Christian legal rights groups responded to the United Nations’ International Women’s Day, and issued a horrifying report highlighting the “shattered lives” that have been tormented by millions of women exploited by prostitution.
The European Centre for Law and Justice (ECLJ) announced the “European Liberalization Lobby” in the same week that the United Nations marked global women’s events on Saturday (March 8) and sought equal rights on the theme of “All Women and Girls: Rights, Equality, Empowerment.”
This follows an interview filmed by ECLJ with the UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, as previously reported by Christian Daily International.
“If we normalize men’s ability to buy women’s bodies and children, we cannot pretend to achieve a society where there is equality between men and women,” Arsalem said in an interview.
In a new report, ECLJ says 6.7 million victims are prostitution all over the world. It states that 1.7 million children are “shattered by exploitation, violence and trauma.” France, Sweden and Ireland have been praised by legal rights groups for banning the purchase of prostitution laws and helping victims escape.
In an article accompanying the report, “Prostitution: New Rights for Women?” ECLJ researcher Priscille Kulczyk said the sex industry is “increasingly becoming a huge industry,” supported by a flood of pornography on the internet and a powerful progressive lobby to liberalize prostitution across Europe.
“On International Women’s Day, the European Centre for Law and Justice (ECLJ) is publishing a new report denounces the actions of lobbys for the liberalisation of prostitution in Europe,” writes Kurtzik.
“If a powerful ‘progressive’ lobby is believed, then legalizing prostitution is a new horizon for human rights, a new right for women to conquer. ”
Kulczyk argued that the presumed presumed to make the human body a prostitute by the lobby of liberalization is comparable to other social issues in Christian ethics, such as abortion, transsexualism, surrogacy, and euthanasia.
She expressed her opinion that the Occupational Committee relies on several non-governmental organizations to advance its objectives. Both the Council of Europe and the United Nations itself, Kurkuzik recalls his battle with prostitute victims as opponents of exploitation, such as the eCLJ, and overcomes the pressures from the pro lobby.
“In the guise of the fight against the right to control one’s body, women’s empowerment, or discrimination against women, this lobby promotes violations of women’s rights. It’s delusional to call the “sex work” activity of prostitution or contrast it with voluntary prostitution to allow the latter to be accepted. It is always about purchasing a person’s body. ”
Kurkuzik also thought it was “wrong” to say that prostitutes agree to a physical violation, as the background framework for the sale and purchase of sexual acts is “mainly exploited by traffickers and almost systematically enforced by violence, manipulation, poverty, or drugs.”
“Behind the clearly laudable purpose of defending the rights of people in prostitution and liberalizing this practice would be to legalize exploitation, which they are victims, and to regulate the violence of prostitution,” she concluded.
“The ‘true feminism’ in the service of women’s and girls’ rights lies in the fight against the commodification of female bodies. ”