Scotland Pushes Partnership With Anti-Porn Activist Who Thinks Sex Workers Are ‘Possessed by the Devil’
EDINBURGH — A leading sex worker advocacy group in the U.K. reports that the Scottish government has instructed local authorities to partner with controversial English charity Azalea, led by a religious anti-porn activist who has stated that sex workers are “possessed by demons.”
National Ugly Mugs (NUM), a national sex worker safety charity in the U.K., received tips from individuals in local councils in Scotland that the ruling Scottish National Party (SNP) has recommended partnering with Azalea, founded and run by a woman named Ruth Robb, from the English town of Luton.
NUM has reviewed documents showing Robb has in the past recommended “carrying out exorcisms on sex workers who are ‘possessed by demons,’” the North Edinburgh Press newspaper reported.
Robb also believes yoga is an “occult practice” and sex work leads to a “lesbian lifestyle.” She told her local newspaper that watching pornography is an “unhealthy habit” similar to “buying sex.”
Robb’s Azalea was drafted as a Scottish government partner as part of an initiative by Victims and Community Safety Minister Siobhian Brown, a Nordic Model proponent who created a network of regional “commercial sexual exploitation hubs” in February. According to Brown, this network would “support women to safely exit from prostitution and challenge men’s demand for prostitution.”
In June, national government officials made presentations throughout Scotland promoting partnerships with Christian charity Azalea, “as part of an approach to persuade men not to purchase sexual services,” and praising the group’s initiatives as “similar to approaches within the Nordic Model.”
NUM also reviewed documents released under the Freedom of Information Act showing that the Glasgow City Council has refused to take part in Brown’s scheme, citing “dangerous plans to involve Azalea, and complaining that ministers have given no detail or structure in relation to governance, accountability, outcomes, milestones, monitoring, evaluation, funding or timescales for it,” the North Edinburgh Press reported.
Robb has written guidebooks for Christian organizations doing sex worker outreach. According to Robb and co-writer Marion Carson, “most prostitutes have had some exposure to the occult” and her guides offer a checklist to determine if a sex worker is undergoing “demonic possession.” Symptoms include “flailing limbs” or a “sudden change of voice.”