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On September 6, 1997, the Taipei City Council and Taipei City Mayor
Chen Shui-bian together decreed the 128 legal prostitutes of Taipei illegal.
Overnight, these 128 prostitutes became the target of police arrest, daily
surveillance and harassment; whereas before September 6, they had been
the only prostitutes able to take recourse to the police and demand legal
protection in case of client harassment and abuse.The Taipei City Government
had been planning to phase out legal prostitution by not giving out new
licenses and within the next two decades, legal prostitution would have
died out in Taipei city. Yet, in order to show its determination in the
recent governmental anti-obscenity campaign (sao huang), the mayor has
willfully decided to implement the inhumane measure of declaring illegal
the work of 128 women, most of whom are semi-literate single mothers in
their mid-forties, many of whom are supporting extended families. The city
government has promised temporary subsidies for these prostitutes, but
the latter say they do not want charity funds from the government. We can
work for a living, let us do that, they say. Furthermore, governmental
subsidy funds come with strings and stringent conditions which not all
the women can meet. It also demands that these women stay away from hotels,
bars and all such places for the duration of a year of subsidy funding
to avoid all suspicions of continued sex work: these 128 women have in
effect been placed on parole awaiting the allocation of subsidy funding.
Since September 6, these women have formed a group to demand a reasonable
two-year grace period before the new law making their jobs illegal takes
effect. Several local labor groups and women's groups have rallied to their
support, pointing to how this mode of declaring prostitutes illegal is
similar to the recent spate of sudden closing of factories in Taiwan without
providing for woman workers' security. We urge you to sign your name in
support of these 128 prostitutes who are still in the process of protesting
their sudden illegal work status and the resulting police harassment and
surveillance. We urge you to support their demand for a two-year grace
period, which will be discussed at the opening of the next city council
meeting in October. Your signature will certainly add to the pressure.
Please forward this message on to all concerned. |