Author Archive

Open Letter

We write as a collective of sex worker rights organizations who organize in coalition as human rights advocates in our own standing, as member organizations of the US Human Rights Network (USHRN) and as members of the Sex Worker Rights Working Group.

Members of our Coalition have worked in partnership with the USHRN since 2010 during the first United Nations Universal Periodic Review of the United States. We have joined with the network on actions and the network has joined us. 

Sex worker rights organizations defend criminalized communities of many kinds. Part of our work includes providing our communities with valuable information about issues of concern. We do this work when others hesitate because we have to. Our safety and integrity depends on speaking up.

In this spirit we report the following news: Eric Tars attended an organizing meeting of USHRN members on October 31, 2021. During this meeting Eric Tars said that he would call law enforcement on human rights advocates and organizers. Eric Tars stated that he spoke on behalf of the board of directors of the USHRN in regards to the need to call law enforcement.

The USHRN is a people centered movement that is led by people of color. Our sex worker rights working group is co-chaired by a Black trans woman and an immigrant woman, and includes highly active Black led and BIPOC groups. 

Under no circumstances can we tolerate the presence of Eric Tars or like-minded members in any space of our organizing, including at the USHRN, because he will use the strategy of calling law enforcement on people of color when he deems it to be necessary. This is an anathema to sex worker rights leaders and in violation of everything that the US Human Rights Network stands for. 

Eric Tars term on the US Human Rights Network Board of directors expired more than one year ago. Yet he has been allowed to stay because we have remained silent. Our silence ends today. We do not recognize Eric Tars as a board member and we demand that he be removed from organizing spaces for the safety of all members of the USHRN impacted by policing. We demand that any other person who has associated themselves with the USHRN Board of Directors and who has called for the use of law enforcement on human rights advocates also be removed, if they have not already been removed. We do not recognize them as board members.

We offer the gift of peace and healing to any member of the USHRN who has been affected by talk of calling law enforcement. We are with you as the healing begins. But in order to heal, we must be safe. 

The BSWC 

BPPP

Desiree Alliance

The Outlaw Project

NJRUA

Generation Equality, hear sex workers’ voices

Due to whorephobia and transphobia, parts of the United Nations system and some women’s organizations attempt to deny our advocacy in participatory spaces dedicated to the rights of women. US sex workers are documenting our participation in the 2021 Generation Equality Forums held Mexico and Paris.

In 1995 representatives of the fourth world women’s conference in Beijing created the Beijing Declaration stating that “women’s rights are human rights.” Sex workers globally have the least resources to attend UN meetings and to advocate within the admittedly hard won spaces for women’s rights globally. Barriers are deliberately thrown in our way. Yet, representatives of communities of sex workers were there in Beijing in 1995, demanding to be heard and challenging attempts to denounce sex work due to machinations by people with anti-sex worker and anti-trans agendas (1).  Since that time sex workers have fiercely defended our rights at many UN meetings following the Declaration. This includes advocacy in spaces that have been sites of anti-sex worker policy attempts, such as those organized by UN Women as well as around the Women’s Convention (the Convention to End Discrimination Against Women or CEDAW), preventing the codification of harmful language about sex work in the world of human rights.

The Generation Equality Forums were held virtually due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and the groups listed below in our coalition attended. The Forum kicked off in Mexico City from 29 to 31 March and ended in Paris from 30 June to 2 July 2021. According to the Forum’s own publicity it was a “global gathering for gender equality, convened by UN Women and co-chaired by France and Mexico, to chart the way forward and to accelerate the implementation pace of the gender equality commitments made in Beijing in 1995.” The Forum said it would enable “feminist agenda setting and the launch of Action Coalitions that have concrete measurable targets and funding for gender equality for the upcoming five years.” 

Access was limited. Many of our groups applied to attend the Mexico City Forum but never received registration permission. However, Desiree Alliance, a national sex worker rights organization, attended the forum sessions in both Mexico City and Paris. Desiree Alliance noted that Mexico City was problematic in that no mention of marginalized populations such as sex workers was upheld the message of Gender Equality’s “mission of inclusion.” 

We experienced the same deliberate silence in France. Translations were nonexistent for some sessions, there was no access to respond in community forums and discussions, and navigation around the conference sites was difficult. We understand that complications arise with virtual formats. However, the organizers of the Gender Equality Forum clearly have the financial power to create a global event. Accessibility was a problematic limitation for those who were trying to be fully engaged with the conference. Sex workers who committed to be a part of this forum became invisible with no means to interact due to these malfunctions.  

To counter, we made ourselves very visible on social media using the official hashtag #generationequality and #generationequalityforum 

We would like to thank the Urgent Action Fund for supporting our UN work and for providing valuable information about participation in the Generation Equality Forum. We would like to also thank Desiree Alliance for these policy statements on the Convention to End Discrimination Against Women(CEDAW), statements that were released 2019 and in response by coalition in 2020.

Attending

BPPP

Desiree Alliance

The BSWC

NJRUA

The Outlaw Project

FOOTNOTES:

(1) for example, the advocacy of  Sue Metzenrath and others. Scarlet Alliance https://scarletalliance.org.au/who/history/ recalls that the organization had to advocate at the highest levels for the right of sex workers to enter China at all.

Webinar: It’s More than Money, Oct 8, 2021

As sex worker rights ascend, many groups are interested in supporting this work. Find out the best practices in providing funding.


About this event

Friday October 8, 2021: 2 pm US Eastern / 11 am US Pacific / 8 pm Central European Time

BPPP is inviting granters, program managers for grants, board members of foundations, mutual aid and community based sex worker funds/ programs and our community to hear presentations and discuss what sex workers really need in our current times. As sex worker rights ascend, many groups are interested in supporting this work or are already doing so. Find out the best practices in providing funding and support. We will turn preconceptions about sex workers and funding around so that audience members can go out with a fresh mind set to do even better work.

REGISTER HERE: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/its-more-than-money-tickets-171202139207

Sex Workers Unite on International Whores Day: Global Solidarity with Ugandan Activists

Join us on June 2, 2021 at 12.30 pm in NYC in front of the Ugandan Embassy (336 E 45th St, New York, NY 10017) and show solidarity with Ugandan sex worker led groups that are working to protect the rights of sex workers by asking everyone to reject the Ugandan Sexual Offences Bill of 2021. This new legislation harshly affects sex workers, criminalizing brothels, engaging in prostitution and engaging in a sexual act with a sex worker. The legislation also criminalizes  ‘carnal knowledge against the order of nature” fueling anti-LGBTQ discrimination and heteronormative policing of sexuality. Download a statement from Ugandan Sex Workers and download a statement from the BSWC.

We cannot stay silent with the rights of sex workers and allied communities are under attack. Bring signs and banners in support of sex workers and LGBTQ communities for this short and sweet action that will show our colleagues in Uganda that we are in support of them.

Why do we protest on June 2? Protest is the very basis of June 2 actions as the date goes back to the 1970s when sex workers occupied a church in Lyon, France. It is known globally as “International Whores Day.”

Date of action: June 2, 2021

Time: 12.30 pm to 1.30 pm

Location: 336 E 45th St, New York, NY 10017

Accoutrement: Make a sign! Bring your voice and music. Wear purple to be in solidarity with workers worldwide and bring red umbrellas.