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The Factbook on Global Sexual Exploitation |
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About the Factbook |
Contents |
Asia
Europe
Oceania
Africa
Middle East
Central America
& the Caribbean
South America
North America |
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| About the Factbook |
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The Factbook on Global Sexual Exploitation was compiled from media,
non-governmental organization and government reports. It is an initial effort
to collect facts, statistics and known cases on global sexual exploitation.
Information is organized into four categories:
- Trafficking,
- Prostitution,
- Pornography, and
- Organized and Institutionalized
Sexual Exploitation
and Violence.
Sources were not contacted to verify information. Close examination will reveal
that there are contradictions in information depending on the sources of information
(ex: how many women are in prostitution in Thailand). All statistics are reported
with no attempt to evaluate which numbers are more likely to be accurate. In fact,
the exact numbers in many cases are not known and estimates come from different sources
which use different methods to determine what they report.
We hope these facts will assist people to recognize the harm caused throughout the world
by sexual violence and exploitation and catalyze action against this violence agianst women.
This project was made possible with the support of the College of Arts and Sciences,
University of Rhode Island and the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD), Norway.
If you use this information in your work, please reference this factbook-- The Factbook on
Global Sexual Exploitation, Donna M. Hughes, Laura Joy Sporcic, Nadine Z. Mendelsohn,
Vanessa Chirgwin, Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, 1999.
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Cambodia
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| TRAFFICKING |
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Prostituted girls, most of them aged 15 to18 years of age, are found
in the Svay Pak red-light district of Cambodia. Many girls are much
younger. Most of them are smuggled in from Vietnam and all are bound
by contracts, which last from six months to over a year. Svay Pak has
the largest number of prostituted Vietnamese girls. ("The Street of
Little Flowers," rewritten from 'Children of the Dust,' by MIKEL FLAMM
and NGO KIM CUC, Bangkok Post, 23 February 1997)
Many of the prostituted women and children in Cambodia are from Vietnam.
(Chris Seper, "Police Sweeps Help Clean Up Child Prostitution," Christian
Science Monitor, 8 January 1998)
Vietnamese girls are commonly brought to Phnom Penh, where they are
concentrated in a strip 15 km north of the city in an area known as
Svay Pak. (Laura Bobak, "For Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa
Sun, 24 October 1996)Policy and Law
Under newly passed legislation by the Macao Legislative Assembly,
homicide, abduction, smuggling of people, forcing others into prostitution,
aiding illegal immigration, illegally trading, and the manufacture,
use, possession, and smuggling of arms are considered organized crime
activities, and are punishable of 5-12 years in prison. ("Macao sets
up new law to stop organized crime," Xinhua, 5 August 1997)
Methods and Techniques of Traffickers
Unofficial estimates say that there are as many as 15,000 prostituted
persons in Phnom Penh, and that up to 35% of them have been smuggled
into Cambodia from China or Vietman, mostly from the southwestern provinces
of Vietnam (Long An, An Giang, Song Be, Kien Giang, Dong Thap, Can Tho
and Ho Chi Minh City). Brothel owners pay traffickers from US$350 to
$450 (8,750 to 11,250 baht) for each attractive Vietnamese virgin 16
years or younger. Non-virgins and those considered less beautiful are
sold from $150 to $170 each (3,750 to 4,250 baht). ("Children of the
dust," rewritten from 'Children of the Dust,' by MIKEL FLAMM and NGO
KIM CUC, Bangkok Post, 23 February 1997)
Girls bound by contacts to a brother owner have their debt to the brothel
owner subtracted from the number of customers serviced. It may take
from six months to a year or more to work off this debt. The fees that
have been paid to their families, trafficking agents, and border guards
compound the total debt. Once all debts are paid off, the prostituted
person makes from $2 to $3 [50 to 75 baht] per customer, this is after
the brother owner has taken their own cut. ("The Street of Little Flowers,"
rewritten from 'Children of the Dust,' by MIKEL FLAMM and NGO KIM CUC,
Bangkok Post, 23 February 1997)
Virgins, who have been sold to brothels by trafficking agents, are
confined to the brothel or a hotel room until the first client comes.
Due to the belief that sex with a virgin has rejuvenating properties,
her first client is charged an expensive amount. Advertised as "special
commodities," virgins are also attractive in that they are less likely
to have AIDS or other sexually transmitted diseases. The customer pays
from $300 to $400 (7,500 to 10,000 baht) to have sex with her for one
week in a local hotel chosen by the brothel owner. ("Children of the
dust," rewritten from 'Children of the Dust,' by MIKEL FLAMM and NGO
KIM CUC, Bangkok Post, 23 February 1997)
When recruited by brokers in a village, the girls' families are told
they will be employed and be able to send money home. After the girls
are purchased, usually for about $150, they are brought to a hotel room
or safe house where they are kept until they can be sold to their first
buyer for $300 to $400 for a week. But after this, the girl is considered
"used goods" and her value drops dramatically to as little as $2 per
sexual transaction. (Laura Bobak, "For Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia,"
Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
The enslaved girls must stay until their debt to their purchasers is
paid off, or face beatings. This is difficult, if not impossible, since
the owners consider the girls indebted to to them for their constantly
mounting expenses for food, clothing, medical costs and abortions. As
a result, a brothel owner will hold a girl prisoner until she becomes
too old or too ill to attract customers. (Laura Bobak, "For Sale: The
Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
A trafficking network, operating under protection from local authorities,
was discovered by human rights workers in Cambodia. For at least two
years in Koh Kong province the network trafficked hundreds of children
a month into Trat province, Thailand. The children are sold for $70
each. Some children were drugged and forced into prostitution. Other
children who were sent to work on fishing boats were often arbitrarily
tossed overboard to drown. ("Child slavery ring uncovered in Cambodia,"
Associated Foreign Press, 19 December 1997)
Cases
A trafficker was arrested and confessed to having abducted 1,800 women
from Beijing. Because of opposition from the villagers and from local
officials, police were only able to rescue six women out of 1,800. (Stephanie
Ho, "Trafficking of Women in China," Voice of America, 27 September
1997)
A 12-year-old girl from the Zheijang region was sold for US$40,000
to a trafficker. She was taken to Bangkok, Thailand for "instruction"
in prostitution. Authorities found the girl in Italy. Her destination
was the sex industry in Miami, Florida, USA. ("Pedophilia ring uncovered
in Italy," USA Today, Nov 1997)
A Vietnamese woman, one of seven, was trafficked under false pretenses
to China. She escaped from the brothel, and returned to Vietnam, where
she was locked in a hut and threatened by a local Public Security Bureau
official. She eventually fled to Hong Kong in July 1991, and filed for
refugee status, which was denied in 1993. In February 1998, she was
still appealing the decision. ("Viet women deceived into life as sex
slavesı," South China Morning Post, 21 January 1998)
Policy and Law
A law was passed in January 1997 to curb trafficking in
women, with fines of up to $12,000 and prison sentences of up to 20 years
for pimps and brothel owners. No arrests have yet been made. (Debra Boyce,
"Rescued Prostitutes Present Theatre of Life," The World Congress Against
the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children, 30 July 1997)
Following the beating death of a 15-year-old girl in a brothel in the
Svay Por district of Battambang on September 21, 1995, local and provincial
police conducted a series of raids in the area. 26 brothels were searched
and 236 prostituted women detained, along with 34 persons operating
the brothels. 62 girls were under 18 and 75 said they were either sold
or forced into the business. 40 of those forced into prostitution against
their will were minors. Nearly all of the underage girls were afraid
of the brothel owners and refused to press charges. Consequently, 11
of the 34 brothel employees were released without charge. However, 12
were released on bail, charged with trafficking of underage minors for
prostitution and illegal detainmen. ("The Street of Little Flowers,"
rewritten from 'Children of the Dust,' by MIKEL FLAMM and NGO KIM CUC,
Bangkok Post, 23 February 1997)
Official Collaboration and Corruption
Many politicians and their networks are involved in the trafficking
business - indirectly or directly. (Kritaya Archavanitkul of the Institute
for Population and Social Research at Mahidol University, Cameron W.
Barr, "Asia Traffickers Keep Girls in Sexual Servitude, Criminal groups
deceive and lure poor villagers," Christian Science Monitor, 22 August
1997)
he governor if Kok Kong Province recently banned human rights investigators
who raided a trafficking ring without his permission. Cambodiaıs National
Assembly called for the governor to resign, as he is suspected of supporting
brothel rings there. Some traffickers are protected at high governmental
levels. (Chris Seper, "Police Sweeps Help Clean Up Child Prostitution,"
Christian Science Monitor, 8 January 1998)
Cases
45 kidnapped women and children were freed after a raid on a trafficking
ring in Kok Kong Province, Cambodia. (Chris Seper, "Police Sweeps Help
Clean Up Child Prostitution," Christian Science Monitor, 8 January 1998)
One trafficker, Chay Heang, arrested by police in Sihanoukville had
14 Cambodian women and children who were to be trafficked to Thailand
for the purpose of sexual exploitation. Police say Heang is a minor
criminal; he is connected to Chea Sarith an alleged major trafficker
who lives in Koh Kong Province near the Thai border. (Chris Seper, "Police
Sweeps Help Clean Up Child Prostitution," Christian Science Monitor,
8 January 1998)
In one village in Chiang Rai, families sold 61 daughters, most between
13 or 14 years old, into prostitution, for about $480 each, an advance
of her "future earnings". At least 13 of the women were sent to brothels
in Japan, or along the Thai/Malaysia border. Some of the girls have
already contracted AIDS and died. The girls spend months and years enslaved
to pay off the advance given to their parents. (7 year study, beginning
mid1980s, Cameron W. Barr, "Asia Traffickers Keep Girls in Sexual Servitude,
Criminal groups deceive and lure poor villagers," Christian Science
Monitor, 22 August 1997)
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| PROSTITUTION |
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Researchers found 87% of young men were having sex with their girlfriends
or prostitutes; 10% were having sex with other males. (Laura Bobak,
"For Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia, Facts and Figures," Ottawa Sun,
24 October 1996)
There are 10,000 to 20,000 women and children in prostitution in Phnom
Penh, a city of 1 million. Massage parlors and karaoke bars are frequently
fronts for prostitution rings. (Chris Seper, "Police Sweeps Help Clean
Up Child Prostitution," Christian Science Monitor, 8 January 1998)
Prostitution has become a "fixture of urban life" in Cambodia. (Laura
Bobak, "For Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October
1996)
Tuol Kok district is Phnom Penh is Cambodiaıs most well-known light
district. (Chris Seper, "Police Sweeps Help Clean Up Child Prostitution,"
Christian Science Monitor, 8 January 1998)
In 1992, the average age of prostituted persons was 18. This dropped
to 15 years by April 1993, and a follow-up study in February 1994 suggested
that 35% of the persons engaged in prostitution were under the age of
18, according to the Cambodian Women's Development Association (CWDA).
By March 1995, minors (aged 12 to 17 years old) comprised nearly 31%
of prostituted persons in Phnom Penh and 11 other provinces, according
to a survey conducted by the Human Rights Vigilance of Cambodia. ("Children
of the dust," rewritten from 'Children of the Dust,' by MIKEL FLAMM
and NGO KIM CUC, Bangkok Post, 23 February 1997)
35% of prostitutes in Cambodia are under the age of 18. (Tim Seaman,
of the human rights organisation Licadho, Debra Boyce, "Rescued Prostitutes
Present Theatre of Life," The World Congress Against the Commercial
Sexual Exploitation of Children, 30 July 1997)
The Philippines and Sri Lanka are favorite destinations for men seeking
to have intercourse with young boys. (Laura Bobak, "For Sale: The Innocence
of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
There is a lower demand for boy prostitutes in Cambodia, sometimes
an older boy will obtain youngsters for foreign customers, while other
boys are independent. (Laura Bobak, "For Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia,"
Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
Many young prostituted boys live on the streets and at night wait for
the male buyers who will pay $2 to $5 for sex. (Laura Bobak, "For Sale:
The Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
Children as young as four have been sold into the sex industry in Cambodia.
(EPCAT, Laura Bobak, "For Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun,
24 October 1996)
Minors, some as young as seven, constitute more than 25% of the prostitutes
in Cambodiaıs sex industry, (Joe Cochrane, "Childıs tragedy raises profile
of rights march," South China Morning Post, 2 February 1998)
Prostitution was outlawed in Cambodia from 1975 to 1979 during the
rule of the Khmer Rouge, but it resurfaced in the 1980s and peaked between
1991 and 1993 during the UNTAC years when many of the 22,000 UN personnel
stationed in Cambodia frequented the nation's numerous brothels. ("Children
of the dust," rewritten from 'Children of the Dust,' by MIKEL FLAMM
and NGO KIM CUC, Bangkok Post, 23 February 1997)
The UN soldiers presence in Cambodia caused the number of prostitutes
to rise to an estimated 20,000 at the peak. After their departure, the
number dropped to 10,000 to 15,000. (UNICEF report, Laura Bobak, "For
Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
The local industry for sexually exploited children is exploding for
two reasons: Many Khmer -- and other Asian men -- believe sex with a
virgin will renew their vigor and youth, and the fear of contracting
HIV is fuelling a demand for younger and younger virgins. (Laura Bobak,
"For Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
A study of more than 6,000 prostituted girls found that one-third of
prostitutes in Phnom Penh and Battanbang were between the age of 12
and 17. (Human Rights Vigilance of Cambodia, Laura Bobak, "For Sale:
The Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
Prostitution Tourism
Partially as a result of the publicity of the prevalence of HIV/AIDS
in Thailand, Cambodia, India and the Dominican Republic have emerged
as new travel destinations for pedophiles in the 1990s. (Laura Bobak,
"For Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
Health and Well-being
Cambodia's flourishing sex industry had its beginning in the early
1990s, when tens of thousands of UN "blue helmet" peacekeepers and civilian
administrators descended here in an operation known as UNTAC (United
Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia), which was designed to end
a long-running civil war and pave the way for multiparty elections.
On election day last month, when Prime Minister Hun Sen was asked what
would be UNTAC's legacy, he replied: "AIDS." (Keith B. Richburg," Spreading
HIV Threatens Cambodia Government Hard Pressed to Respond," Washington
Post Foreign Service, Sunday, August 9, 1998)
Visiting prostitutes has become a common and accepted male pastime
in Cambodia. As a result men have become the vectors for AIDS. (Keith
B. Richburg, "Spreading HIV Threatens Cambodia Government Hard Pressed
to Respond," Washington Post Foreign Service, Sunday, August 9, 1998)
40-50% the prostitutes in Cambodian are HIV positive. (Ministry of
Health, Debra Boyce, "Rescued Prostitutes Present Theatre of Life,"
The World Congress Against the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children,
30 July 1997)
60% of the young prostitutes interviewed in Cambodia in June 1995 were
infected with everything from sores and warts to gonorrhea. (Youth With
A Mission, Laura Bobak, "For Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa
Sun, 24 October 1996)
Prostitutes have HIV infection rates of at least 40%, but the figure
could be much higher. (Laura Bobak, "For Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia,"
Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
Prostituted girls endure miserable conditions and abuse, including
beatings, cramped quarters, inadequate food and sleep, and little to
no protection against sexually transmitted diseases. (Laura Bobak, "For
Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
The effect of prostitution on children and their families is addressed
in a Situation Report released by Unicef's Cambodia office. "There is
little detailed research on the personal trauma of child prostitutes
as a result of their situation and the effects of their situation on
their relationships with their families. The personal trauma and the
loss of self-esteem to a child prostitute brought about by constant
degradation is difficult to imagine," the report said. ("The Street
of Little Flowers," rewritten from 'Children of the Dust,' by MIKEL
FLAMM and NGO KIM CUC, Bangkok Post, 23 February 1997)
Cases
Ohn, a prostituted boy, said about half of the male buyers are foreigners
and half are locals. He prefers the foreign customers because they pay
more -- the most he ever received was $15. (Laura Bobak, "For Sale:
The Innocence of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
In 1994 Sophak, a 16 year old girl from Cambodia was sold into prostitution
to the owner of a nightclub in Battambang City by her mother, who suffered
a "losing streak" during her compulsive gambling. She was raped by the
owner and others and then escaped. She returned to her home, but fled,
fearing she would be resold. (Laura Bobak, "For Sale: The Innocence
of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
In May 1997, Makara was sold to a brothel in Tuol Kork for about $200
by a broker in her hometown in Kompong Cham, 200 km northeast of Phnom
Penh. Makara's virginity was purchased by a man who bought her on contract.
The contract made her his exclusive sex slave for a period of a month.
He abused her so brutally that she ran away. Her current brothel owner
paid off her $200 debt to the first brothel then bought her, and now
she is indebted to them. Her male buyers, on average 7 each night, pay
$2 for intercourse. (Laura Bobak, "For Sale: The Innocence of Cambodia,"
Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
A Cambodian girl, who awoke in a brothel in Phnom Penh, said that her
aunt drugged her into unconsciousness and sold her to a brothel owner.
When she refused to service male buyers she was drugged again, taken
to a hotel and raped by several men. (Cameron W. Barr, "Asia Traffickers
Keep Girls in Sexual Servitude, Criminal groups deceive and lure poor
villagers," Christian Science Monitor, 22 August 1997)
A lieutenant in the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces is one brothel owner.
He claims to enslave the girls because he cannot make enough money in
his job in the Armed Forces. (Laura Bobak, "For Sale: The Innocence
of Cambodia," Ottawa Sun, 24 October 1996)
Meas, a 16-year-old orphan from Vietnam, was sold to a brothel in Phnom
Penh by her neighbor for $400. She was starved and beaten until she
complied to having sex with eight men a day. When she was found by police,
they took her life savings 30,000 riel, roughly US$8.50. (Chris Seper,
"Police Sweeps Help Clean Up Child Prostitution," Christian Science
Monitor, 8 January 1998)
Official Response and Action
Police raided 40 brothels, including one where a pimp murdered a young
girl. 232 prostituted girls in the Saem brothel were aged 14 to 20.
(Debra Boyce, "Rescued Prostitutes Present Theatre of Life," The World
Congress Against the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children, 30
July 1997)
In a two-month period in 1997, there were more than 500 prostituted
women and girls rescued and 20 traffickers arrested. (Chris Seper, "Police
Sweeps Help Clean Up Child Prostitution," Christian Science Monitor
8 January 1998)
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| PORNOGRAPHY |
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Official Response and Action
Cambodian leader, Hun Sen, has ordered cable television providers
to stop broadcasting pornography saying that it undermined government's
efforts to fight AIDS. (Henry Tang, BBC London, 5 December 1997)
80% of drawings in the Cambodian media, which feature women, are obscene.
More than 50% of the drawings depict women as sex objects. In contrast,
women are the subjects of only 7% of stories. In one newspaper, Koh
Santepheap (Island of Peace), more than half of the stories about women
included pornographic serials. (Research findings, Womenıs Media Center
of Cambodia, AFP, 19 February 1998)
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