This is one of those posts I said I was going to write a little while ago.

When is slavery not slavery? When it’s ‘debt-bond­age’, apparently.

Wei Tang was a madam, with five Thai sex work­ers in her “employ”. Or at least that’s what she argues. She ‘bought them’ for $20,000. Their visas were obtained fraud­u­lently. She con­fis­cated their pass­ports and told them they each had $40,000-$45,000 in debts to “pay off” before they could keep their own money. They paid off their debt by sleep­ing with 900 men, in 10–12-hour shifts, six nights a week. And yet she says she believes she had an employer-employee rela­tion­ship, not a slave-owner rela­tion­ship, with them.

She was con­victed but that case has been in the High Court of Aus­tralia recently on appeal. (Court doc­u­ments, Word doc­u­ment)

All the women had pre­vi­ously worked as sex work­ers in Thai­l­and. But that’s pretty dif­fer­ent from being effect­ively imprisoned. Even being told you have a debt but you can work it off at your own pace is better than what these women were forced into. Some of the com­ments from the judge have wor­ried me along the way. 

Justice Michael Kirby said if slavery was not care­fully defined, “then lots of harsh employ­ment con­tracts are going to slip over into slavery and are going to be pro­sec­uted with a poten­tial of 25 years impris­on­ment on conviction … 

There are an awful lot of people work­ing in back rooms of res­taur­ants and in the rag trade (whose employ­ers) would be sus­cept­ible to … pro­sec­u­tions for slavery.”

I find it hard to believe the case was over­turned on appeal once and that the Crown has had to take this to the High Court. And she’s cross-appealed for an acquit­tal. To me, this sort of revolt­ing traf­fick­ing should be illegal and simple to pro­sec­ute. That it’s not sad­dens me. Since it all star­ted, the Fed­eral gov­ern­ment has added “traf­fick­ing” and keep­ing someone under “debt bond­age” as new and sep­ar­ate offences under the law to avoid the weasel word­ing the has been going on in this case.

What’s stupid is the debate about whether Tang know­ingly inten­ded to keep slaves. Who cares? Either it was slavery or it wasn’t! I thought ignor­ance was no excuse? If slavery is defined so nar­rowly that we can all pat ourselves on the back that we have erad­ic­ated this cruel prac­tice, because “look, aren’t we good? We don’t sell people on open mar­kets in chains any more and know­ingly buy other people’ then we have missed the spirit of the ori­ginal inter­na­tional treat­ies. To which, I might add, Aus­tralia is a sig­nat­ory. There’s a really good opin­ion piece on this by Anne Galla­gher called “A Ques­tion of Bond­age”.

We have already had this stupid dis­cus­sion about how we define tor­ture in this brave new cen­tury to weasel out of our human rights oblig­a­tions in one “theatre” of oper­a­tions. Let’s not do it with some­thing as vital as non-con­sen­sual sexual ser­vitude. [Note: I inten­ded to write this around May 16 when I first read about it. I’ve searched for more inform­a­tion, like an out­come, but as far as I can see, the judges have reserved their decision, whatever that means. If anyone has more inform­a­tion, please let me know.]

Ave­line, I wish you were here to fight this one, babe. I really, really do. Miss you.