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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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Mexico
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| TRAFFICKING |
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16 and 17 year old girls from Central America are being trafficked to Chiapas,
Mexico for prostitution. ("Women and Low Intensity Warfare," SIPAZ Report,
Vol 3 No 1, January 1998)
The United Nations now lists Mexico as the number one center for the supply
of young children to North America. Most are sold to rich, childless couples
unwilling to wait for bona fide adoption agencies to provide them with a child.
The majority are sent to international pedophile organizations. Many times
the children are snatched while on errands for their parents. Often they are
drugged and raped. Most of the children over 12 end up as prostitutes. Hector
Ramirez, a former deputy, or Mexican Member of Parliament, stated that "many
of the state and city authorities [are] doing absolutely nothing to stop what
is going on." (Allan Hall, The Scotsman, 25 August 1998)
Case
16 Mexicans have been indicted in Florida on trafficking charges. Between
August 1996 and February 1998, at least 20 young Mexican women and minors
were trafficked into Florida and South Carolina, United States under false
pretenses of jobs, and forced into prostitution through debt bondage of US$2,000.
The brothels were operated by "ticketeros" who collected fees and sold "tickets,"
usually in the form of condoms, which were exchanged for sex. The charge was
usually US$20, of which the women received US$3 toward paying off the US$2000
debt. The brothel operators used violence to control the women. ("16 indicted
in Mexican prostitution ring," United Press International, 23 April 1998)
& (Jim Loney, "US indicts 16 in Mexican prostitute slavery ring," Reuters,
23 April 1998)
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| PROSTITUTION |
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The majority of the homeless girls assisted by Casa Alianza programs in Mexico
are victims of prostitution. ("The Situation of Street Children in Latin America,"
Bruce Harris, Executive Director, Latin American Programmes, Casa Alianza/Covenant
House Latin America, 9 October 1997)
Military personnel are prostituting Mexican women in Chiapas. Soldiers pay
100 pesos for virgins, 50 pesos for other girls, the prettiest are sold to
high-ranking officers. Girls, 11-13 year olds, are sold by their fathers into
prostitution. The girls are dishonored, while their fathers are not. ("Women
and Low Intensity Warfare" SIPAZ Report Vol. 3 No 1 (January 1998)
Case
Twenty women who once worked in the lower house of Congress accuse the woman
in charge of the pages of running a prostitution ring for lawmakers. Two former
pages said Montes de Oca trained the women to "stick out their chests, hike
up their skirts and smile at lawmakers." (Niko Price, Associated Press,
18 November 1997)
Health and Well-being
A large proportion of the minors used in the sex industry, catch sexually
transmitted diseases which leave them infertile, others contract AIDS. Some
25 homeless children contracted AIDS in the past two years after being forced
to engage in sexual activities. Many girls get pregnant, and are forced to
have abortions. All suffer serious psychological consequences. Children in
Mexico City and cities along the US border are at highest risk of sexual exploitation.
(Ser Humano, Diego Cevallos, "Sterile at Age 12, AIDS at 14," IPS,
10 February 1998)
Policy and Law
Mexico has no laws defining or sanctioning child prostitution and pornography
as criminal activity. (Diego Cevallos, "Sterile at Age 12, AIDS at 14," IPS,
10 February 1998)
Prostitution is legal in Mexico except in brothels, bars, nightclubs or cabarets,
thus forcing it onto the street. Pimping is against the law. (Rene Villegas,
"Mexico City prostitutes protest new rules," Reuter, 3 September 1997)
Women in prostitution in Mexico City now must follow a dress code, and are
limited to within two main districts. (Associated Press, 3 September
1997)
The World Agency Against AIDS, a group claiming to represent 800 women in
prostitution, signed a code of conduct agreement with Mexico City’s Cuanhtemoc
district government. The new rules ban solicitation on the street from 6 a.m.
to noon. The code does not address extortion from police, violent clients
and the commissions demanded by hotel owners. (Ana Maria Casimiro, leader
of La Merced prostitute’s group People of the World Against AIDS, Rene Villegas,
"Mexico City prostitutes protest new rules," Reuters, 3 September 1997)
Prostitution Tourism
Mexico is one of the favored destinations of pedophile sex tourists from
Europe and the United States. ("Global law to punish sex tourists sought by
Britain and EU," The Indian Express, 21 November 1997
An estimated 5,000 children are currently involved in prostitution, pornography
and sex-tourism in Mexico. Nearly 100 children and teenagers a month fall
into the hands of the child prostitution networks which are mafias or organized
crime syndicates. (Elena Azola, Diego Cevallos, "Sterile at Age 12, AIDS at
14," IPS, 10 February 1998)
NGO Action
300 participants of the National Meeting of Sex Workers in Mexico called
for an end to police abuse and discrimination that has denied them everything
from health care to basic dignity. One person said that they receive death
threats from police. Prostitution is legal in Mexico, but brothels are not.
(Dan Trotta, "Mexican prostitutes band together to demand rights", Reuters,
22 July 1998)
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| PORNOGRAPHY |
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In 1996 U.S. Postal Service announced that Mexico
City was one of the leading producers of child pornography videos. (Diego
Cevallos, "Sterile at Age 12, AIDS at 14," IPS, 10 February 1998)
Case
Over Sea Service Mail Company produced pornographic
videos using 7-11 year old children. Videos sold for $250 each. The list of
clients included some 2,000 addresses all located in the U.S. (Diego Cevallos,
"Sterile at Age 12, AIDS at 14," IPS, 10 February 1998)
In 1996 Mexican authorities discovered a house in
Acapulco where pornographic videos were filmed using children ranging in age
from newborns to 18 year olds. Two U.S. citizens and four Mexicans were implicated.
(Diego Cevallos, "Sterile at Age 12, AIDS at 14," IPS, 10 February
1998)
In 1996, Mexican police broke up an international
child pornography ring based in Acapulco which had at least 4,000 clients
from the U.S. ("Mexico under fire over child abuse," BBC, 14 November
1997)
Policy and Law
Mexican justice system is inadequate to protect children
from abuse such as child pornography. (Ofelia Calcetas-Santos, United Nations
Special Rapporteur on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and and Child
Pornography, "Mexico under fire over child abuse," BBC, 14 November
1997)
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ORGANIZED AND INSTITUTIONALIZED
SEXUAL EXPLOITATION AND VIOLENCE |
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From June 1994-early January 1998, 45 females have been sequestered, wounded,
tortured, raped, or murdered by military and paramilitary fighting in Chiapas.
(Synopsis by Gloria Huretas de la Doble Jornada, 11 January 1998, Masiosare,
28 December 1997, the Information Service of Centro Agustin Pro Juarez & testimonies
collected from women of San Cristobal" Chiapas: The Silenced Death, Geometric
increments of violence against women in Chiapas")
Policy and Law
In mid-1997 the Mexican Supreme Court ruled that violently forcing a spouse
to engage in sexual relations was not rape but the "undue exercise of a right."
(Eduardo Molinay Vedia, "Mexico: Supreme Court Legitimises Rape of Spouses,
Critics Say," InterPress Third World News Agency, 16 June 1997)
On July 1991, Mexico revised its rape law, eliminating a provision that allowed
a man who rapes a minor to avoid prosecution if he agrees to marry her. (Report
of the Special Rapporteur, "Women and Violence," United Nations Department
of Public Information, February 1998)
Official Corruption and Collaboration
Two Mexican Federal police officers have been jailed for the rape of a fourteen-year-old
street girl, in a case pursued by Casa Alianza on behalf of the young girl,
with the support of the Public Ministry. A recent court ruling, by the 12th
Penal Judge of Mexico City, sentenced officer Perez Davila to eleven years
imprisonment and officer Sanchez Ramirez to nine years and six months imprisonment.
"In all too few cases these public figures are arrested and punished for their
crimes. This is a sad reminder that the sexual abuse of children continues,
but it is good to see that at times justice can prevail," said Bruce Harris
the Regional Director of Casa Alianza in Latin America. ("Two Mexican Federal
Police Officers Jailed for Raping Street Child," Press Release, Casa Alianza,
17 August 1998)
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