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She describes how her experience of a brothel raid in Mexico radically altered her views on trafficking for sexual exploitation. A few years ago I worked as a psychotherapist in a governmental institution in Mexico that treated survivors of sexual violence.
For several months I managed to avoid the call to participate in the raids. Psychologists that did go along told me they were taken to a hotel. Eventually I could avoid the calls no longer. I saw how the rights of the women found in the hotel were trampled on. I witnessed the physical maltreatment of sex workers found in the vicinity. This single experience made me resign my job. The raid made me rethink several issues.
Was setting out to rescue victims of trafficking for sexual exploitation the correct strategy for dealing with the problem?
Was the problem really as serious as people made out, or was it being sensationalised? Above all I started to think about real victims of the raids: women engaged in prostitution for whom mistreatment at the hands of the police was by no means a novelty. I was also struck by how the therapeutic treatment for these women mostly consisted of convincing them that they were victims. If they disputed this, it was because their vulnerability had rendered them incapable of realising their true situation.
I noticed they were unwilling or even angry at the idea of receiving therapy. Later I moved to Argentina, where I now live, to study this phenomenon through an anthropological lens. What started as a social debate is now a legal argument between those who favour legalisation and regulation of sex work and those who aim to abolish or prohibit the trade. There are associated arguments over whether the clients or those that profit from sex work should be criminalised. Some take the position that anti-trafficking laws are the only way to protect people from sexual slavery.