Men threaten girls
working the streets
02.07.2003
By LOUISA CLEAVE police reporter
Young
prostitutes in south Auckland have been threatened by a group of men wanting to
cash-in on their work since prostitution laws were reformed, says a community
worker.
Mama
Tere, who runs the support centre Te Aronga Hou Inaianei, a stone's throw from
where women work the streets near Hunter's Corner, said transsexual workers had
told her about the stand-over tactics.
Mama
Tere said she did not know whether the men had gang connections or were
"uneducated, low-level pimps" who believed the new laws gave them a
right to "work the girls and live off their living".
Yesterday
morning, Mama Tere arrived at the centre to find a machete on the doorstep.
"You
can take it any way. It could have been someone handing it in to be rid of or
it's a warning. In any case, it's a worry."
Mama
Tere said the men had not approached transsexual workers, who visit her centre
and tell her what is going on among the prostitutes.
"They
came in the other night telling me some of the girls have been chased by the
men, and stood over saying they'll be protected [if they work for them]."
Mama
Tere believed the bill had "very quickly caused a bit of a territorial
thing". There had been "the odd prospector" trying to control
working prostitutes in the past, but stand-over tactics had not been used.
Mama
Tere, who is a member of the police community liaison group, said she would
pass the information and the machete on to authorities.
She
spoke to Maori wardens, who told the Herald they had never heard of such
incidents before.
*
Unionists have lifted a picket against the Showgirls strip club, in Auckland,
after a management offer to negotiate over four sacked cleaners.
Alliance
president Matt McCarten, whose Unite union kept publicity-shy patrons away when
it picketed the club on Friday night, said he expected a settlement soon from
talks which began after the management urged him not to repeat the performance.