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MIDDLE
EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
The
sexual exploitation of children in the Middle East and North Africa region
is generally considered to have less of a commercial dimension than in
other regions.
Familial sexual exploitation of children is reported by researchers
and NGOs.
However, sexual exploitation remains a taboo subject for the
community.
Family and community members and authorities are reluctant to
acknowledge and discuss the issue.
The
effects of modernisation, urbanisation, structural adjustment and family
and community fragmentation are playing a key role in the region in the
increasing vulnerability of children to commercial sexual exploitation.
Children working as street vendors or in unregulated mail or
delivery services in the 'poverty belts' in cities such as Cairo,
Casablanca, Marrakech and Tunis are especially vulnerable.
These areas are populated by high numbers of unemployed people and
migrants from rural and major urban areas.
They are joined by children from families that have disintegrated,
from ethnic minorities and geographically isolated groups and by children
who have not been granted civic status.
In
some areas, groups of children band together, establishing their own
subculture, and within this network younger children are reportedly abused
by the older children in the group.
Reports also indicate an increase in drug abuse.
In
addition, while there are no exact figures, a high percentage of girls
work in unregulated households - too often isolated, invisible and highly
vulnerable to sexual and physical abuse.
In
cities such as Alexandria, Marrakech and Tunis a link has been established
between tourism and the growth of commercial sexual exploitation of
children.
The exploiters are identified as coming from within the same
country, from other countries within the region, as well as from Europe.
Young boys are the key targets in several countries in this region,
according to reports including recent studies by the International
Abolitionist Federation. Live-in
domestics or those on the streets are among the most vulnerable.
In addition, girls - mostly from Asia - who are below the legal age
of marriage are trafficked under the guise of marriage to rich older men
in countries in the Middle East.
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