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- <text id=93TT1935>
- <link 93TO0129>
- <title>
- June 21, 1993: Defiling the Children
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 21, 1993 Sex for Sale
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 52
- Defiling the Children
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In the basest effect of the burgeoning sex trade, the search
- for newer thrills has chained increasing numbers of girls and
- boys to prostitution
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL S. SERRILL--With reporting by Bruce Crumley/Paris, Ann M. Simmons/Moscow and
- Rhea Schoenthal/Bonn, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Sasha, a scruffy-looking long-haired resident of Moscow, has
- a lucrative profession. He sells the sexual services of small
- boys. His base of operations is a garden in front of Moscow's
- magnificent Bolshoi Theatre, where both local and foreign clients
- know to seek him out. Sasha pimps for a number of male teenagers
- who hang out with him near the Bolshoi, but his main "team"
- consists of three younger boys--Marik, 8, and Volodya and
- Dima, both 9.
- </p>
- <p> The three boys wound up in Sasha's clutches when they were cast
- into the street during the social upheaval that followed the
- collapse of communism. The ex-collective farmworker dresses
- them up in girls' clothes and sells their favors, given eagerly,
- he maintains, for as little as $20 a day. "I am helping them,"
- he insists, flashing gold teeth set into a pockmarked face.
- "This type of work is profitable. The boys are grateful."
- </p>
- <p> The exploitation of Marik, Volodya and Dima exemplifies the
- single most unsavory element of the worldwide growth in the
- sex trade: an explosion in child prostitution, driven in part
- by the fear of AIDS. In Moscow alone an estimated 1,000 boys
- and girls of tender age are selling their bodies. Three years
- ago, police say, there were only a very few. A similar rise
- in child prostitution has occurred in other Russian and East
- European cities. In the Third World the numbers are also staggering:
- an estimated 800,000 underage prostitutes in Thailand, 400,000
- in India, 250,000 in Brazil and 60,000 in the Philippines. The
- newest international sites for child prostitution: Vietnam,
- Cambodia, Laos, China and the Dominican Republic.
- </p>
- <p> Everywhere, including affluent Europe and the U.S., the pattern
- is the same: kids run away to escape domineering parents or
- because they are being physically or sexually abused, or they
- are kicked out because their parents can't or don't want to
- take care of them. Some children fall into prostitution through
- abduction or trickery. Easy prey, they become chattel for the
- sex merchants. Sasha says Marik was sold to him for a case of
- vodka, while he found Volodya abandoned at the Moscow railway
- station--together with thousands of other youngsters who have
- turned the terminal into a street urchin's paradise. Once victimized
- by the violent gangsters and pimps who control the sex trade,
- most children end up addicted to alcohol or drugs. Despair is
- the norm; suicide is common.
- </p>
- <p> At 11, Sandra Patricia has not reached puberty and yet has been
- a prostitute in Bogota, Colombia, for two years. The youngest
- of eight children, she fled an abusive stepfather for what she
- describes as the "dangerous but exciting" life of the streets.
- A recent Chamber of Commerce study concludes that the number
- of prostitutes ages 8 to 13 in Bogota has quintupled in the
- past seven years--while government funding of programs to
- help youth in trouble has declined. Sandra Patricia is riddled
- with venereal disease; her favorite pastime is sniffing glue.
- "I know I'm sick," she moans, "and people treat me like dirt,
- and sometimes I'd just like to die."
- </p>
- <p> Child prostitution is no less a product of poverty and drugs
- in the U.S. than it is in Colombia. Estimates of the number
- of U.S. prostitutes under age 18 range from 90,000 to 300,000.
- "The combined impact of the deterioration of the cities and
- the drug epidemic is driving this phenomenon forward fast,"
- says Kenneth Klothen, head of Defense for Children International
- U.S.A. in Philadelphia. Poor teenagers sell their bodies to
- acquire drugs, jewelry or even food and household items for
- their families. Once initiated, says Klothen, "kids learn that
- they can use sex to get things in the world--status, acceptance,
- material things--or the prevention of worse things, like physical
- abuse."
- </p>
- <p> The sex trade among children receives a further boost in the
- U.S. and elsewhere by the child pornography industry. In Germany
- annual sales of "kiddie porn" are estimated at $250 million
- and the number of consumers between 30,000 and 40,000. Since
- penalties in developed countries are severe, most dealers buy
- films made in Asia, where operations can be easily run from
- hotel rooms and where there is an abundance of potential victims
- in the streets.
- </p>
- <p> The market for child prostitutes has always been strong, especially
- in Asia. In India children command a price three times that
- of older women, in part because of a common belief that sex
- with a virgin or a child cures venereal disease. "Having sex
- with children provides a greater sexual thrill to many men,"
- explains I.S. Gilada, secretary-general of the Bombay-based
- Indian Health Organization. "They find it more titillating,
- and it gives them an added sense of power." To feed the sex
- market, tens of thousands of girls as young as 12 are recruited
- in Bombay and other cities; many are devadasis, "slaves of god,"
- a distorted legacy of a 7th century religious practice in which
- girls were dedicated to temples for lives of dance and prayer.
- Today the girls pledge fealty to the goddess Renuka at puberty
- and then--with the full knowledge of their parents--are
- shunted off to brothels.
- </p>
- <p> One of the more tragic, and ironic, reasons for the recent upswing
- in child prostitution is the mistaken belief that young sex
- partners are less likely to have AIDS. In fact, the opposite
- may be true. "Both boys and girls are more vulnerable to infection
- because they are prone to lesions and injuries in sexual intercourse,"
- says Dr. Pers-Anders Mardh, director of the World Health Organization's
- Collaborating Center for Sexually Transmitted Diseases in Uppsala,
- Sweden. "Imagine intercourse occurring millions of times under
- these conditions." The AIDS epidemic alone is enough to justify
- a crackdown on child prostitution, says Mardh. "There is too
- little attention being paid to the health of these children,"
- he says. "Yet they are playing Russian roulette with their lives."
- </p>
- <p> One survey found that more than 50% of Thai child prostitutes
- are HIV-positive. Still, with Thai men and foreign sex tourists
- unaware of or unfrightened by those statistics, the country
- has the world's largest child sex industry, and sex mobsters
- go to great lengths to find virginal youngsters. Entire villages
- in northern Thailand along the Burmese border are almost bereft
- of young girls because they have been sold into prostitution,
- often by parents willing to sacrifice a daughter for payments
- that range as high as $8,000. Having exhausted the Thai supply,
- child traffickers have expanded recruitment into Burma and China.
- And when the girls are no longer useful, they are tossed away.
- Prostitutes returned to Burma from Thailand infected with AIDS
- have reportedly been locked in prisons by the military government
- or even killed.
- </p>
- <p> A typical victim of the Thai trade in prepubescent sex is Armine
- Sae Li, 14. She was spirited away from northern Chiang Rai province
- at age 12 when child traffickers convinced her parents they
- would give her a good job in a beach-resort restaurant. When
- she reached Phuket, a center for sex tourism, she was forced
- into prostitution in conditions of virtual slavery until she
- was rescued last December by Thai police. But they arrived too
- late; Armine has tested HIV-positive and will die of AIDS.
- </p>
- <p> During Armine's brief career as a prostitute she entertained
- two to three customers a night, almost all of them foreigners.
- In recent years Europeans, Australians, Japanese and Americans
- have flocked to Southeast Asia by the thousands to engage in
- sex acts with Thai, Filipino and Sri Lankan youngsters that
- would win them a jail term in their home countries.
- </p>
- <p> Dozens of tourist agencies cater to this clientele, which is
- made up of both pedophiles and pederasts taking advantage of
- lax law enforcement in Third World nations. Pederasts in particular
- have lots of help in finding a good time in Asia, Africa or
- Latin America. Numerous gray-market publications and computer
- networks provide information. One of the most notorious guides
- to world sex spas for homosexuals seeking boys is called the
- Spartacus International Gay Guide; available since the 1970s,
- it is now published in Germany in several languages.
- </p>
- <p> One Mecca for pederasts is Sri Lanka. "There are no ads in catalogs
- for sex tours, and yet people are coming for sex," says Maureen
- Seneviratne, an anti-child prostitution activist in Colombo.
- Guides to the local boy-sex scene are easy to find, she says,
- and the illegal trysts frequently occur behind the walls of
- well-guarded compounds where police never venture.
- </p>
- <p> Another favorite destination is Pagsanjan in the Philippines,
- about 40 miles south of Manila. Many sex tourists return there
- again and again, and have established permanent relationships
- with not just the boys of the town but their families as well.
- According to Ronnie Velasco, secretary of the Center for the
- Protection of Children in Pagsanjan, the wealthiest pederasts
- buy homes, businesses, automobiles and other expensive items
- for the boys' parents. Some even "adopt" boys and take them
- home to Europe or America.
- </p>
- <p> Tourism whose sole aim is the exploitation of children is so
- out in the open that a new organization has sprung up to combat
- it: ECPAT, or End Child Prostitution in Asian Tourism. Founded
- three years ago by three Asia-based Christian groups, ECPAT
- now has offices in 14 nations--there are four in the U.S.--and extensive links with religious and social organizations
- around the world dedicated to fighting child prostitution. Pressure
- by ECPAT and groups like it have already had some impact; in
- 1992 the Philippine government adopted a Child Protection Code
- to guard against child abuse. And Thai Prime Minister Chuan
- Leekpai has announced a campaign to wipe out child prostitution.
- </p>
- <p> But few expect much to come of such efforts. Rather, attempts
- to suppress the trade have shifted to the First World nations
- that supply the clients. "We live in a world of contradictions,
- lies and cowardice," says Francois Lefort, a French priest and
- doctor who has fought child prostitution throughout the world.
- "This problem is not just Bangkok's, Colombo's, Manila's. It's
- Paris', Brussels', Rome's. It's the nice, respectable white
- man who goes down there to molest these kids."
- </p>
- <p> Officials have recently taken the point to heart. In Australia
- the government has declared war on illicit sex tourism, and
- the federal police have been targeting travel agencies catering
- to pedophiles. Germany is expected to pass a law by the end
- of the summer that for the first time would make patrons of
- foreign child prostitutes violators of German law, as is already
- the case in France and the Scandinavian countries. "Sexual abuse
- of children is a crime, worldwide, and will be prosecuted by
- criminal law," warned German Bundestag President Rita Sussmuth
- in an address opening a May ECPAT conference in Stuttgart.
- </p>
- <p> In Britain 153 members of Parliament so far have signed a motion
- introduced in January asking Thailand to take action to stamp
- out sex tourism. "The Thai government has come down hard on
- foreigners who try to smuggle drugs into the country," M.P.
- Nigel Evans told the House of Commons. "I only wish that they
- would come down equally hard on foreigners visiting Thailand
- to prey on the children of that country." Britons are apparently
- well represented among such visitors. In 1991 83% of all British
- tourists to the Philippines, and 80% of all visitors to the
- Philippines, were men.
- </p>
- <p> One effective fighter against sexploitation of children is the
- Task Force to End Child Exploitation in Thailand, a coalition
- of 24 government and private agencies dedicated to exposing
- links between Europe and the child sex trade in Bangkok. Last
- year the group disclosed the existence of a Swiss network of
- airline-ticket agencies catering to European pedophiles; one
- was shut down. Then last August the task force focused on Lauda
- Air, the Austrian-based airline owned by former auto-racing
- champ Niki Lauda, for running a caricature in its in-flight
- magazine that allegedly promoted child sex tourism.
- </p>
- <p> Lauda Air reluctantly agreed to withdraw the offending magazine
- from circulation, saying that the cartoonist's intention had
- been misinterpreted. Was the illustration a come-on aimed at
- pedophiles? Let the reader judge: the ad consisted of a mock
- postcard. On one side was a drawing of a bare-breasted little
- girl in a heart-shaped frame with the inscription "From Thailand
- with Love." The greeting on the back, signed by "Werner, Gunter,
- Fritzl, Morsel and Joe," read, "Got to close now. The tarts
- in the Bangkok Baby Club are waiting for us."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-