KERALA
Emphatic CampaignThe fight for
'justice' by a sex workers' union sparkle a debate.
By M
G Radhaakrishan
For the group of
sex workers on its usual rounds near the Thampanoor Railway Station in Thiruvananthapuram,
the night of February 25 appeared no different at first: an altercation with the local
autorickshaw drivers opposed to their hanging around in the stand invariably ending in
some of the women being bashed up. And the police arriving soon after to lock them up --
with their children in some cases -- in one of the station rooms.
Normally, their freedom would have depended on the concerned
police officer. But this time, no sooner had they been rounded up than fellow workers led
by a few social activists, who just two days earlier had formed the Sex Workers' Forum of
Kerala (SWFK) -- the first of its kind in the state -- gathered before the station
demanding that the women be let off. When the police gave in a few hours later, the sex
workers' union saw it as an early triumph in its fight against police atrocities. But when
the SWFK hit the headlines the next morning, it sparked off an unprecedented debate on
what many construed as an attempt to get sex work legalised in the state.
Surprisingly, among the most vociferous in their protest
against the SWFK were women's organisations. Says Meenakshi Thampan, MLA who heads the
pro-CPI Mahila Sanghom: "We fully support the SWFK's demands to be freed from all
kinds of harassment. But attempts to form a union would only give a formal approval for
the work these poor women are forced to do." Women's groups affiliated to the CPI(M)
and the Congress too condemned the move as an effort "to gradually seek
legalisation" of sex work. Similar efforts in Maharashtra resulted in the
introduction of the Maharashtra Protection of Commercial Sex Workers' Act in 1994.
On its part, the SWFK maintains that its demands are modest.
At a meeting held in the state capital earlier, it accused the state police of treating
sex workers like criminals and said all it was fighting for was the
"decriminalisation of the profession". "It's the police who make our life
hell," explains Selma Joseph, one of the sex workers. "They want sex free of
cost but lock us up even when we are out buying medicines for our children." Another
woman went as far as to mention the names of a few local police officers who routinely
harass the sex workers.
Taking a leaf out of the sensational manifesto of the
Calcutta Sex Workers' Union released two years ago, the sex workers of Kerala too
emphasised not on rehabilitation programmes but the freedom to practise their profession
"with respect". Branded as prostitutes, these women have been struggling to
escape social stigma. One of the sex workers, Girija, explains how they are not even
allowed to visit their children being rehabilitated by the state Women's Commission.
"Rehabilitation programmes," argues Maithreyan, one of the social activists
behind SWFK, "are based on the belief that all the sex workers need are food and
shelter. Unless social rehabilitation is a reality, the existing programmes will not
help."
Many, however, say such social acceptance would result in a
dangerous trend, lending glamour to the sad plight of the sex worker. According to state
Women's Commission Chairperson and poetess B. Sugathakumari, "It would eventually
lead to the demand for licensing brothels." Prominent women's activist and former
Naxalite leader K. Ajitha agrees. She says it would import a Thailand-like situation into
Kerala, "which is already in the grip of sex rackets and sex tourism".
Maithreyan calls much of the opposition unwarranted. "We
are not for legalising the profession nor licencing brothels. All we are saying is that if
a woman wants to be in the business by choice, she should be allowed to and it should be
unshackled from issues of morality."
The SWFK is now planning to meet Chief Minister E.K. Nayanar
and submit a charter of demands by the sex workers which seeks among other things free
education, free medicines, ration cards, bank loans and a decent place to sleep in at
night. The sex workers know it will not be easy to get the Government around in the face
of stiff opposition. But for the first time in all these years, they are upbeat. |