Globalized
Female Slavery
by Onnie Wilson
April
2000
Said It: feminist news, culture, politics
http://www.saidit.org
What
a world we live in, a male-framed world, where
global economics sets in concrete a system
of winners and losers--with poverty, disadvantage,
and minimal choices for many as the consequence.
The climate is ripe for men's sexual exploitation
of women without bounds, abuse of the worst
kind. Women are set up to lose in this system,
and like buzzards circling around an ailing
member of the herd, businessmen prey upon the
globe's most disadvantaged women, entrapping
them within their web of despicable sex slavery
enterprises, trading women far and wide as
sex chattels.
In this globalized economy, impoverished countries have been increasingly
forced to accommodate multinational large-scale farming and short-lived
manufacturing enterprises. This has resulted in social dislocation, escalated
unemployment, and increasing poverty, impacting hardest on women. Lower
statused, less educated, with limited work options, women are the most
vulnerable to the systems of exploitation. They earn only a portion of
the males meager wage, are last hired and first fired and when,
as is not uncommon, mens warring is added as a demon overlay, the
cumulative effect of widowhood is devastating. Partnerless, poor women,
often with dependent children, are socially abandoned. Men, quick to
see an advantage, wave a carrot of economic "opportunity" in
front of women's noses: male money for women's flesh, traded around the
globe.
Today, this trade in womens bodies is a global business grossing
over six billion dollars annually for the traffickers, and growing fast.
The UN estimates that about four million women are being trafficked as
sex slaves. Some 50,000 women are brought into the US every year, predominantly
from the Ukraine, Albania, the Philippines, Thailand, Mexico and Nigeria.
Women from China, Malaysia, Indonesia, South Korea, Colombia and Vietnam
are used in Australian brothels, legal and illegal. Traffickers sell
the women into the prostitution network for $4000 - 5000 for short-term
contracted work. The women are then forced to pay off the fee for their "owners" by
free "servicing" of up to 500 men, in 12-plus hour shifts,
seven days a week, before earning a low fee for sexual services.
This male sexual violation of women is receiving the highest sanction.
The United Nations, in a 1998 report by its official labor agency, the
International Labor Organization (ILO), blatantly legitimated sexual
exploitation as an appropriate, key component of gross national product,
calling upon governments of poorer countries to take economic advantage
of "The Sex Sector": regulated, expanded, and taxed. The cost
for women was conspicuously missing from the economic equation: no mention
of the rapes, beatings, imprisonments, sexual abuse, servitude, illness,
and the permanent destruction of millions of women's souls.
One wonders how such an insidious "meat trade," a unique feature
of "first world" male ingenuity, could be tolerated in "developed," "civilized" societies.
If one looks below the surface, just a tissue thickness deep, it is not
difficult to see the neat male sleight of hand that keeps women in their
sexually violated place. While the dirty little male business of sex
trafficking is sliming the globe, the practice of males prostituting
women (and children, and less frequently, other men) is presented as
clean: a legitimate career choice for "sex workers." But it
is obvious who benefits here, who maintains the upper hand in the power
system, and in whose favor the unsavory practice of legitimized sexual
abuse is weighted. Men set the parameters. Men establish the power relations.
Men demand and obtain exploitative sexual "services" from women:
men only have to negotiate the price.
The lack of outrage against sex slavery and the global system of prostitution
is deafening. Laws are inadequate, few traffickers are investigated,
and a pitiful number of convictions ensue. A mild slap on the wrist is
often the harshest penalty, sending very encouraging messages to those
men poised to enter the lucrative market. Traffickers are linked to sophisticated,
professionally organized criminal networks worldwide, involving immigration
and government officials where kickbacks are many: sexual favors, money
or, at the very least, a simple strengthening of the system of male sexual
exploitation of women. As lawmakers and law enforcers themselves are
predominantly male, sexual exploitation practices go unrecognized as
human rights violations. The problem is dismissed as harmless male business.
In a recent Australian case, Gary Glasner was charged with prostituting
and falsely imprisoning 40 Thai women. Despite extensive evidence of
sexual slavery, the charge of false imprisonment was dropped "on
a technicality." All but two of the women were deported. The two
who were left to give evidence had little knowledge of Australian legal
procedure. Isolated, threatened, easily intimidated, they were no match
for hard punching, legal professionals.
Meanwhile, for "Mr. Big" of the operation, the reported link
to international traders boasting government and immigration connections,
it is business as usual. The public yawned over newspaper reports of
excessive male behavior and the deportation of anonymous, Asian prostitutes.
The issue of prostitution per se also remains unchallenged: the Immigration
Department filed another folder, stamped "closed." Melbourne
hardly missed a beat.
But what of these women? For the millions of women, predominantly poor,
often sold off by a male family member to work off a family debt, or
chosen to be the family expatriate breadwinner, the experience of sex
slavery is physically and psychologically debilitating. Women often lured
from their home country with promises of legitimate work are sold like
cattle, imprisoned, sexually violated and returned home shamed and poor,
many suffering from AIDS or other sexually transmitted diseases. Many
go back home to die.
In foreign lands, ignorant of the law, often having little grasp of the
local language, women are hardly positioned to demand their human rights.
They are easily held captive under lock and key, in overcrowded rooms,
denied access to passports, and forced to perform unprotected, debasing
and life threatening sexual acts. When the time is right for their "owners," when
short-term work visas expire or the women are judged to be past their
use by date, the appropriate authorities are informed and the women are
deported, often at taxpayers' expense. Lives are permanently shattered.
Let outrage roar! When will men take a good look at themselves in the
mirror and act on what they see? Men have to name men as the perpetrators
of this system of sexual abuse and it is men who have to stop this practice.
The silence and collusion must end now.
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