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ASIA
& PACIFIC
Large-scale
prostitution has been identified in many countries in Asia.
Trafficking
of children is prevalent, as is brothel - based prostitution is more
common. Organised
crime is heavily involved in the commercial sexual exploitation of
children.
Child pornography, though less common, is also prevalent,
particular in Japan.
Social
and economic conditions in the region are the foundation from which the
commercial exploitation of children grows.
Despite recent economic gains, the vast majority of Asia's
population lives close to the poverty line.
Growing prosperity has thrown the difference between rich and poor
into sharper relief, projection
materialism and consumer values onto traditional ways of life.
The
generally low status of girls and women and their limited opportunities
for education and employment also leave them extremely vulnerable to
sexual exploitation.
Girls
are valued so little in Asia that sex-selective abortions and female
infanticide are practised in a few countries; in others, they are
perceived as little more than sexual commodities.
Sexual exploitation of children, specially adolescents, through
prostitution is common.
The
growth in sex tourism in the last few decades is another contributing
factor.
Asia has been marketed as a key destination, a sex 'haven' for
business and vacation travellers.
Hard-pressed economies in the region have come to value the foreign
exchange brought in by such tourism.
Wars
in the region over the past several decades have also disrupted economies
and traditional social patterns.
The stationing of military troops concentrated large numbers of
single men in some areas, another factor in the growth of the commercial
sexual exploitation of children.
Data
studies
Trafficking
is prevalent in the Mekong region extending through Cambodia, the Lao
People's Democratic Republic, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam, and in the
southern Chinese province of Yunnan.
In these areas the children of ethnic minorities, already
marginalized by their language, culture, and extreme poverty, are
especially at risk.
Child
prostitution is increasing in Bangladesh.
According to a March 1996 Dhaka Star report, there are now 5,000
children in prostitution in Dhaka alone.
About 2,000 are working in licensed brothels, the rest on the
streets.
A number of Bangladeshi girls are being trafficked to India and
Pakistan.
In
Cambodia, mass killings and the deliberate destruction of most political
and social instructions - including the family in the 1970s, together with
severe conflict spanning the 1970s and 1980s, left the country vulnerable
to an increase in commercial sexual exploitation.
According
to UNICEF - supported surveys in Cambodia in 1995, there were 10,000 to
15,000 prostitutes in Phnom Penh.
At least one third of the total were found to be under eighteen.
Many of those surveyed reported being deceived or sold into
prostitution by people known to them, including family and neighbours.
Data
on China is scarce, though eyewitness accounts and anecdotes suggest a
resurgence of a long-dormant commercial sex industry following economic
liberalisation in the 1980s.
In 1994, the People's Daily reported that more than 10,000 women
and children are abducted and sold each year in Sichuan Province alone.
Major
cities in India, such as Bangalore, Bombay, Calcutta, Delhi, Hyderabad and
Madras, have an estimated 100,000 prostitutes, of whom some 20-30 per cent
are children, according to the 1993 survey by the Central Welfare Board.
The vast majority are Indian (94 per cent); 2.6 per cent are Nepalese and 2.7 per cent Bangladeshi.
The sex exploiters are mostly men who frequent brothels.
The devadasi system practised in a few parts of India is a
contributing factor in the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
Girls, usually of lower caste, are 'dedicated' to a temple, where
they are sexually exploited.
Many of the girls in later years have little option but to enter
brothels.
Even though outlawed, it is reported that about 5,000 girls are
forced into this form of sexual exploitation every year.
Trafficking
is an important aspect of the industry in India, with girls transported
into the country from Bangladesh, Bhutan , Nepal and Sri Lanka.
Between 5,000 and 7,000 girls are reportedly trafficked from Nepal
alone to India every year.
India is also a centre from which girls are exported for a fee as
'brides', usually to rich older men in parts of the Middle East.
In
January 1995, the director of Prostitutes Rehabilitation in the Ministry
of Social Affairs estimated that 60 per cent of the 71,281 registered
prostitutes in Indonesia were between 15 and 20 years of age.
In recent years, sexual exploitation of children on the streets has
increased, as has sex tourism.
Sex
tours from Japan to nearby Philippines, Taiwan and Thailand are
increasing, as is the trafficking of women from these countries - and in
recent years from Eastern Europe and Latin America - into Japan for
prostitution.
The
Philippines has between 60,000 and 100,000 child prostitutes - the lower
figure is from End
Child Prostitution in Asian Tourism (ESPAT), and the higher figure was
quoted in Asia week.
Most of them are street children, who constitute 35 per cent of the
total number of prostitutes, according to the NGO Women's Development
Association.
Tourists and military troops are believed to have constituted about
40 per cent of the sex exploiters in the decade.
Press
reports from Sri Lanka associate the rapid growth of tourism in the
country during the 1970 with the increase in the sexual exploitation of
children, most of whom are boys exploited by male visitors at the island's
beach resorts.
ECPAT estimates some 20,000 boys are exploited as prostitutes in
these locations.
30,000 child prostitutes in the country as a whole. The NGO PEACE
(Protecting the Environment and Children Everywhere) cites a figure of
10,000 girls sexually exploited in brothels.
In
Taiwan, between 40,000 and 60,000 children are exploited in prostitution
by local men and visiting Asian businessmen, according to ECPAT.
The local industry has a long history, and Taiwan has been a
destination for Japanese sex tourists for decades.
A significant number of young sex workers are culturally and
economically marginalized aboriginal girls, according to ECPAT.
The
sex industry in Thailand
is believed to generate about $1.5 billion every year, according to
studies by Thammasat University in Bangkok.
Estimates of the number of child prostitutes in the country diverge
widely, ranging from 15,000 cited by the Ministry of Public Health, to
30,000 to 40,000 cited by the Thai Red Cross, to 200,000 cited by ECPAT
and the Thai police (this latter figure includes girls from neighbouring
countries).
The country has long had a large domestic sex industry which has
expanded since the 1950s.
More recently, the industry has grown as a result of the large
numbers of business and vacation travellers seeking sex.
Asia
Watch
estimates that 10,000 women and girls from Myanmar are trafficked into
Thailand annually.
Others come from Cambodia, the Lao People's Democratic Republic and
Vietnam.
While many are kept in Thailand, large numbers are reportedly
're-exported', along with local Thai girls, to other Asian cities.
Some (from the Yunnan Province of China) are taken to Malaysia and
Singapore, others to Australia, Germany, Japan, New Zealand, Taiwan and
the United States, according to the Centre for Protection of Children's
Rights.
The
increase in child prostitution in Vietnam
in the last few years has been linked to the recent economic
liberalisation, an increase in business and vacation travellers and the
lifting of restrictions on sex-related entertainment.
A survey in 1992 by the Women's Union said there are 60,000
prostitutes of whom 63 per cent are under the age of 16 years.
Child workers in Asia, and NGO's, estimate that girls under 18
account for one in five of the country's prostitutes.
PACIFIC
Australia
and New Zealand have often been cited as prime sources of sex tourists
into Asia, and these two countries have been active in the review and
introduction of extraterritorial legislation and public awareness
campaigns targeted at travellers within the region.
In the last two years, Australia has been looking at the domestic
sexual exploitation of children, following a number of cases of children
being sold into sex by those responsible for their welfare in social
services.
The activity of Australian diplomats overseas has also been in the
spotlight.
Data
studies
Police
raids in Australia often discover under-age children working in
prostitution.
Recent raids in Sydney found girls of 14 and 15 years of age
working in brothels of the Kings Cross area.
Young women from the Philippines and Thailand are increasingly
found soliciting on the streets.
A
Royal Commission covering sexual exploitation and abuse of children in
care was announced in 1996 in New South Wales.
Some
under-age prostitutes have been found soliciting on the streets of New
Zealand.
Asian women now predominate in many of the bars in the red-light
districts.
With
tourism increasing, some Pacific Islands
have noted a demand for young girls.
Informal child prostitution has been found on a small scale in
Papua New Guinea.
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