Showing posts with label Sex tourism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sex tourism. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 08, 2011

Man jailed over sex tourism in Cambodia

Wed Jun 8 2011
9News (Australia)

A Cambodian court on Tuesday sentenced a Danish man to eight years in prison for providing his young male guesthouse staff for sex with tourists, a judge said.

Svend Erick Jonasson, 65, was arrested in the northwestern tourist hub of Siem Reap last August for letting his guests have sex with four male Cambodian workers aged between 15 and 19.

The guests would allegedly pay them between $15 and $50 for sex, with Jonasson taking a cut.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Paying a high price for cheap sex

Prostitutes outside a brothel in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photograph: Rob Elliott/AFP/Getty Images
MAGAN' WORLD: Manchán Magan’s tales of a travel addict

Saturday, November 27, 2010
IrishTimes.com

HOW MUCH for a really good hooker in Cambodia these days? For a young one, just down from her remote mountain village.

As a travel supplement aimed at helping travellers get the best from their holidays it would be remiss of us not to cover this important tourism growth area. After all, 22 per cent of foreign visitors to Cambodia in 2000 were there for sex; no doubt some may have been Irish Times readers. So, in the interests of catering to readers of all tastes, let’s seek out the best value for yam-yam and bam-bam.

It might help first to take a quick glance at international sex trafficking statistics, as a large proportion of Cambodian sex workers are trafficked in from Vietnam and northern Thailand. The pretty little girl you buy is likely to have been either kidnapped by neighbours or sold by desperate relatives for a few hundred euro.

She will probably have been held in the brothel you found her in, or in some squat belonging to the pimp from whom you bought her, but one needn’t think of it as imprisonment.


She is, in theory, free to leave at any time, once she has paid back the expenses incurred in bringing her there. These debts aren’t as terribly crippling as you might imagine – a large proportion will have been cleared in the first few months, when she was first sold as a virgin for top dollar to a few lucky foreigners, after that her value quickly plummets, so that within a few months you could pick her up for less than €50 if you know how to bargain. Or even as low as €10 if you wait until she is strung out on heroin, and possibly infected with HIV.

By then the brothel has little use for her, and would be glad to sell her freedom to you for a nominal fee to cover any remaining charges for room and board, or any abortions she may have had to undergo due to “carelessness”.

It’s odd that although one may go to Cambodia seeking sex, one finds instead a last vestige of slavery, not the brutish, bewhiskered 19th century type involving scurrilous men in knee-length breeches and boots, but something more subtle and innocuous. The United Nations estimates that between 700,000 and 4 million people are cajoled from their homes and sold into slavery worldwide each year. Some 80 per cent are women, girls and young boys trafficked into commercial sexual exploitation. They are lured with false promises of low-skilled jobs in waitressing, modelling or domestic help, at ever younger ages: the average age of trafficked prostitutes in some Asian brothels is 14.

There’s unlikely to be a famous Harriet Tubman or Frederick Douglass-type figure leading an heroic revolution of enslaved sex workers to liberty, because such is the debased status of women in many Asian societies that some will have voluntarily agreed to their enslavement to help feed a hungry family or provide medicine for a sick relative. Once the money has been earned, in theory they are free to return home, but in practise a village community is unlikely to allow them forget their act of generosity. They will be stigmatised, unable to marry. Their sacrifice is for life – although that might not in fact be very long: many die of Aids by their 20s, or are so severely afflicted with post-traumatic stress disorder that they drink or drug themselves to an early grave.

The leading causes of death among trafficked women are homicide, suicide, drug/alcohol related problems and HIV. In fact, the homicide rate among trafficked women is 17 per cent higher then the average.

But, I’ve drifted off-topic. To get back to finding a really good prostitute in Cambodia. First off, I am told it’s best to say you are going on a golfing holiday.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Defamation fight to come before the bar

Tuesday, 18 May 2010
Cameron Wells and Chrann Chamroeun
The Phnom Penh Post


CHILD protection NGO Action Pour Les Enfants (APLE) is set to file a complaint with the Cambodian Bar Association regarding a lawyer who has accused the group of entrapping foreigners suspected of committing sex crimes.

Samleang Seila, APLE’s country director, confirmed the complaint would be lodged today, following a defamation lawsuit filed against the lawyer at Phnom Penh Municipal Court on Wednesday.

“We will ask the bar association to consider a fine, a professional suspension, or to cancel his lawyer’s license,” he said.

Defence lawyer Dun Vibol, who often represents foreigners in child sex cases, told the Post on May 10 that he believed entrapment had been employed by APLE “in most sex cases related to foreigners”, reiterating claims he has previously made in court.

Sok Sam Oeun, director of the legal aid organisation Cambodia Defenders Project, during a conference on May 7 also accused local NGOs and police of engaging in entrapment, although he declined to name which NGOs were complicit in the practice.

In its lawsuit, APLE accused Dun Vibol of lacking evidence to back up his accusations and deliberately slandering APLE to sway the group’s foreign donors, its partnerships with other NGOs and international law enforcement agencies. It states that Dun Vibol’s comments “damaged the reputation, dignity and determination of staff” at APLE.

The suit seeks to charge Dun Vibol under Article 63 of the 1992 UNTAC Criminal Code, which defines defamation as “any allegation or imputation” that harms the honour or reputation of an individual.

“We will ask for 20 million riels [around US$4,820] compensation, and a fine of 10 million riels [$2,440],” Samleang Seila added.

Phnom Penh Municipal Court officials could not be reached for comment Monday. But Dun Vibol said the complaints were “unacceptable”, and pledged to file a countersuit if the courts dropped the defamation charge.

“I would prepare a countersuit defamation charge against APLE if I find out that it has deliberately destroyed my reputation,” he said. “I will find evidence to defend myself by revealing APLE reports of its investigations against suspects.”

He again repeated claims that APLE allowed child sex crimes to occur despite having prior knowledge of them, in order to catch foreign men red-handed.

“They file records to police and court prosecutors two or three days in advance, before nabbing the foreigners,” he said, adding that APLE should have made “a thorough consideration” before bringing the case to court.

Separate case
APLE is also awaiting a decision after a separate complaint lodged with the Bar Association in June last year, when it accused Dun Vibol of bribing officials to change the age of a victim in a child sex case from 16 at the time of the abuse to 19, before submitting the forged documents with the falsified age to the courts.

Dun Vibol has previously denied that he submitted forged documents to the courts, but admitted paying an official $50 in “tea money” to expedite the process of confirming the age of the victim.

Bar association President Chiv Songhak could not be reached for comment Monday, but said last Wednesday that the investigation into the complaint would soon be complete.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Take your Cambodian dream girl back home with you! [-Commercialization of Cambodian women?]


Thursday 13 May 2010

By Frederic Amat
Cambodge Soir Hebdo
Translated from French by Mo Ly Yeah!
Click here to read the article in the language of Molière

The jerks dare to do anything, that’s what they are known for,” said the father in the French movie “Tontons flingueurs” (Crooks in Clover). However, in this case, one really needs to be very daring.
Following the false article published by a local news media [Koh Santepheap] offering a young woman for marriage for the modest sum of $1 million, now, it is about a real advertisement openly comparing Cambodian women to exotic souvenirs that the [foreign or expat?] men can now “take back home.” Thus, in addition to the local consumption [of these women] during the few short weeks of vacation under banana trees [because it’s a banana kingdom?], you can now discover new methods to bring these Cambodian women of your dream back home in your luggage [none the least?] !

When heard about this news in a bar somewhere late at night, such comparison would have shocked even the most machos of the misogynists. But, in this case, the news is spread on a half-page ad in a free English-language tourist guide which is distributed in Phnom Penh. The guide is also used a bible source by a handful of compulsive partygoers. “The” late night guide is aimed at men who prefer to spend their night of solitude in parlors known for sharpening their male libido [sex parlor or brothel in plain English]. The latest edition of this guide includes a hallucinating claim placed among traditional ads which usually give out details on the charms of identical bars whereby sardines are disguised as mermaids. However, this peculiar ad boasts the merits of a company which specializes in obtaining for Cambodian women (and women only please!) real visas allowing them to travel overseas. While very explicit, the ad is not placed there by chance because, after all, this guide is aimed towards single men who, preferably, like the ease of their encounters….

Four pictures are shown: the first one features a young woman who is all smile, she is happy because she just obtained her prize, a visa allowing her to leave for Europe. She is showing her passport with great pride, just like Marcel Pagnol’s father showing off his rock partridge birds [allusion to a French novel by Marcel Pagnol]. The second picture shows a handsome blond man next to a local damsel, both of them busy filling out forms. The other two photos show visas affixed on other passports, both belonging to pretty local ladies.

The large and bold letters in the ad read: “Get Visa…! Take her back home with you.”

One can almost imagine the more explicit question that would go like this: “Did you sample her? Does she fit your taste? Don’t leave her behind on the sidewalk. Take her home with you!” The ad does not mention if one can take back to one’s own “home sweet home” several of these delicacies. Since one took such a long journey, might as well take advantage of it… [sic!]

This type of society, where [paid] local services are provided for administrative steps needed for foreign consular offices, can be found in several countries in the region, starting with Thailand. However, there, the ad is addressed to everybody, men and women without distinction. Furthermore, the Thai ads would never refer to human beings as products that one can take back home.

In some countries, such as the US and those belonging to the Schengen Agreement [Europe], suspicions are raised when a visa application is filed for young women, especially when they declare that they are traveling on a tourist visa with a foreign man who is three times older than them. How then can a damsels? But, it is also true that the ad only claims that it “can help” to obtain the visa.

Short of being able to obtain a visa for the women of their dream, the [male] sex tourists can always take back home a full human size wooden Apsara statue that can be bought at the Russian market. For sure these statues are very cumbersome, but at least they do not talk back and they do not require any maintenance either. When you settle these Apsara statues on the mantle of your chimney at home, you can at least wait patiently until your next vacation in Cambodia, which hopefully by then, you would be able to successfully bring back a real one “home,” just like what the ad claims! The ad should have added also: “Hurry up! This is a limited time offer, not everyone will get one!”, shouldn’t it?

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Congresswoman Examines Cambodia’s Sex Trade

Sisters, Reps. Linda Sanchez, D-Calif., left, and Loretta Sanchez, D-Calif, pose during a re-enactment of their swearing-in ceremony on Capitol Hill in Washington. (Photo: AP)

In an exclusive interview with VOA Khmer, US Rep. Loretta Sanchez, a Democratic congresswoman from California said she had wanted to look into the issues of human trafficking, especially sex trafficking.

Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Washington Monday, 19 April 2010

“Cambodia is a destination, that means that Westerners, including US citizens, go to Cambodia for the sex trade. Mostly because they can afford it—you know, because people are poor there—they use their money to buy in particular children and young women…to have sex with.”
US Rep. Loretta Sanchez, a Democratic congresswoman from California, recently returned from a fact-finding trip to Cambodia. In an exclusive interview with VOA Khmer, Sanchez said she had wanted to look into the issues of human trafficking, especially sex trafficking.

“Cambodia is a destination,” she said. “That means that Westerners, including US citizens, go to Cambodia for the sex trade. Mostly because they can afford it—you know, because people are poor there—they use their money to buy in particular children and young women…to have sex with.”

In its attempt to curtail the crime, the US has helped Cambodia strengthen its laws, she said.

“We have helped Cambodia to make its judicial system better, so that it can in fact prosecute people,” she said. “We have put in an [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] unit and put in our immigration people to train [the authorities], to show them the signs for when these people come into Cambodia.”

The US also has officials from the Department of Homeland Security working with border and immigration authorities, as well as assistants to help the judiciary and court system.

The US also has an extradition treaty with Cambodia that helps bring perpetrators of sex crimes back to the US for prosecution if they do not face trial in Cambodia, she said.

“And we have investigators there,” she said. “We have people helping the local police be trained so we catch these people [beforehand], as they are trying to come into the country.”

Sanchez said the US was serious about prosecutions and would not attempt to alleviate sentences for US citizens found guilty of sex crimes.

Sanchez has worked on human trafficking issues at the US-Mexico border, as well as in the communities of Cambodians, Filipinos and Vietnamese in Orange Country, Calif., which she represents.

“So it is a big issue for me, an issue that I am passionate about, and I knew that there was a lot of this going on with respect to Cambodia, so I wanted to go to Cambodia on this trip,” she said.

Sanchez also looked into the US military’s role in the country and the region, demining operations and counterterrorism.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Tourism a Boon to Siem Reap Prostitution

By Vong Dara, VOA Khmer
Original report from Siem Reap
15 March 2010


In recent years, Siem Reap province, the home of the Angkor temples, has seen its tourism numbers grow beyond 2 million. Luxury hotels, restaurants and entertainment clubs have all grown around this boon. But so has prostitution.

“If you have money, you can find a girl,” a motorcycle taxi driver name Por said recently. Por, who declined to give his full name, finds prostitutes for visiting tourists.

“There are prostitutes in karaoke, in clubs, and she will come out for $30 or $35 for one night’s sleep,” he said.

“The sex business is behind the massage salon,” said another guide who wished not to be named at all.

For the workers, prostitution is an underground industry.

“Most go out [with clients] without showing that we are working directly [in prostitution],” said one worker in a Siem Reap town karaoke club.

Residents here like Mao Yin say the problem is getting worse, and the local government is not doing enough.

“They do not take action frequently,” she said. “A lack of action has dishonored our province.”

However, Sun Bun Thang, the head of the provincial counter-trafficking office, acknowledged the problem is increasing, but he said the authorities are doing what they can.

Eight entertainment clubs have recently been closed due to association with the sex trade, he said.

“We have to find evidence before action,” he said. “If we only see karaoke, we cannot identify that place as a brothel.”

Tuesday, March 02, 2010

US, Cambodia Bolster Efforts on Sex Crimes

By Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
01 March 2010


Cambodia and the US agreed to make stronger efforts to fight sex tourism and sex trafficking on Monday, with the US increasingly cracking down of sex offenders here.

Fourteen Americans are facing charges in the US on allegations of sex crimes in Cambodia, said John Morton, assistant secretary for the Department of Homeland Security, who signed the pact with National Police Chief Neth Savoeun.

The two sides signed a letter of intent to increase training and improve bilateral cooperation of investigations of sex crimes, following Morton’s arrival.

Morton, who arrived on Monday, met with NGO leaders in Phnom Penh and was scheduled to meet with immigration and archeology officials and others in Siem Reap on Tuesday.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

'Bachelor' No. 3, does your wife know where you are right now?

French men joke and flirt with a Cambodian woman along the Tonle Sap River in Phnom Penh. Lax law enforcement and poverty have made Cambodia a prime destination for foreigners seeking sex, especially with minors. (Photo: Paula Bronstein / Getty Images)

Friday, October 09, 2009

'No Thanks, I'm Not a Sex Tourist'

A sex worker in Phnom Penh. Credit: UNAIDS/S. Noorani

And yet, how I ended up doing a bit of business with a Cambodian prostitute.

9 Oct 2009
By Luke T. Johnson
TheTyee.ca


It was not my intention to pay for the services of a prostitute in Cambodia. But it was the least I could do.

My dalliance with that young woman at dawn was spontaneous, infinitely relieving and wholly chaste. It capped, for me, a vicarious romp through the Southeast Asian nation's booming sex industry, a first-hand look at the desperation born out of decades of corruption and suffering.

Hardship and human trafficking

Cambodia can be a very grim place. It was carpet bombed by the United States during the Vietnam War, followed by genocide led by Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge from 1975-1979. The latter atrocity killed nearly 2 million Cambodians -- nearly a quarter of the population. Today about half of the population of 14 million is under 20 years old.


The last three decades have seen Cambodia claw its way back to some sort of normalcy. Transparency International still ranks it as one of the world's most corrupt nations, but that hasn't kept the tourists out. With the magnificent Angkor Wat complex of temples in the north and miles of pristine beaches in the south, Cambodia has seen an increasing number of visitors in the past 10 years as tourism has become a pillar of the country's meager economy.

But economic development and the growth in tourism have brought along with them a marked increase in human trafficking. The UN Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking (UNIAP) cites the rise in tourism and an imbalance in urban-rural development in the past decade as contributing factors to human trafficking. With few jobs in the countryside and a young population earning barely US$1.50 a day, desperate families may sell their children to traffickers, who promise employment opportunities in well-travelled urban areas such as Phnom Penh, Siem Reap and Sihanoukville.

Many of those trafficked are women and children who end up selling sex in brothels, beer gardens and karaoke bars in these cities. But just because someone is a prostitute does not mean she is a victim of trafficking. The exact numbers are difficult to pin down, but a U.N. official told me that of the 20,000-30,000 prostitutes working in Cambodia, probably about 10 per cent consider themselves trafficked. That number likely does not include women who were tricked or fell into prostitution through other circumstances, however.

Sex tourist magnet

Nevertheless, the industry thrives. Patrick Stayton, the Cambodia field office director of International Justice Mission (IJM), a faith-based human-rights agency, says the quick-cash nature of prostitution has made it a generally accepted part of the culture in Cambodia. As a result, the country has become an attractive destination for so-called "sex tourists" -- those who travel abroad to fulfill their carnal needs.

And with such low overhead to start selling sex, Stayton says, supply can easily keep up with demand: "For a brothel, you just need someplace with a roof over it and a ratty old mattress. I mean, the guys that come in to support this kind of thing, they're not looking for five-star hotels. They'll do it basically anywhere."

Though it's the Caucasian sex tourists who stand out, the majority of johns in Cambodia are Asian. Unlike Westerners, who usually travel alone and find what they're looking for on the streets, beaches and in expat bars, Stayton says, tourists from China, Japan or Korea tend to travel in groups, visiting entertainment establishments like karaoke bars and massage parlors on pre-arranged tours, "because that's more their style."

'Boom-boom' for sale

The southwestern city of Sihanoukville -- with large chunks of land and even several islands owned by foreigners -- is a top destination for tourists of all kinds, but especially sex tourists. I was unaware of its notoriety when I boarded the bus in Phnom Penh with a friend to spend a few days there.

Sihanoukville, a sister city to Seattle, is home to Cambodia's lone international port and sits on a peninsula jutting into the Gulf of Thailand. In 2005, the New York Times called it the "next Phuket".

We had been in town less than ten minutes before an enterprising young man driving us to our hotel in his tuk-tuk (a motorised rickshaw) asked if we were interested in some "boom-boom," the not-so-secret code word for paid-for sex. It would be the first of countless offers we would decline.

Lawless law enforcement

Prostitution is technically illegal in Cambodia. It was criminalised last year with the passage of the Law on the Suppression of Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation, a move widely seen as an attempt by the Cambodian government to win favour with the U.S. State Department, which duly removed Cambodia from its annual human-trafficking watch list shortly after the law's passage.

The law itself is ambiguous at best and may even do more harm than good. The prostitutes and victims of trafficking -- those whom the law is supposedly intended to help -- reportedly are, in practice, the targets of widespread and often violent crackdowns, as police have no means or real motivation to distinguish between trafficked and non-trafficked sex workers. A recent article in The Economist cited reports of women and children who were beaten and raped while in detention following a crackdown, and suggested the crackdowns were negatively impacting progress made in fighting HIV/AIDS in Cambodia.

The State Department's 2009 report, which placed Cambodia back onto the trafficking watch-list, says that despite numerous raids on brothels, police failed "to arrest, investigate or charge any large number of persons for human-trafficking offenses."

The report continues: "Corruption is pervasive in Cambodia and it is widely believed that many individuals, including police and judicial officials, are both directly and indirectly involved in trafficking. Some local police and government officials are known to extort money or accept bribes from brothel owners, sometimes on a daily basis, in order to allow the brothels to continue operating."

Exploited children

The price of boom-boom for a Caucasian in Sihanoukville starts at about US$5, but $25 can usually get you a partner for an entire night. Oral sex, or "yum-yum," costs between $3 and $5. Generous customers might give tips of 100 to 200 per cent.


It's not hard to spot the sex tourists in Sihanoukville. Often sitting at tables surrounded by scantily clad ladies, they'll try to make awkward conversation until their solicitor's vocabulary has been exhausted and then surreptitiously saunter off, either to a room in the back or somewhere otherwise unseen. Or you'll see them walking down the street usually towering over the petite woman or women at their side, maybe holding hands to give themselves the impression that this relationship is more pure than it actually is.

These are the johns that few of the NGOs or human-rights groups are concerned about. Though maybe a little sad, these sex tourists are merely taking advantage of a quasi-legitimate service being offered, and no one really complains about the money they bring in.

What groups like IJM and Action Pour Les Enfants are really concerned about is child-sex tourism. The poverty and lawlessness of Cambodia has created an environment relatively friendly to pedophiles, who can find victims as young as 6 if they look in the right places. Sihanoukville indeed has some of those places, though indications are that they are not as prevalent as they once were.

It's impossible to know exactly how many child prostitutes -- defined as under 15 by the 2008 Sexual Exploitation Law -- are currently working in Cambodia. And opinions differ as to how much the situation has improved. IJM's Stayton says "pedophiles have to be more careful these days, because they know they can’t walk around as freely as they have in the past," though he says opportunities for pedophiles have not necessarily decreased.

Education campaigns have helped. The Childsafe program of Friends International, a child-advocacy NGO, trains and certifies Cambodian tuk-tuk drivers to be more aware of the dangers children face. Other countries, including Canada, have laws banning their citizens from travelling abroad to have sex with minors. Canada has caught two such offenders since the law was strengthened in 2002 -- Vancouver man Donald Bakker, who pleaded guilty in 2005, and Kenneth Robert Klassen, who is facing 35 sex-tourism-related charges. Canada, however, has also been criticised for not enforcing its law strongly enough.

Taking the tour


My time in Sihanoukville did not bring me into contact with any pedophiles, as far as I know. But my friend and I were given a tour of the town by a couple of local expatriates who are well familiar with some of the seedy hot spots.

The port, the point of entry for horny sailors, is Sihanoukville's cheapest and dirtiest red-light district and is located a few kilometres outside downtown. It's a dirt strip about 200 metres long, lined with shacks and huts with fluorescent red and blue lights dangling from the eaves and rows of catcalling women.

We rode our rented motorbikes from one end to the other, and the second we stopped to turn around we were swarmed by ladies desperate for work. One jumped on the back of my bike and said, "Let's go!" It was the beginning of the rainy season and most of the clientele had dried up, so two white guys in the middle of the night looked like hot commodities. They surely felt more than disappointment when we sped away.



Back in town, at a brothel in the Blue Mountain area, we sipped cans of Anchor Beer ("An-chore", not to be confused with Angkor, Sihanoukville's local brew) as a pleasant young lady kept us company, all but begging us to take her into one of the rooms in back, as cockroaches the size of my thumb scuttled across the dirt floor underfoot. She said she was Vietnamese, as were most of the girls at this place. Cambodia scores an unholy human-trafficking trifecta as a country of transit, origin and destination for victims. As many as 80 percent of the prostitutes trafficked to Cambodia are from Vietnam.

We gave our hostess a couple dollars for her time. She smiled, gave us each a hug and waved as we rode away.

Help in an emergency

On my last night in town we went down to Serendipity Beach (Ochheuteal Beach) to watch the sun rise. The beach is known for its ladyboys, but was mostly empty by the time we got there. I had a bus to catch at 7:45 AM and it was getting to be time to go. We gathered our things and mounted our motorbikes, but I was missing something... my keys! How they fell out of my pocket, I have no idea, but a full-scale search ensued, retracing steps and sifting through sand.


I was growing more and more anxious; the bike rental place had our passports, and without the keys I had no way to return the bike. A couple of prostitutes and some unseemly men had appeared. My friend said, "You know, if you leave the bike here, it'll be gone in 10 minutes." I knew.



Sensing the emergency, the prostitutes kindly joined our search. Just as hopelessness was setting in and I prepared to give up, one of the girls exclaimed and held up a sandy set of keys... my keys! Sweet relief. I took the keys and pulled a crisp $5 bill out of my wallet and handed it to my savior. She blushed and declined at first, asking if I wouldn't rather go over there so she could earn it. She promptly changed her mind and took the money, and I was off.



And that's how I came to pay a prostitute -- money well spent. For the price of a blowjob, I was able to leave Sihanoukville and Cambodia with my passport, some knowledge, and my dignity.

Luke Johnson is a former Vancouverite now reporting from Asia.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

UN expert slams India, Cambodia, Thailand over sex tourism

GENEVA (AFP) — India, Cambodia and Thailand are not doing enough to protect children against the risks associated with sex tourism for fear of damaging their economies, a UN human rights expert charged on Friday.

Juan Miguel Petit, the UN special rapporteur on the rights of children, said authorities in these countries are often not willing to tackle the issue of children's sexual exploitation for tourists' benefit.

"Sometimes there are big pressures on governments, explicitly or implicitly, when there are enormous touristic activities going on, making millions of dollars," he told journalists.

"Some interests see the limitation on the sexual market as a limitation for their earning of money," he added.

He denounced this "insane tourism that puts at risk the lives of hundreds and hundreds of children," saying it was against the public interest in such countries.

In general, Asia "continues to be a very difficult, alarming place" as far as human trafficking is concerned, Petit said.

Police often appear unconcerned about the scale and gravity of the problem, he charged.

"They accept this kind of crime in a passive way, as if their job was only to chase bank robbers," he said.

Many convicted Western sex offenders are drawn to Southeast Asia for its perceived laxness in terms of child sex.

British former pop star Gary Glitter, whose real name is Paul Gadd, was jailed for three years in Vietnam in 2005 for molesting girls aged 11 and 12.

He fled Britain for Southeast Asia, initially Cambodia, in 1999 after serving half of a four-month prison term for possession of child pornography.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Cambodian mother, friend charged over sale of daughter

Sat, 19 Jan 2008
DPA

Phnom Penh - A Cambodian mother and her female friend have been charged with selling her daughter and another young woman, local media reported Saturday. Som Vanny, 42, a karaoke shop owner, and her friend Sour Sarun, 55, were arrested after reports she had sold her 17-year-old daughter and another 20-year-old girl to a foreigner of unspecified nationality for sex, local newspaper Koh Santepheap reported.

The Khmer-language daily quoted Sun Bunthon, anti-trafficking police chief of the northern province of Siem Reap, 400 kilometres from the capital, as saying the two women face up to 20 years in jail if convicted. It did not say how they had pleaded.

Impoverished Cambodia, notorious for human trafficking and sexual exploitation, has made serious efforts to shake off its seedy reputation and made dozens of arrests in recent years. Karaoke shops are often thinly veiled fronts for prostitution in the country.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Trafficking: Safe travels these holidays - for all

11 Dec 2007
Laurence Gray, Regional Advocacy Director
World Vision International


An opinion piece by Laurence Gray, Regional Director Advocacy, World Vision Asia-Pacific

Holiday makers will flock to exotic destinations of South East Asia over the Christmas break for warmth, beaches and adventure. The presence of slavery is probably the last thing on their mind.

But human trafficking is exactly that - and this illegal and inhumane industry has many links to the tourist trade.

Around the world, an estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people are trafficked across borders each year - around 50% of them children. Even more are trafficked within their own country. Some of them are sent by their families in search of better opportunities; a small percentage are sold by them. Often children make themselves vulnerable to trafficking by running away from broken or violent and abusive home environments.

Where do they end up? South-East Asia's Mekong region has a reputation as a hotspot for the trafficking of young people, most notoriously into the underage sex scene. Children are forced or tricked into underground brothels, begging on streets, working on fishing boats and construction sites, and in farms and factories.

The many services which cater to tourism draw young people from near and far. Tourism is increasingly a vital economic driver and a valued source of employment in emerging economies. It brings prosperity, dynamism and enhances cultural richness. Investment in infrastructure and local business bring more visitors prepared to spend. High fliers, package tours, back packers and increasingly regional tourists all contribute to local economies.

While all this sounds good on paper, managing the impact of this growth on traditional lifestyles and values is a major challenge facing governments. Thailand has over 11 million visitors annually. Tourism is Cambodia's second largest source of employment, tipped shortly to become its number one industry. Ambitious for the recognition and profit the tourist industry brings, these countries risk racking up high costs for local communities.

"Sex, sun and heritage"

Following a request from Greater Mekong Sub-region governments, World Vision and the UNIAP commissioned study into tourist-based exploitation in the region. The resulting report, "Sex, Sun and Heritage: Tourism Threats and Opportunities in South East Asia," will be presented as part of the Coordinated Mekong Ministerial Initiative against Trafficking meeting in Beijing on Dec 12-14.

The report reveals an ugly side to the economic promise tourism brings. Families and individuals are drawn in to economic hubs as demand for construction and entertainment services grow. These are most noticeable at international centers close to air links and border points as a result of increased regional tourism. It is here where the demand has fueled the growth of services where exploitation can and does occur.

A story like Sokha's shows clearly the relationship between tourism, exploitation, trafficking and poverty. Sokha was sold to a tourist at the age of 12 to assist her family in Cambodia with medical treatment. There was no going back; Sokha stayed in prostitution until she became sick and clients refused to take her. She had contracted HIV and AIDS, and died at the age of 16 weighing less than 20 kilograms. Sokha received no support from her family, community or government.

Living in a World Vision shelter in the last months of her life, Sokha expressed her anger at the injustice which had allowed her and others like her to be used in this way.

The report gives a snapshot of two member countries working with civil society on efforts to counter sexual exploitation and trafficking of children linked to tourism. Good practices are highlighted, difficulties and observations noted which are valuable to the countries of the Mekong sub region and beyond. Social responsibility from businesses such as international hotel chain Accor is recognized as a strong contributor. Awareness campaigns in regional languages have increased profile of the issues, though greater targeting of messages is needed to reach an increasing number of Asian tourists.

Successful partnerships with government on industry evaluation and protection of vulnerable groups exist, but need scaling up. As well, governments need a sustained engagement on questions of migration, trafficking and smuggling in this diverse and rapidly changing region.

The key to reducing trafficking in Asia and the Pacific is in the hands of national governments. Many are hesitant to change laws or enforce them, especially in cultures where child labour is common or sexual exploitation is lucrative. It is hoped that this week's Beijing forum will further increase political will in the countries of the GMS to understand and act on child trafficking and sexual exploitation. Tourist businesses, companies and services have the opportunity to join them in this goal.

To this end, the report contributes valuable evidence of need for a united, sincere response involving governments, corporates and communities: action plans, policies and cross-border collaborations.

Tourism is maybe the only industry in the world which, by its very nature, brings the wealthy and the poor into contact with each other. At one extreme of this interaction is exploitation including child sex tourism. At the other is understanding, interest and a desire to protect and preserve local heritage. Long after the photos have faded, the impact of that tourism decision will be felt.

Let's make our choices count!

Laurence Gray moved to Cambodia in 1995 to work with children in crisis, including trafficked children and children on the street. Laurence now advises on advocacy and child protection responses in eighteen countries regionally.

For interview or further comment:

Laurence Gray, Regional Advocacy Director, World Vision Asia-Pacific, laurence_gray@wvi.org

Abid Gulzar, Project Manager, Regional Advocacy Anti Child Trafficking Project (GMS), abid_gulzar@wvi.org

Download the executive summary:
http://www.wvasiapacific.org/images/Publications/execsummEnglr.pdf

Download the report:
http://www.wvasiapacific.org/images/Publications/sunsexheritage.pdf

Friday, October 19, 2007

LOVE FOR SALE: Neary Kroup Lak and the Economics of Sex


Phnom Penh Post, Issue 16 / 21, October 19 - November 1, 2007

I believe the health of our nation hinges on the liberation of our female population. We, Khmers, cannot expect social progress and economic development to occur in a vacuum, without the empowerment of our sisters, daughters, and wives. This will require us to alter our thinking regarding what it means to be an 'ideal Khmer woman', neary kroup lak, as outlined by the Women's Code of Conduct or Chbap Srei. She need not be the deferential, submissive, homely, soft-spoken, well-mannered, long-haired, almond-eyed Asian mannequin of society.

Instead, let her breathe air after 6 PM; let her be educated; let her speak her mind; let her explore; let her skin and scrape her knees a little.

Tradition and customs protect her from vices and being misunderstood, people explain. But I believe we hold on tightly to these customs and forms, partly, to counter the rising social ills of prostitution-to prove to ourselves and others that we Khmer pride ourselves on values and decorum. This holds true for men in particular, who proclaim their commitment to these values as a way of absolving themselves of their involvement.

We may excoriate the debased foreigners who come to our country to exploit the very fragile legal, enforcement infrastructure and the young girls, but we have to face the fact that the majority of the clients in the red light districts are actually our Khmer men.

Immorality and amorality

A while back I helped with a translation of a film on prostitution in Cambodia. In an interview with a 'john', I was struck by the glibness and lackadaisical attitude of this moto-taxi driver, who visited prostitutes on a regular basis because he wanted to try how a 'fat' one differs from a 'skinny' one, or how a 'white' one differs from his wife. Moreover, he could do things to prostitutes he could not do to his wife.

Besides repulsion, I was struck by a devastating thought: he lives in a society that is slipping beyond immorality into amorality. With immorality, at least his conscience pricks him to tell him his acts are wrong. But with amorality, a person is so de-sensitized that he does not care.

Where is love amidst this cruel bond? Where is romance and intimacy amidst this vile union? How can something so beautiful be so degraded? But sadly, as is often the case, the greater the beauty the greater is the perversion.

How is it that lust has replaced love, what is permissible preferred over the best? Has he not ever experienced that exquisite union of souls where the acute swelling of heart and tightening of muscles have nothing to do with carnal knowledge but everything to do with the best of the beloved? Where the knees give way, the chest pounds, and the throat dries up when we catch glimpses of the ethereal beauty of the adored?

Legacy of UNTAC

Under its rule, the Khmer Rouge can be credited with abolishing 'the oldest profession' in our country. This condition remained so until the presence of the United Nations in 1992. The invasion of 26,000 UN blue berets-young men culled from all over the world, paid with generous UN salaries-created a demand that was quickly supplied by the poverty-stricken female population (many trucked in from Vietnam, commerce transacted by local officials) in satisfying the libidos of these men. The United Nations paid these peacekeepers several thousand dollars per month in a country on the verge of extinction whose population lived on almost nothing.

The UN peacekeepers have been long gone, but the trade of selling bodies and souls continue. In certain situations, the girls sacrifice their bodies for the survival of their family. In other cases, the parents sell their daughters as part of the human cargo and trafficking that make for common occurrences that do not even raise an eyebrow anymore.

This social ill inflicts fatal wounds on all levels of our Khmer society, and its worst twists spiral down from the highest echelons of power.

Beauty and power

Beauty is attracted to power, power to beauty. A most despicable cycle of violence has been spiraling in our present-day society whereby the first wives of prominent men hunt down much younger second wives or mistresses of their philandering husbands. Time and again, we read the same storyline, with only the names changed: vengeful wives, armed with an entourage of bodyguards, attacking the girls with skin-eating acid thrown onto faces and bodies. The intent is not to kill so much as to deform. In a culture of impunity, these perpetrators have yet to face justice.

There is no winner in this situation. Everyone is to blame; everyone is a victim; everyone is a perpetrator. The issue is not one of justification for the younger women-sometimes a refusal can turn dangerous-but of proportionality and just deserts.

And the cruelty of it all-women are pitted against women, encouraged and circumscribed by a cultural, social and economic construct where the sexual degradation of one is to preserve the twisted ideal of another!

Economics of sex

The problem raises the larger issue of how we are to live, whether we want to live in a society where "love" is purely an economic equation and is up for sale; whether we want to live in a society where our daughters and sisters can aspire to nothing greater than the wife or commodity of a wealthy man, of an Okhna, of a white man, of a minister. Have we resigned ourselves to accepting the union of a beautiful 16-year old girl with a scraggly 60-year old man as normal? Is it ageism or an issue of power and choice? If we believe love is the foundation of such a union, I don't think we would be so uneasy (or queasy!), but rather rejoice with this most fortunate of a man! Do we as a society not feel the onus and responsibility for creating more opportunities and empowering our women or are we so ready to disown the many living in sexual slavery because we are free from it? Are we not concerned for the larger implication of what it means for us as a people, as a nation?

Or can we carelessly dismiss this as fate and neatly absolve the problem with a simple classification of neary kroup lak or "good" girls versus "bad" girls. If we are to pause and deeply assess the present-day status of Khmer women, our values and actions, is this categorization even meaningful? Many times, is not the line of respectability a bit blurred and skewered and based more on economics and social status rather than morality or ethics? Does not our current society quietly admire or envy a beautifully kept woman with a man of means, but treat with contempt and discard the pretty farm girl who has been trafficked into the sex trade for pennies?

Neary kroup lak reassessed

The Chbap Srei and the concept of the neary kroup lak must be reassessed in light of the realities of current society of 2007 (and not 1907) and where our society is heading. We can pretend to exist in a society of 100 years ago and to close our eyes to the changes around us, or we can face straight on the changes-often times unsettling and seemingly uncontrollable-and try to shape them. Change is never easy, especially when our identity, honor and worth are at stake. But rather than retreat and be defensive or act like an ostrich with its head stuck in the sand refusing to believe the obvious, we can, we should, we must take control of our destiny and impact it rather than living passively to be impacted upon.

If we are at all concerned about the state of affairs, we, Khmer women, need to be empowered through education and the exercising of our Constitutional and inherent rights; our Khmer men need to be educated concerning their own dignity and worth and the value and freedom of their Khmer women. It reflects our inadequacy and self-loathing when we feel we need to demean and one-up another; we must fight against this tendency to devalue each other as Khmer.

It also reflects our imbalance when we kow-tow to anything foreign or display passive-aggressive attitudes to them when we feel slighted; we must take care not to praise disproportionately or misplace our criticism of foreigners, for no one can give us or take away our inherent values, as no one can look down on us-without our consent.

And we are consenting when we mistreat each other, particularly our own women; we are consenting when we close our eyes to the misery of the vulnerable, of the fatherless, of the elderly, of the landless, of the disabled, of the needy; we are consenting when we abuse the rights of our own people and create conditions where they are forced to beg for the most basic of necessities.

We both need to understand that in destroying the souls of our wives, daughters and sisters, we are destroying our own souls; we are consenting.

We of both sexes must be braver to withstand the social stigmas and temptations and value each other. If we are at all serious and concerned for the welfare of our society, there is no other way. We must translate lip service into active service of care, compassion and individual transformation.

Presumption against Khmer women

To be human is to desire. But there are times, when our heart's desire has to be subordinated and sacrificed for a larger good. Even as our heart is being ripped out of us, we know there are limits to our desires. Why is it that we so often do what we know we ought not to do, and so often love or desire someone whom we would be better advised to walk away from?

The problems have reached such an apex that presumptions against us Khmer women are growing. And these presumptions are impeding our progress. They shackle our mobility and freedom, for these presumptions mistakenly inform Khmer women what is and is not permissible to do or not do, to be or not be. They are nefarious because our opportunities are limited by someone's misperceptions, our choices dictated by a social construct that makes our interaction with men, particularly of power, suspect.

Consequently, we Khmers should not be too surprised when outsiders view us with weariness or disdain, or when they exploit this presumption to their advantage. By not highly valuing ourselves or each other, and by not responding appropriately when others degrade or slight us, no matter how wrong their statement or action, we reinforce these presumptions. Let others take responsibility for their own wrongs, and let each of us expend our energy reflecting on our own life, and how we can do better.

And for those of us Khmers who have acquired education, power or wealth, let me say: do not think we are free from indignities heaped on us by foreigners because of the strand(s) of diamonds around our neck, or the perfect American accent we have cultivated, or the Gucci bag we carry, or the shiny Mercedes we drive, or the foreign degree(s) we have accumulated, or through any other means by which we believe can distance us from "the masses" and poverty's ugliness-unless we want to altogether disown our Khmer identity. We are only fooling ourselves if we believe we have gained respectability through any of these things while still misusing and abusing ourselves and our women.

Long ago a non-Khmer man of immense wealth and authority responded to my refusal of his propositioning with a contemptuous "Cambodians are a dime a dozen." I wanted so badly to direct him where he should go in the same manner we Khmers might use a finger to indicate where the sky is!

In the expatriate community of humanitarian workers, diplomats, businessmen (cleverly and accurately dubbed the 'lords of poverty' by one author), the presumption against us Khmer women can unfold either in explicit arrogance or subtle sophisticated undercutting.

I have encountered personally, on countless occasions throughout the years, the mixture of the two. In one particular situation, my forcing of an issue to expose the fraud of a foreign lawyer posed too great a risk to make it to print: the expatriate community was experiencing a backlash of anti-foreigner sentiments coupled with the possibility that I was just a disgruntled employee. Also, concerns were raised about the innocent local staff whose livelihood depended on the continued existence of the institution.

Later on, it was spun that I was the scorned lover of the foreign lawyer.

Of course... what else can I, a Khmer woman, possibly be?!

It will take years to chip away at this presumption made by us toward each other and by foreigners alike. We need to return to the principle of first things. Genuine Love. For ourselves. And for each other.

Theary C. SENG
Executive Director

To read past columns, please visit www.csdcambodia.org "Voice of Justice Program".

Monday, June 04, 2007

Cambodia: 44% of the girls forced to prostitute, had their first sexual contact with foreign tourist

03.06.2007
Viva Sex Tourism

By Blaga Bangieva
News.bg (Bulgraia)


World's tourism development is directly related with sex tourism's flourishing, informed NGOs and tour agents in a press conference in ‘Air France's main office, reported France Press.

Round 3 million kids become victims of sexual exploitation around the world. 10 % from 842 million tourists choose destinations depending on sex tourism possibilities.

Sex tourism prospers in quite developed destinations as Morocco, Hungary, Chez Republic and Poland. No matter what Asia is still the absolute phenomenon.

In Cambodia, for example, 44% of the girls forced to prostitute, had their first sexual contact with foreign tourist.