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Tens of thousands of women are bought and sold in China each year.
The most popular areas for abducting women are the poor areas of Yunnan,
Sichuan and Guizhou. (Human Rights in China organization report, Sophia
Woodman, Stephanie Ho, "Trafficking of Women in China," Voice of America,
27 September 1995)
China is a destination of trafficked women from Ukraine and Russia.
(Global Survival Network, Vladmir Isachenkov, "Soviet Women Slavery
Flourishes," Associated Press, 6 November 1997) Traffickers are increasingly
transporting Burmese and Chinese girls for prostitution, partially due
to a decrease in the availability of northern Thai girls. "Their pleasant
character, white skin and beauty were similar to northern girls." (Prof
Kusol Sunthorntada, Researcher, Institute for Population and Social
Research, Mahidol University, ("More foreign workers join sex industry
as fewer Thai girls enter flesh trade," Poona Antaseeda. Bangkok Post,
24 November 1997) Girls from China, aged 12-18, are in more demand for
the sex industry in Thailand since fewer girls from Northern Thailand
are being lured by traffickers. (Wanchai Boonphacra, Centre for the
Protection of Children's Rights, "More foreign workers join sex industry
as fewer Thai girls enter flesh trade," Poona Antaseeda. Bangkok Post,
24 November 1997)
Women are also being trafficked for sale as wives to husbands who often
resell them. (CATW - Asia Pacific, Trafficking in Women and Prostitution
in the Asia Pacific)
Chinese girls from provinces in Yunan state are trafficked via Chiang
Tung in Burma and then into Thailand at Mae Sai in Chiang Rai. ("More
foreign workers join sex industry as fewer Thai girls enter flesh trade,"
Poona Antaseeda. Bangkok Post, 24 November 1997).
Traffickers force Chinese immigrants into indentured servitude, women
into prostitution and men into the restaurant business. In September
1998, 153 men and 21 women, including 35 juveniles, arrived in San Diego,
California from China via Mexico, after paying smugglers $30,000. In
1997, 69 and in 1993, 650 Chinese immigrants were intercepted in the
same area. If caught by immigration (INS) officials, most will be sent
back to China, unless they receive political asylum. The smugglers may
face jail time in the United States. (Paula Story, "Chinese Immigrant
Boat Reaches US," Associated Press Online, 19 September 1998)
Thousands of girls from China's southern are trafficked into Thailand's
sex industry; some go on to Malaysia or Singapore. The economic crisis
has no impact on this segment of the sex industry. More affluent Chinese
businessmen from mainland China or Taiwan who do business in Thailand
purchase sex from these Chinese girls. (Supalak Ganjanakhundee, "Migrant
workers booming as Asian economy declines," Kyodo News, 23 September
1998)
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)
Official Response and Action
3,000 women and children were rescued after being abducted and sold
into slavery in Southern China during the past two years. Local authorities
do not assist the victims because they have sympathy for men who cannot
find wives. It is cheaper to buy a woman than to have a proper wedding.
In one incident in Uangdong, a whole village purchased women and prostituted
them from their homes. One household had bought close to 100 women and
was selling them in prostitution. (Sophia Woodman, Stephanie Ho, "Trafficking
of Women in China," Voice of America, 27 September 1995)
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)
Bride Trafficking
The pre-revolutionary custom of bride selling has returned to rural
villages in China. Marriage brokers - essentially slave dealers - search
the countryside, offering girls for sale to prospective husbands. The
recruiters kidnap and buy women and girls. From 1991 through 1996, Chinese
police freed 88,000 kidnapped women and children and arrested 143,000
people for participating in the slave trade. Women often work with a
marriage broker in the hope of saving their families from hunger. "Local
people defend the man who buys a wife, they think if she takes money
and sends it to her parents, he should be able to marry her." (Liu Bohonhg
Beijing social worker, Dorinda Elliott, "Trying to Stand on Two Feet",
Newsweek, 29 June 1998)
The kidnapping of women for marriage by criminal gangs and middlemen
has become a growth industry in China. (CATW - Asia Pacific, Trafficking
in Women and Prostitution in the Asia Pacific)
In Yanbian, China, where men outnumber women, ethnic Korean men seek
illegal North Korean women to marry. The going rate for a wife is 5,000
yuan (£400). (Andrew Higgins, "Straight on for China and karaoke slavery,"
the Observer, 15 March 1998)
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There is a resurgence of prostitution all over China. (CATW - Asia
Pacific, Trafficking in Women and Prostitution in the Asia Pacific)
1.5 million prostitutes and male buyers were arrested between 1991
and 1995. Shangchuandao Island off Guandong is a tourist spot offering
drugs and sex casinos with 300 women from all over China. In 1994, 500,000
tourists spent HK$55.8 million on legal tourist services alone (Associated
Foreign Press, 8 January 1998)
Women who are migrating from Changzhou, formerly an area with a high
standard of living, now hit by high of unemployment, to the cities and
finding no work, resort to prostitution. ("Out of Jobs, Countryside
Workers Fend For Themselves," InterPress Services, 20 October 1997)
On Shanghai Street Hong Kong triads in rule the sex industry. One network
traffics girls as young as 13 across the border from China. (The Nation,
5 July 1997)
Brothels in Hong Kong employ minders to prevent girls from running
away. In 1994, a woman attempting to escape was murdered. (CATW - Asia
Pacific, Trafficking in Women and Prostitution in the Asia Pacific)
Prostitution is widespread in Shenzhen, China and brothels, saunas
and pick-up joints there attract many men from Hong Kong just across
the border. ("Condom vending machines a hit in China," Reuters, 9 September
1998)
Prostitution is used to lure motorists to more than 1,000 gas stations
in the Ningxia region of China. Motorists have to buy a tank of gas
before than may purchase sexual services. ("China petrol stations offer
fill up with flair," Reuters, 21 September 1998)
Cases
A woman from Sichuan, in order to avoid being forced into prostitution,
tried to commit suicide by jumping from a window. She had been tricked
into work at a nightclub and locked in a room with other women. (Associated
Foreign Press, 8 January 1998)
Chan Wing-hong, who gruesomely murdered a prostituted woman, was convicted
only of manslaughter because the judge determined that he was suffering
from emotional pain and lost control of himself after the women called
him negative name. ("Dwarf who killed prostitute suffered emotional
pain," Reuters, 4 September 1997)
In 1995 the Head of Police in central Hunan province, China beat a
20-year-old peasant girl for eight hours to make her confess to being
a prostitute in order to fine her. The girl suffered serious kidney
damage and internal bleeding. ("China newspaper urges curbs on police
power," Reuters, 24 July 1998)
In the Fall of 1997, a 23-year-old woman from North Korea waded across
the Tumen River to get to Yanji, the capital of Chinaıs Yanbian Region.
She was escaping near starvation in North Korea. A relative living in
Yanji bribed Chinese police manning a roadblock near the border, provided
her with new clothes, taught her a smattering of Chinese - and set her
up in a friendıs karaoke club. Now, drunken men pay 100 Chinese yuan
for two hours of her company. She sleeps on the floor in a room shared
with nine other women, and is not allowed out unaccompanied. Unable
to speak more than a few words of Chinese, she is at risk of being identified
as an illegal immigrant. She hopes to return home, but says she will
never tell what she had to do to get money. (Andrew Higgins, "Straight
on for China and karaoke slavery," The Observer, 15 March 1998)
Policy and Law
In Hong Kong, prostitution is legal but pimping is not. (The Nation,
5 July 1997)
Official Response and Action
A nationwide campaign against prostitution is to be launched in 1997
following the resurgence of pornography-related activities in Beijing.
Public security authorities are urged to inspect dance halls, massage
salons, hairdressers and holiday villages for signs of prostitution
and drugs. People found to be involved in prostitution activities will
be banned or fined and those people in charge will be punished according
to the law. (Chen Yanni, "State hits hard on hookers," China Daily,
22 August 1997)
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