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PROSTITUTION & PORNOGRAPHY

Associazione Aura attends CAP International 4th World Congress for the Abolition of Prostitution

Associazione Aura attends 4th World Congress for the Abolition of Prostitution

From 31 May to 3 June 2024, Associazione Aura attended Equality In Action: 4th World Congress for the Abolition of Prostitution in Montreal, Canada co-organised by CAP International, CLES – Coordination des Luttes contre l’Exploitation Sexuelle, Vancouver Rape Relief and Women’s Shelter, EVA Center and Breaking Free

After Paris (France, 2014), New Delhi (India, 2017) and Mainz (France, 2019), Montreal hosted the world’s largest abolitionist event and brought together survivors of prostitution, researchers on the field of women’s human rights, frontline workers, activists, parliamentarians from all over the world as well as Canada State officials. 

The World Congress kicked off with the World Survivors’ March, attended by hundreds of people and specifically survivor of the system of prostitution and their allies.

The days following the March were spend inside the beautiful Marché Bon Secours, the host to the Congress and its diverse panels.

Categories
WOMEN'S RIGHTS @ EUROPEAN UNION

ENoMW Expert Statement – “Forced Marriage: a European crime EU states must take seriously”

ENoMW Expert Statement - "Forced Marriage: a European crime EU states must take seriously"

On the week of 22 April 2024, the European Parliament adopted two crucial instruments for migrant women: the revised Directive on Trafficking in Human Beings and a new Directive on Violence against Women and Domestic Violence.

As acknowledged by the European Network of Migrant Women (ENoMW), of which we are members, both instruments present serious gaps in what concerns the numerous forms of violence against women and girls. Yet, both instruments take a step forward in addressing forced marriage, a form of violence faced disproportionately by migrant women and girls, and which has historically been overlooked by the European Union.

It is with great satisfaction that we see a definition of the crime of forced marriage and with it the acknowledgement that it entails a serious violation of fundamental rights, something that ENoMW says “has not been fully acknowledged within institutional, judiciary and medical bodies“.

We encourage you to read ENoMW’s Expert Statement and get a firm grasp on what this means for the migrant women and girls in the European Union! 

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DIRITTI DELLE DONNE @ UNIONE EUROPEA ITALIA

Annuncio: Corsi di Informatica sostenuti dal Comune di Bassano del Grappa

ANNUNCIO: Corsi di Informatica sostenuti dal Comune di Bassano del Grappa

Abbiamo un annuncio speciale: il Comune di Bassano del Grappa sostiene il nostro gruppo di donne migranti con corsi di informatica! Grazie ai fondi europei, il Comune offre corsi di informatica in cui tutti i cittadini possono imparare a configurare e utilizzare le piattaforme di posta elettronica, creare il proprio CV e migliorare e/o sviluppare le competenze informatiche.

Questi corsi sono particolarmente importanti per le donne, che sono sottorappresentate a tutti i livelli nel settore digitale in Europa. Inoltre, a causa della discriminazione del mercato del lavoro, le donne migranti sono per lo più intrappolate nel lavoro domestico e di cura e sono pochissimi i luoghi che offrono opportunità di formazione digitale alle donne migranti e rifugiate.

Per questo motivo siamo lieti di annunciare i dettagli dei corsi di informatica:

🗓️ GIORNO: OGNI GIOVEDI
🕛 ORARIO: 10-12h00
📍INDIRIZZO: Via Angarano Bassano del Grappa 77
💌 PARTECIPARE: Scrivete a associazioneaura.comunicazione@gmail.com se volete partecipare alle lezioni di informatica o contattateci via Instagram o Twitter.

Categories
PROSTITUTION & PORNOGRAPHY

The Belgian Presidency to the Council of the EU 2024 meets  with European Justice Ministers to debate the regulation of “sex work” and deliberately ignores survivors of prostitution

The Belgian Presidency to the Council of the EU 2024 meets with European Justice Ministers to debate the regulation of “sex work” and deliberately ignores survivors of prostitution​

The Belgian Presidency at the EU 2024 Council me with EU Justice Ministers on 26 January 2024 to discuss the regulation of “sex work” and deliberately ignores prostitution survivors.

It is disconcerting to see the Belgian Presidency of the EU 2024 Council inviting EU Justice Ministers to talk about “sex work” without even consulting the groups most affected by prostitution and sexual exploitation – women and girls who are survivors of prostitution and who recount the horrors they have experienced in the system. Consulting the pro-prostitution lobby does not mean engaging meaningfully with those who have been inside the system and are now speaking out against it, as Belgium did before adopting its new law by which it regulated prostitution.

We regret that the Belgian Presidency deliberately ignores the testimonies of prostitution survivors and insists on calling their sexual exploitation “work”, and we remind the Presidency of the September resolution voted by the European Parliament, which clearly states that sex must be based on consent and cannot be replaced by the exchange of money.

Categories
WOMEN'S RIGHTS @ EUROPEAN UNION

Migrant women’s rights organisations in Italy call for the protection of trafficking victims

Migrant women’s rights organisations in Italy call for the protection of trafficking victims

As a group of migrant-women led organisations and organisations working towards the full achievement of migrant women’s rights in Italy and Europe, we consider the Anti-Trafficking Directive as one of the key instruments in protecting women and girls against trafficking, a very specific type of male violence against migrant and refugee women in the European Union. Migrant and refugee women and girls face a very high and disproportionate risk of becoming victims of human trafficking, particularly trafficking for the purposes of prostitution and other forms of sexual exploitation. Migrant and refugee women are also vulnerable to being trafficked for the purposes of forced marriage, labour exploitation in marriage, reproductive exploitation in surrogacy and egg harvesting, trafficking for exploitation in domestic work and other forms of trafficking. Prostitution, trafficking for prostitution and other forms of sexual exploitation are intrinsically linked in all contexts and all constitute a violation of women and girls’ rights. Statistically, trafficking in human beings for purposes of sexual exploitation remains, by far, the most prevalent form of trafficking in the European Union, with 51% of victims being trafficked for sexual exploitation. Out of 51% of these victims, 87% are women and girls

Prostitution and sex trafficking, being two of the most egregious women and girls’ rights violations, cannot be analysed separately. They must be analysed together as consequential: sex trafficking exists because the purchase of sexual acts, including prostitution exists and is still allowed in many European jurisdictions

Alongside the crucial need to provide women-specific psycho-social, legal and economic support and assistance to migrant and refugee women victims of sex trafficking, targeting the demand and hence the means (trafficking) that foster prostitution and sex trafficking remains the only solution to adequately support and protect victims from a systemic point of view. From a women’s human rights perspective we support the European Parliament’s step in criminalising all “users” of sex trafficking victims, since prostitution is one of the root causes of women and girls being trafficked.

Thus, it is with deep regret that we read that ASGI and EcST, the Association for Legal Studies on Migration and the Expert Group against Exploitation and Trafficking respectively, two leading entities in terms of migration in Italy, condemn and oppose the provision concerning the criminalisation of the buyers of prostitution and other sexual acts. Migrant and refugee women and girls are the primary target of human trafficking for the purpose of sexual exploitation. The criminalisation of buyers of sexual acts ensures that trafficked women and girls are dully protected, since it analyses the problem at the source: the demand for prostitution and sexual exploitation. Advocating for victims’ protection while protecting the perpetrators of the exploitation and rights violation of women and girls is contradictory and counterproductive. They cannot go hand in hand. Our coalition is very sorry to see ASGI and EcST align with pro-prostitution organisations such as the European Sex Workers’ Rights Alliance (ESWA). The incongruity of protecting pimps and buyers of women and girls in the sex trade, while purporting to protect the women and girls being exploited by them, is self-evident and should have been fully analysed.