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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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Germany
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| TRAFFICKING |
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1,094 cases of trafficking were reported in 1996, compared to 517 in 1993.
(Germany's federal criminal investigation office, "German police swoop on
suspected sex slavery ring," Reuters, 19 March 1998)
Germany is one the most popular destinations in Europe for women trafficked
from Ukraine and Russia. (Global Survival Network, Vladmir Isachenkov, "Soviet
Womem Slavery Flourishes," Associated Press, 6 November 1997)
Cases
Twenty four women, from Poland, Russia, Italy, Albania, and Turkey were freed
by police during a raid on a German brothel where they were held as slaves
and prostituted. Two of the women had been locked up for 7 months without
seeing daylight. A criminal gang of sixteen suspects, from Turkey, Italy and
Albania were arrested, police are searching for six others. Three Luedenscheid
police officers allegedly were working with trafficking network. The operation
was one of the largest ever against an organized crime ring in Germany. (Erich
Reimann, "Germany Breaks Up Sex Slave Ring," Associated Press, 13 December
1996)
At least 200 women, including girls under the age of 16, were trafficked
by one Polish man to Germany and the Netherlands between 1993 and 1996. (Warsaw
Voice, 1996, "Trafficking of Women to the European Union: Characterisitics,
Trends and Policy Issues," European Conference on Trafficking in Women,
June 1996), IOM, 7 May 1996)
Two German lawyers, Bernd Malitzki, 31, and Sabine Pohl-Jovanovic, 37, offered
to acquire a Czech girl of 12-14 for "extreme sex games" for DM12,000, if
she died they would dispose of the body for DM3,000 (US$1,580). They used
the Internet for initial contacts under the nicknames of "Sado-Hangman" and
"Leather-Witch." Malitzki said he was a practicing sado-masochist. Police
found a soundproofed torture room in their home in Stephanskirchen, near Rosenheim
in southern Germany. They were arrested under charges of conspiracy to kidnap,
conspiracy to abuse children and conspiracy to murder. ("German couple on
trial for Net torture," Calgary Herald, 7 August 1997)
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| PROSTITUTION |
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In Germany, 75% of the prostitutes are foreigners. (Altink, 1995, p.33) ("Trafficking
of Women to the European Union: Characteristic, Trends and Policy Issues,"
European Conference on Trafficking in Women, June 1996, IOM,
7 May 1996)
There are 6,000 - 8,000 women in prostitution in Hamburg, about 70% of them
are migrant prostitutes and 50% of those are East European women, from Poland,
Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania and the Czech Republic. The majority is controlled
by pimps, isolated in apartment-brothels and controlled by Russian mafia organizations.
(Hamburg police Department, Lucia Brussa, "Transnational AIDS/STD Prevention
Among Migrant Prostitutes in Europe," TAMPEP, 1996)
The second largest migrant group of women in prostitution is from Latin America,
mostly from the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela and Brazil.
Dominican women are confined to apartments, while those from Ecuador work
in the street, or in bars and cabarets. (Licia Brussa, "Transnational AIDS/STD
Prevention Among Migrant Prostitutes in Europe," TAMPEP, 1996)
There are between 60,000 and 200,000 women in prostitution in Germany. Foreign
women and girls account for about half of the women in prostitution, most
of them are illegal immigrants. (Michele Hirsch, "Plan of Action Against Trafficking
in Women and Forced Prostitution," p.9, Council of Europe, 1996)
The Eros Center in Kiel is one of Germany’s biggest licensed brothels. The
standard price, DM50 (about US$ 30) has not changed since 1992, which means
it has dropped to one-third the real value since 1992. ("Giving the customer
what he wants...," Economist, 14 February 1998)
The E55 highway from Berlin, Germany to Prague, Czech Republic is lined with
hundreds of prostituted women, the cheapest, typically gypsies or Ukrainians
can be bought for US$10-20. ("Giving the customer what he wants...," Economist,
14 February 1998)
In 1994-1996 the sex industry scenery, in Hamburg and other parts of Germany,
underwent important changes due to the increasing number of women coming from
East European countries. (Lucia Brussa, "Transnational AIDS/STD Prevention
Among Migrant Prostitutes in Europe," TAMPEP, 1996)
Official Response and Action
Twenty suspected members of a gang of pimps and prostitutes were detained
in the biggest raid ever in Germany in March 1998. The police raided 40 apartments
and offices in Berlin, Potsdam, and Oranienburg. DM165,000 (US$90,000) was
found. ("German police swoop on suspected sex slavery ring," Reuters,
19 March 1998)
Prostitution Tourism
The Philippines, Thailand, South Korea, Sri Lanka and Hong Kong are some
of the primary Asian destinations for organized sex tours from Germany. (CATW
- Asia Pacific, Trafficking in Women and Prostitution in the Asia Pacific)
At least 10,000 of estimated 200,000 - 400,000 German sex tourists seek to
sexually exploit children. (The Child Help Organization, Duisburg, "A children’s
summit in the making?," the Hindu, 1 February 1998)
200,000 German men travel abroad each year as prostitution tourists, many
of whom are seeking girls under the age of 14. (Child welfare experts, Emma
Thomasson, "Germany Launches Offensive on Child Sex Crimes," Reuters,
29 July 1997)
Law and Policy
Bonn Germany passed a law in 1993 to convict citizens for having sex with
minors abroad, but prosecutions have been rare since and foreign officials
ignore the reality of prostitution tourism. (Emma Thomasson, "Germany Launches
Offensive on Child Sex Crimes," Reuters, 29 July 1997)
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| PORNOGRAPHY |
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Case
A suspect detained in connection with the international child pornography
network based in the Netherlands had confessed to sexually abusing his 12-year-old
son over a period of 18 months and to having taken a photograph of his son
which was later posted on Internet site for child-porn pictures. ("German
police detain child porn ring suspect," Reuters, 24 July 1998)
A 13-year-old German boy downloaded more than 100 pornographic images from
the Internet onto a disk and sold them. ("German schoolboy sold child porn
from Internet: police," Agence France Presse, 1 August 1997)
Official Response and Action
Raids in seven German states, conducted as part of a crackdown on a worldwide
internet-based pedophile ring, targeted 18 people, said Germany's Federal
Criminal Agency (BKA). (Jill Serjeant, "Police swoop on global child porn
ring," Reuters, 2 September 1998)
German investigators have detained five more suspects as part of a worldwide
crackdown on an Internet child pornography ring and still more could be arrested.
The Federal Criminal Agency (BKA) said a total of 23 people had been detained
in Germany since the coordinated operation began. Most were released after
questioning. Suspects from Berlin, Stuttgart and Naumburg had confessed to
exchanging child pornography and information over the Internet, German police
said. The BKA said it did not have a precise picture of how many computer
terminals and videocassettes had been seized. In some cases, thousands of
files had been seized. ("German police hold five in new child porn raids,"
Reuters, 3 September 1998)
In a German court case, a former CompuServe employee was convicted of aiding
and abetting the spread of pornography. As CompuServe subscribers could access
the material from the web, the court decided that the employee had facilitated
the spread of pornography on the Internet. (Andrew Beattie, "Crackdown on
pornography raises prosecution fears," Scotsman, 9 September 1998)
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ORGANIZED AN INSTITUTIONALIZED
SEXUAL EXPLOITATION AND VIOLENCE |
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Evidence in British documents from World War II report that SS men and "top
Nazis" were involved in exploiting and abusing women during their service
in the war. Munich-based Party chief Christian Weber was notorious before
the war for his exploitation of women. A German lieutenant reported seeing
a party given by Weber where a naked girl had been strapped to a roulette
wheel and was later found unconscious. SS Chief Heinrich Himmler, who planned
the genocide against the Jews, was the protector of a cult that met in an
eastern German castle for sex to the high-priestess with the Berlin State
Opera. A German plane was also used as an airborne brothel, and a Norwegian
ship as a floating brothel. The German consul conducted "conspicuous activities"
in Casablanca, Morocco, with local men and boys. (Nazis mixed was with sex,"
AFP, 22 July 1998)
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