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SUB-SAHARAN
AFRICA
Poverty,
wars and the presence of military troops are the major underlying factors
driving the commercial sexual exploitation of children in Africa.
The many wars in the continent have weakened family structures and
supports, with families left to fend for themselves because the men have
been conscripted into armies.
Civil strife has meanwhile destroyed subsistence systems.
Vast numbers of refugees and internally displaced people have been
forced across hostile territories and into precarious situations on the
very margins of existence.
Structural adjustment programmes have siphoned funds away from the
social sector, increasing economic and social hardships.
In many cases, adults and children have been left with few, if any,
alternatives to exchanging sex for food, money and even relief supplies.
The vulnerability of children in refugee camps or recruited as
soldiers or in other work among armed contingents is high.
Another
factor fuelling sexual exploitation is the generally low status of girls
and women in the continent. 'In
kind' exchanges, such as the payment of bridge price involving child
bridges, is considered a regional form of commercial sexual exploitation.
Older men referred to as 'sugar daddies' commonly provide girls with money
for school fees, books or clothes in exchange for sex. Incest and
sexual abuse within the family is a major contributing factor.
Sexual exploitation of domestic help is also common.
Because
of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, there will be many AIDS orphans in the region by
the year 2000.
It can be predicted that many will be forced to earn a living on
the streets through prostitution.
Major cities, such as Addis Ababa, Johannesburg and Nairobi,
already have concentrations of children surviving on the streets.
Many resort to prostitution, often influenced by friends and peers.
Another
pattern discernible in Africa is the movement of men away from their
communities and families in the countryside to seek work in cities or
mining areas.
The sexual exploitation of children by large populations of single
men is especially acute along truck routes in Kenya, in fishing villages
in Sierra Leone and in mines in South Africa.
Data
studies
In
Angola, a recent Christian Children's Fund study found a visible increase
in child prostitution, especially among very young girls called catorzinhas,
literally translated as 'little 14-year-olds', even though girls as young
as 11 have been identified.
Sexual
exploitation of girls has increased in
Ethiopia since 1990.
The country has a long-standing history of girls and women
supporting the family.
Limited occupational options in rural areas force female migration
to cities such as Addis Ababa, where the difficulties of finding
employment coupled with the costs of living leave them vulnerable to
sexual exploitation.
In
Kenya, child prostitution is primarily a street-based phenomenon, with
many girls involved in selling and begging during the day and switching to
prostitution at night.
The Kenya Child Welfare Society has noted that some children create
their own brothels;
others are operated by adult prostitutes in bars and restaurants.
Tourists are preferred customers because of the greater possibility
of good pay and other favours.
In
Liberia, which has been ravaged by civil war since 1989, a 1995 study by
Save the Children identified children as young as 10 being sexually
exploited by soldiers at military bases.
It also found that, while most parents did not tolerate
prostitution, some parents encouraged girls to begin sexual activity at an
early age to help support other members of the family.
The study emphasised that the cultural values and norms that had
bound communities and protected children had eroded as people had been
forced to seek refuge in unfamiliar, overcrowded urban areas.
In
1996 ECPAT study on South Africa revealed a growing number of girls aged
between 12 and 16 years soliciting on the streets and in the dock areas of
Cape Town and Durban.
The study also showed that there is an increase in businesses
catering to child sex exploiters.
In
Zambia, it is estimated that there are 70,000 children who are forced to
live and work on the streets.
According to the NGO Tasintha,
most of the child prostitutes are daughters of prostitutes, orphans or
children in especially difficult circumstances.
The incidence of HIV/AIDS among girls in the 15-19 age group is 7
times higher than that for boys in the same age group.
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