The shootings of Asian massage workers in Georgia this month have been framed as part of a surge of anti-Asian violence during the COVID-19 pandemic. But they're also part of a longstanding problem: the violence against and the surveillance of migrant massage workers.
These women are vulnerable because of their race, their gender, their immigration status — and for the type of work they do. Asian massage parlors have long been a target of law enforcement and anti-trafficking organizations who see "illicit massage businesses" as loci of human trafficking.
Nearly all of these organizations have called for the increased surveillance and policing of massage businesses, and the result has been hundreds of raids across the country which have terrorized and criminalized massage workers. These systemic forms of violence cannot be divorced from the brutal killings of massage parlor workers in the Atlanta area on March 16.
Countless Asian massage workers in the United States are not victims of sex trafficking, and many of them aren't sex workers, even if they are often profiled as such by police agencies, anti-trafficking organizations and civilian vigilante groups. To ensure their safety, we should turn instead to the work of grass-roots migrant, labor and sex worker rights organizations that focus on massage worker safety, organizing and mutual aid. One such organization is Red Canary Song, with which I have worked as an outreach organizer for the past two years.
When my colleagues and I talk to Asian massage workers, they often share stories of police officers entering their workplaces at random under the guise of stopping sex trafficking. When they don't find any evidence of wrongdoing, they demand to see massage licenses. Workers tell us they are frequently arrested if they don't produce a license, or are hit with building code or public health violations.
Those who are arrested are often funneled through special courts and programs where workers, seen as morally flawed and traumatized victims, are offered programming framed as rehabilitation. Yet those alternatives to incarceration subject these migrant workers to everything from religious proselytization to "recovery-focused yoga" to unpaid labor, when what they really need is economic security.
When conducting raids, local law enforcement agencies often team up with the Department of Homeland Security, which can initiate detention and deportation proceedings against undocumented workers unless they are determined to be victims of trafficking. That status allows them to avoid conviction and receive temporary immigration protection.
Yet, despite these obvious incentives, many massage workers refuse to take on the label of trafficking victim, largely to avoid a long legal process and taking part in the prosecution of their traffickers.