Sex workers keep rallying year after year because human rights battles are never definitely won; they have to be fought over and over.
Sixty advocates and supporters once again rallied in Victoria on this International Day to End Violence against Sex Workers, fighting a perpetual battle for their rights against a moralistic government and an uncaring society.
This year’s event was organised by a group or sex workers calling itself Sacred, part of Peers Victoria, a sex work advocacy and outreach charity. It was endorsed by Victoria-Beacon Hill MLA Grace Lore who claims to have attended it, although I did not see her among the attendance and she did not speak at the event.
The crowd first met at Bastion Square, under the gaze of curious onlookers who were unfamiliar with the trade and the hasards sex workers face. Given the stigmatisation of the sex trade, few witness the ordeal and, sadly, even fewer care. The likes of Robert Pickton can then prey on them with relative impunity, to the point that even he got convicted with only six counts of murder (and second-degree murder at that) out of the forty-nine he’s actually killed. And while the difference may look academic to the RCMP in its attempt to discard the case’s evidence, it is anything but to fellows in the sex trade who resent actual lives, especially that of indigenous women, being undercounted.
The participants then marched through Broad Street to Centennial Square, where an organiser held a quick roundup of the legal battle news since last year. To keep it brief, the Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform (CASWLR) lost its Charter challenge of the Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act with the Ontario Superior Court. This is of course an irrelevant setback, as major Charter challenges always end up being decided by the Supreme Court of Canada. Nevertheless, in the meantime the sex trade remains subjected to oppressive rules criminalising all but the sale of sex proper, in a constructive violation of the workers’ rights.
We tried holding a candlelight vigil, but it was mostly futile, as even the gentlest bruise snuffed out the flames no matter how many times we would light them. Likewise, sex workers’ legal struggles are a neverending cycle of setbacks before the courts and in the political arena. As one speaker put it, human rights battles are never definitely won, we have to fight them over and over.
Once again I've reached my breaking point, and I'm forced to take some time off for my own survival.
I'd been itching to organise a celebration of life for Shea Smith, because I think no one in town was…
You know where would be cooler than by City Hall for the unhoused to set up their next encampment? On…
In the past several months my life has started looking like a TV show scripted by a screenwriter on an…
So far I've been holding back in my fight against the City of Victoria's Alto administration. You're about to see…
No rally is too small to be worth media coverage, especially when the cause is good and underreported. Let's talk…