Saturday, August 30, 2025

Key Issues for Asian Migrant Sex Workers: Our 2023 Agenda - Scarlet Alliance

Key Issues for Asian Migrant Sex Workers: Our 2023 Agenda - Scarlet Alliance

Key Issues for Asian Migrant Sex Workers: Our 2023 Agenda

Jun 27, 2023 | AMSWAGNews

Background

Scarlet Alliance convenes the Asian Migrant Sex Worker Advisory Group (AMSWAG), made up of Asian migrant sex workers and Asian migrant sex worker peer educators. AMSWAG centres the voices of Asian migrant sex workers in the development of Scarlet Alliance policy and advocacy on issues impacting migrant sex workers.  During the Scarlet Alliance annual National Forum November 2022, AMSWAG facilitated a panel presentation and further discussion highlighting the current key issues for Asian migrant workers across unceded Australia.

This discussion focused on the changing demographics and work practices of Asian migrant sex workers, experiences of discrimination and police harassment, the importance of culturally-competent services across a range of areas, and increasing leadership capacity and opportunities for Asian migrant sex worker peer educators to enable culturally and linguistically relevant peer-support and outreach. Asian migrant sex workers also asserted the importance of sex work being decriminalised and affording all sex workers with the same rights and  protections. This is particularly important for Asian migrant sex workers who experience harassment and discrimination at greater rates.

Based on this panel session and consultation with AMSWAG, this briefing paper sets out some of the priority areas for action and informs the work of Scarlet Alliance to fulfil its Objectives under our Strategic Plan.

Key issue: Leadership, representation and capacity building

Between 2009-2018, the Scarlet Alliance Migration Project, staffed entirely by and for migrant sex workers, was funded as part of the Australian Government’s response to trafficking and slavery. The Project built capacity for sex worker peer educators in Australia to provide in-language peer support, education and referals, information on rights and responsibilities in relation to Australian laws in each juristiction, and safety in navigating pathways for migration and sex work in Australia. The Project also established partnerships with international sex worker advocacy and support organisations, facilitated migrant sex worker input into the development of anti-trafficking legislation and policy, and challenged harmful myths and stereotypes about migrant sex workers in public discourse.

The loss of funding for this Project in 2019 has led to reduced opportunities for  Asian migrant sex workers to engage in community building, information sharing and networking, and has impacted the leadership capacity and opportunities for Asian migrant peer educators to engage with national issues.

Both informal and formal evaluations have recognised the Project as being integral to ensuring the health, wellbeing, workplace rights and community participation of Asian migrant sex workers living and working in unceded Australia. While a new funding application for the Project is underway, sustainable ongoing Project financing is integral to protecting the gains made over the previous decade.

Leadership and mentoring

Asian migrant sex workers noted the need for community capacity-building underpinned by principles of self-determination, agency, choice, freedom, and responsibility, to enable Asian migrant sex workers to lead policy development, identify advocacy priorities, and facilitate information sharing on issues that impact on them.

The lack of training and networking opportunities for Asian migrant sex worker peer educators and under-resourcing of dedicated culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) education and outreach roles are barriers to meeting the changing support and information needs of the Asian migrant sex worker community. CALD projects within state and territory sex worker organisations are often underfunded or non-existent, and CALD outreach workers are not able to access culturally-appropriate guidance, support and mentoring when supporting Asian migrant sex workers on issues unique to their community.

As one member of AMSWAG stated, ‘you can’t expect lots of eggs without healthy chickens.’ CALD peer educators, outreach workers, translators and community organisers need adequate time and space for capacity-building, and sex worker peer organisations must be equipped to provide opportunities for networking, training and mentoring, strengthen mechanisms for the exchange of information, facilitate culturally safe migrant sex-worker only spaces, and partner in the development of culturally and linguistically-appropriate resources that meet the information needs of Asian migrant sex workers.

Supporting sustainable leadership and capacity-building enables Asian migrant sex workers to provide leadership on national issues, engage in representation and advocacy, deliver support to migrant sex workers, and ensure access to training and networking opportunities for the wider Asian migrant sex worker community.

Accessible, accurate and relevant resources

AMSWAG has identified ongoing and unmet information needs among Asian migrant sex workers. The development and maintenance of accurate, relevant and culturally and linguistically-appropriate targeted resources are essential to the community, and require involvement from bi/multilingual peer educators at every stage of development, not just as translators of a ‘finished product.’

Recent changes to sex work laws in several jurisdictions mean that legal resources need to be updated. Asian migrant sex workers also need comprehensive information on workplace rights and workplace health and safety, as well as practical information such as referrals to other services, dealing with council workers, police and immigration officials, handling workplace raids and bi/multilingual support contacts, particularly for ‘after-hours’ support and information.

AMSWAG also identified a need for the development resources for service providers (e.g. sexual health centres) to assist with providing culturally-competent care to Asian migrant sex workers.

Key issue: stigma and discrimination

While stigma and discrimination affect all sex workers, Asian migrant sex workers experience intersecting marginalisation from racism and stigma due to  assumptions that conflate sex work (and particularly Asian migrant sex workers) with trafficking, slavery and slavery-like practices.

These stereotypes are currently being perpetuated in the legislative/policy sphere in reviews of the Modern Slavery Act 2018 (Cth) and Crimes Act 1990 (Cth), as well as by recent sensationalist and harmful media coverage by reporters. As well as excluding the voices of Asian migrant sex workers from issues that directly affect them, the prevalence of these myths in the public discourse generates harm for Asian migrant sex workers during interactions with health services, accommodation providers, financial services, police and other members of the community.

Trafficking, slavery and slavery-like practices

Recent reviews of the Modern Slavery Act 2018 (Cth) and the trafficking and slavery provisions in the Crimes Act 1990 (Cth) have highlighted the flaws in basing Australia’s response to trafficking, slavery and slavery-like practices within criminal justice and corporate reporting frameworks.

Evidence demonstrates that most trafficking, slavery and slavery-like offences occur outside of the sex industry, and that these practices are driven by poverty, a lack of access to safe migration pathways and a lack of information and redress mechanisms to enforce the rights of migrant workers across all industries.

Australia’s anti-trafficking response has led to migrant sex workers experiencing workplace raids, fear and distrust towards police and immigration officials, migration detention/deportation and a lack of access to compensation/redress options.

The review of the Modern Slavery Act 2018 (Cth) also highlighted the impacts of stigma and discrimination from large corporate entities (such as financial institutions and chain accommodation providers), who are legally required to implement policies to ‘combat modern slavery within supply chains,’ without understanding the nature and drivers of these practices. Frontline staff in these entities are trained to detect and report ‘suspicious’ behaviour, which may result in Asian migrant sex workers losing access to services such as accommodation and banking, without any clear avenue for appeal.

Rather than being based in harmful stigma, law and policy frameworks combating trafficking, slavery and slavery-like practices must be evidence-based,  have input from Asian migrant sex workers, address the drivers of trafficking, slavery and slavery-like offences and provide safe and accessible migration pathways for all types of workers.

Stigma and discrimination from service providers

AMSWAG highlighted that stigma conflating Asian migrant sex workers with victims of trafficking, slavery and slavery-like offences also impacted interactions with services such as healthcare providers. Asian migrant sex workers need to have confidence that when accessing healthcare and community services, it will be confidential, culturally safe, and free from stigma.

Four Essential Actions

The four essential actions to ensure good health outcomes for Asian migrant sex workers, including low rates of BBVs/ STIs, are:

  1. Implementing legal and policy frameworks providing equitable access for Asian migrant sex workers to justice, health and safety, and community participation including sex work decriminalisation, anti-discrimination and vilification protections, safe migration pathways and an evidenced-based human rights response to trafficking, slavery and slavery-like practices.
  2. Supporting Asian migrant sex workers to develop and distribute culturally and linguistically-appropriate resources, information and support options
  3. Sustainably funding the Scarlet Alliance Migration Project to enable capacity and leadership-building for Asian migrant sex worker peer-educators, and to provide support, mentoring and networking opportunities for Asian migrant sex workers across unceded Australia and internationally, and
  4. Ensuring equitable access for Asian migrant sex workers to culturally-competent services and healthcare.

Investigation finds links between white nationalist views and March for Australia organisers - ABC News

Investigation finds links between white nationalist views and March for Australia organisers - ABC News

Investigation finds links between white nationalist views and March for Australia organisers

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Who is behind the March for Australia protests?

In short:

The website of March for Australia, an upcoming anti-immigration rally, previously contained a reference to the white nationalist concept of "remigration" as a reason for marching.

Some organisers of rallies around the country have posted white nationalist ideas and, in one case, pro-Nazi and pro-Hitler memes.

What's next?

The rallies will take place this weekend in cities around the country.

The organisers of an anti-immigration march scheduled for Sunday have been linked to white nationalist ideas, including, in one case, sharing pro-Nazi and pro-Hitler memes, an investigation of the march's website and social media of the organisers has found.

ABC NEWS Verify can reveal that the website for the March for Australia previously listed the white nationalist concept of "remigration" as a driving force for the event. The reference was deleted days after the website was established.

Remigration is a notion linked to far-right ideology that calls for the mass deportation of non-European peoples from Western nations.

March for Australia maintains that its opposition to current immigration levels is not "far-right".

march logo

March for Australia organisers say their views on anti-immigration are "not far right". (Supplied)

"It is the popular mainstream opinion, silenced for too long, often by those who profit from this very system driving housing shortages, job insecurity, declining productivity, environmental decay, lowered living standards and the erosion of national identity," a post on its Facebook page reads.

Federal independent MP Bob Katter and NSW Libertarian MP John Ruddick have both pledged to attend the event.

Here's what we know about how the rallies came about and those working to organise it.

'Protect white heritage'

"But if we break it down, this is how I tried to explain it to somebody."

A woman's voice is heard during a 2-hour audio live stream on social media platform X on August 11. She's explaining the "messaging" of March for Australia.

"So, protect Australian heritage, culture, way of life. Next step, protect European culture, heritage, way of life. The next step is protect white heritage. So it all means the same thing.

"Australian heritage — by saying it that way, it is more appealing to the public. It's going to deter them from saying, 'Oh, it's a Nazi rally, blah, blah.'"

The voice belongs to a woman who calls herself Bec Freedom, a pseudonym.

She also goes by Bec Walker online. It is unclear if this is her real name.

Ms Walker would later reveal herself to be the organiser of the Sydney march.

Kaz Ross, an independent researcher of extremism and conspiracy theories, agreed Ms Walker's admission about the march being a front to protect "white heritage" was part of a strategy by organisers to hide their affiliations with Australia's far-right and the march's ultimate intentions.

She pointed out that many march organisers had shared material online referencing white supremacist and far-right ideas like remigration and the great replacement.

"When you dig a bit deeper into what they've been saying and who they hang out with online, you can see it's a very problematic event."

Ms Walker says her involvement in organising the rally came after two TikTok videos calling for Australians to "take this country back", posted by a newly created account with the handle @aussibireyt, went viral.

The account's second post is the first time ABC NEWS Verify can find the date of the march, August 31, being mentioned online.

Ms Walker told ABC NEWS Verify she was sent the video by "a friend" and was then contacted by the "aussiebireyt" account.

In an interview with 2GB's Ben Fordham, she said the account was run by "an 18-year-old uni student" with no experience in organising marches, and that she offered to help through an intermediary, before he decided to bow out.

ABC NEWS Verify contacted the account on TikTok, but did not receive a response, and has not been able to independently verify Ms Walker's claim.

On August 7, Ms Walker posted a flyer for the event, featuring an Australian flag background, to her social media accounts, promising rallies in major capital cities on the date. The same flyer was reposted on the aussibireyt account on August 8, before all previous posts on the account were deleted.

Flyers with the same background and similar style have since appeared on the official March for Australia social media accounts.

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Flyers for the march have since appeared on the March for Australia social media accounts.

Ms Walker now appears to be a linchpin of the march's organisation nationwide. On her social media, she has posted updates about other cities' march locations, as well as announcements about organisers for other cities.

A mysterious website

On August 8, a website was established for the March for Australia, and then, social media accounts.

A link on the front page entitled "Why we're marching" led to a bulleted list under the heading "Australia's future is in our hands". It read:

  • No foreign flags;
  • end mass immigration; and
  • remigration now.

By August 11, the reference to remigration was removed, leaving the two other bullet points in place.

a screengrab of a website page that

The March for Australia website used to feature a tap that read "Remigration now".  (Supplied)

ABC NEWS Verify has been unable to establish exactly who is responsible for the website due to its operators using a privacy service to obscure their identity.

An email with questions sent to the contact address listed on the website went unanswered.

Also on August 11, March for Australia responded to claims from a well-known neo-Nazi that the rally was being organised by prominent neo-Nazi group the National Socialist Network (NSN), with organisers seeking to distance themselves from the group.

"We wish to make it clear: the organisers are not members of, nor acting on behalf of, any other group. In particular, recent claims by [the NSN] are not reflective of the organisers nor the politics of March for Australia."

ABC NEWS Verify found no evidence that the NSN has been involved in organising the marches.

Dr Ross told ABC NEWS Verify that neo-Nazis were still very likely to attend, and that other attendees might inadvertently find their attendance weaponised for extremist propaganda.

"They will be looking for media opportunities. What they want is a sea of Australian flags with a whole lot of people marching along so they can say, 'See, all these people are for White Australia.'"

ABC NEWS Verify has also identified several prominent far-right and conservative influencers involved in organising March for Australia rallies.

Combined, they paint a picture of an event coloured by ties to extreme-right ideas.

What we know about the organisers

One organiser and promoter of the rally is Hugo Lennon, a far-right anti-immigration influencer who has a history of promoting extreme-right and racist materials online.

Mr Lennon appeared as one of two administrators for the March for Australia Facebook group. He has since been removed from the page.

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Hugo Lennon's online profile Auspill was listed as an admin of the March for Australia Facebook page on August 13.  (Supplied: Facebook )

He told news.com.au that he had assisted march organisers in "certain technical systems and back-end infrastructure" for the rallies, as well as provided "occasional logistical support in online co-ordination".

Mr Lennon has promoted remigration and the far-right white nationalist conspiracy theory "the great replacement", where white nationalists contend they are being replaced as the majority by immigrants.

The conspiracy theory has been connected to extreme-right violence in the past. In 2019, the Christchurch massacre shooter used it as the title of his manifesto.

Mr Lennon did not respond to questions about whether he was involved in setting up the website and its inclusion of remigration as a goal.

In a video posted to social media on August 22, Ms Walker said Mr Lennon would take over the organisation of the Melbourne march, after she announced that Matt Trihey, the leader of Eurocentric nationalist organisation National Workers Alliance, was no longer the Melbourne organiser.

However, a senior Victoria-based figure from the NSN claimed in a live stream on video-streaming site Rumble with other leadership that they had been asked to help with the rally.

"We have been asked to help to a certain capacity."

Ms Walker said she had never approached the NSN or asked for help with March for Australia or other events.

The identity of the Brisbane organiser is also unknown, but a social media account named "Bender" on the platform X has taken ownership.

The account denied they had interacted with any members of NSN when asked by ABC NEWS Verify.

The account's banner photo reads "remigration" over a drawing of a smiling white woman. The account has also posted about the great replacement theory and shared NSN material.

Further west

On Australia's west coast, one of the Perth march organisers has a history of promoting neo-Nazism, remigration and antisemitism.

An account on X that goes by the handle @BoilingaBilly, and which also goes by the names bayloolie and Baylie Bergroth on other social media platforms, is one of the organisers of the Perth March for Australia event.

In an X post published on August 19 they shared snippets of protest applications to Western Australia police for a rally on August 31.

The BoilingaBilly X account has a history of sharing pro-Nazi and pro-Hitler memes, antisemitism, calling for remigration and belief in the great replacement.

They've also referred to themselves as the "supreme Führer of Australia" and shared images of Mein Kampf, calling it "the Bible".

Social media platform X page of a man named Billy with the Australian flag in his bio

The X feed of Baylie Bergroth, where he goes by BoilingaBilly. (Supplied: X)

In an email, Mr Bergroth said he supported "voluntary remigration" but denied any ties to NSN.

He defended his pro-Nazi and pro-Hitler social media posts as "satire", pointing to a parody account label on the X profile.

He justified the posts as attempts to "play the algorithms on social medias [sic] to gain engagement" for their account on X.

Politicians give their support

As chatter about the rally gathered steam through August, Mr Katter and Mr Ruddick both lent their support.

Mr Katter released a video on his social media pages on August 12 urging people to join the march.

"It is wartime now, we are fighting to stop our country being flooded by immigration," Mr Katter said.

A spokeswoman for Mr Katter referred ABC NEWS Verify to comments "available on social media" regarding the march and did not directly address questions.

Another post released by Mr Katter reiterated his support for the march but added that he wanted to ensure it was not "hijacked" by "supremacist organisations".

Bob Katter urges Australians to attend March for Australia.

Mr Ruddick, a Libertarian state MP, also endorsed the rally and vowed to attend.

In response to questions from ABC NEWS Verify, he said he had for "some time" supported a five-year immigration pause.

"I have no doubt there will be people attending who have views I don't agree with, but I truly do not care. I believe guilt by association is an attempt to close down a debate without having debate," he said.

Mr Ruddick said he did not support the idea of remigration, describing it as "inhumane", but said he would still be attending the rally.

"If somebody got up there and said … Adolf Hitler was a great guy … well, at that point I would probably go home."

Macquarie University far-right researcher Kurt Sengul said politicians lending their support for the march is consequential and "alarming".

Endorsements from politicians provide the rally "credibility and visibility" while normalising its more extreme messages, he said.

"The March for Australia's goal of mainstreaming and normalising its message to a broader audience is greatly helped by the participation and endorsement of democratically elected politicians."

Far-right in plain sight

Joshua Roose, a political sociologist from Deakin University, is an expert in extremism.

He said far-right groups like neo-Nazis are exploiting deeper societal concerns about economic uncertainty and genuine hardship to further their own hidden agendas.

"When the going gets tough, people look for someone to blame or they look for a group to blame.

"They're cloaking themselves in the rhetoric; migration and crime, to attempt to legitimise a much deeper, hate-filled, racist agenda," Dr Roose said.

"There's certainly space for the conversation about migration in this country, there is space for a reasoned and a really respectful conversation"… [but] that you can just solve your problems with one quick policy and that is just to get rid of everyone who doesn't look and sound like you, that's deeply problematic."