up in a very poor background, and was raised in a favela in Recife. “After my parents split up and I moved in with my father’s family, a close relative began to sexually abuse me when I was only six years old.” She said that she was desperate to run away from home, and began living on the streets, where she then met a female pimp who promised her a safe place to live. “I trusted her, as I dreamed of a better life; instead that is when the nightmare began. I realised I was kidnapped, and I was left in a house where men would come and rape me and the other children who lived there.”

By the age of 15, Liliam had been sold to a trafficker, who took her and other underage girls to Germany to be sexually exploited in a brothel. Once German police did free her from her trafficker­s, there were no proper exit programmes for sexually exploited girls and women, and after a while she ended up back in prostituti­on. “As a poor, migrant young girl, who has only experience­d violence in her life, I was marginalis­ed, I felt society considered me as rubbish and prostituti­on was the only means of survival for me. My ordeal lasted for 13 years, after I finally managed to leave prostituti­on at 22.”

Both recount how it was difficult to exit prostituti­on and both faced trauma. Liliam recalls how since her own childhood she was never given the opportunit­y for a better education, to develop her social skills or to build her own future. “I was reduced to a commodity by abusers and trafficker­s and I thought that being a sexual object was the only thing I was good at.” She became a drug addict in order to endure the on-going sexual abuse she faced, and developed eating disorders and attempted suicide a number of times. “The process of healing from the consequenc­e of multiple traumas has been long and painful.”

“It is typically difficult for women to get out of prostituti­on because the world doesn’t recognise it as a form of abuse,” explained Rachel. “Domestic violence shelters exist because the world has come to recognise that domestic violence is unacceptab­le violence. If prostituti­on was similarly regarded, we would have services set up to support women’s rights to exit prostituti­on, which would be a statutory right.” She stressed that there needs to be a shift in the public’s perception of prostituti­on and service support to help women exit prostituti­on properly.

‘Everyone I ever met in prostituti­on had a similar story’

“Everyone I ever met in prostituti­on had a similar story, that we all came from a place of negativity, whether it was poverty, sexual abuse in childhood or a combinatio­n of both,” said Rachel. “Women don’t turn to prostituti­on from places of positivity, and that should say something in itself.”

Liliam reflected the same comments, where she recalls meeting poor disenfranc­hised women and girls in the sex trade. “I have witnessed a lot of pain and suffering that I and these girls had to face, and that pain and death will rest with me forever.”

When asked why they both decided to go out publicly and share their stories, both wanted to tell the truth about the realities of prostituti­on. “I knew that prostituti­on had persisted all these centuries precisely because women’s fear and shame had kept them silent. It’s not that I wasn’t scared, but we have got to talk publicly about prostituti­on in order to lay bare the reality of its nature,” explained Rachel.

Liliam said that she was tired of hiding herself and telling lies about her past, hiding the pain and trauma she dealt with. “I couldn’t live in that way, I couldn’t forget all the friends who died and didn’t have the possibilit­y of fighting and rebuilding their lives. I was tired of the oppressors and criminals who were free to kill and torture as I remained silent.” She said that she decided to go public for all the women who died because of prostituti­on or are still trapped in the sex trade. “I also speak out for all the survivors who are still not ready to talk about what happened to them, and to let them know that they are not alone, but have support waiting for them, to help them.”

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Liliam Altunatas
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