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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>