Archives for March 2012

TFHT: We have just begun to drain the swamps…

The Task Force on Human Trafficking (TFHT) is pleased to announce that Israel’s government has taken the first step towards passing legislation prohibiting the purchase of sexual services. This progressive legislation, already implemented with great success in Sweden, Iceland, and Norway attacks the demand side of the sex services ‘industry’, and thus acts as a powerful deterrent. Every measure which attacks prostitution immediately attacks sex trafficking, a major goal of this effort.

The struggle to pass this legislation has been a long one, for which TFHT laid the foundations and lobbied for every step of the way. The process began when Knesset Member Zahava Gal-On first proposed the bill and MK Orit Zuaretz took on the bill’s sponsorship. This January, the legislation came before the Ministerial Committee, where it was reviewed for a month.

During that month, TFHT and its many dedicated volunteers initiated Project 119 to lobby the Committee to support MK Zuaretz’s proposed bill. With the help of volunteer organizers such as Peggy Sakow in New York and Leonie Fleischmann in London, demonstrations in London, Jerusalem, New York, and Washington, D.C. were organized.

The Task Force also conducted a letter writing campaign, sending hundreds of letters to the Committee members; collected thousands of petition signatures; contacted international community leaders, such as Mark Lagon, the former U.S. Ambassador to Combat Trafficking in Persons at the U.S. Department of State, who agreed to appeal directly to the Committee; and paired Israeli volunteers with specific members of the Committee to intensively lobby for the legislation. In large part a result of this campaigning, on February 12  the Ministerial Committee voted unanimously to support Zuaretz’s proposed legislation, and on February 15 the legislation passed its pre-reading in the Knesset.

The legislation will now go before a committee for review and to ascertain the funding it requires. After the Committee has finished its review, the legislation will be returned to the Knesset for its first, second, and third readings. Due to coalition obligations, Knesset members are expected to vote in favor of the legislation at these readings, though TFHT is taking nothing for granted.

Thus, it is important to note the legislation has still not been passed into law. It is possible that some MKs or ministers will stall indefinitely to delay the process, allowing Israelis to continue to purchase sex at the expense of the suffering of thousands of women and children.

It has been an extraordinary effort to get the bill to this point; we have not yet reached the end. Let’s not lose momentum. To find out how you can help make this legislation a reality, please visit our website and “Like” our Facebook page.  Help us secure passage of this progressive legislation that will put Israel at the forefront of the fight against sex trafficking and forced prostitution.

Kayla Zecher
Projects Coordinator for ATZUM’s Task Force on Human Trafficking

A Message From Levi Lauer: A Step Forward

The February 12 unanimous vote of the Knesset Ministerial Committee, and the Knesset’s first reading vote on February 15 approving legislation criminalizing the purchase of sexual services, are a victory for all who seek to free Israel from the evils of sex trafficking and the degradation of women and children. The message is clear: human bodies are no longer for sale in an enlightened society; trafficking in sexual services and prostitution are no longer legitimate enterprises on our streets; clients who rape sex slaves and make women and children the victims of their perverse power are criminals.

I celebrate this decision with MK Orit Zuaretz who advanced the legislation; with MK Zahava Galon who laid foundations for this effort in the Knesset; with Minister of Education Gidon Saar who through many political thickets supported these efforts; with many organizations and volunteers who brought this measure to wider attention; and above all with the staff members of ATZUM, Kabiri-Nevo-Keidar, and the Task Force on Human Trafficking who coordinated the information, legal and lobbying campaigns that brought us to this day. As MK Zuaretz noted in her Knesset address, ATZUM led this legislative and enforcement struggle.

We are also grateful to you, the supporters of ATZUM and our partners in this success. 

But make no mistake, there is still much to be done, and we require your continued support to ensure that the Knesset and enforcement and judicial agencies use their authority to arrest, prosecute and punish the pimps, traffickers and clients who have too long turned our neighborhoods into comfortable environments for the brothels and slave pens that are our shame and disgrace. A new day is dawning, and I thank all of ATZUM’s friends for letting that light in and working to expand the spectrum of its impact on Israeli society.

With gratitude,
Levi Lauer
Founding Executive Director