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EUROPE
AND NORTH AMERICA
The
commercial sexual exploitation of children in the industrialised countries
of Europe and North America is a recognised phenomenon.
Nevertheless, despite otherwise good statistics and research
facilities on social issues, little data is available on the subject.
Commercial
sexual exploitation of children in industrialised countries primarily
occurs as child prostitution and pornography.
In recent years, with the collapse of the Soviet Union, child
trafficking from Eastern to Western Europe and the United States is on the
rise. The
factors driving child prostitution in these countries are poverty, growing
economic disparities, severe stress on families, drug abuse and, in more
affluent societies, rampant consumerism.
The majority of children involved in street prostitution in the US
and Western Europe are runaways often fleeing family abuse.
In
addition, West European and North American countries are the primary
points of origin for sex tours to Asia and Latin America.
A mid-1996 update to ECPAT's database on sex abusers, covering the
240 sex exploiters who have been arrested, convicted, imprisoned and/or
deported or otherwise found guilty of child sex crimes in the past seven
years in Asia, shows that most are Americans, followed by Germans, British
and Australians.
Data
studies
In
1995 research project showed that 10 per cent of prostitution in northern
Italy involves girls between the ages of 10 and 15 years.
Thirty per cent of prostitutes are between 16 and 18 years of age.
A
UN report cited a Defense
for Children International estimate in 1988 that about 1,000 children
were working as prostitutes in the Netherlands.
Among them were children of migrant workers and children trafficked
from Central and South America, Africa and Asia, according to the
Children's Society in a 1995 publication.
There is widespread trafficking of women and children from Poland
to Germany and Western Europe.
In
the United Kingdom in recent years there has been a spate of reports on
children being sexually exploited while in the care of social services,
and a number of paedophile rings have been identified and broken up.
Investigations into Europe-wide paedophile networks have also been
carried out in conjunction with police in France, Switzerland and other
parts of Europe.
In Scandinavian countries, too, police have stepped up
investigations into sex tourism originating from the area, as well as into
the activity of Scandinavians posted overseas and into paedophile
networks.
Child
prostitution has recently risen in Eastern Europe, where political and
economic upheavals, runaway inflation and increasing economic disparities
have made communities and children especially vulnerable.
Child
prostitution in Eastern Europe is primarily a street-based phenomenon,
with some children working in bars and other entertainment venues as well
as railway stations and other public areas.
Increasing numbers of girls are lured from Eastern Europe -
especially the Czech Republic, Poland, the Russian Federation and Ukraine
- to countries in Western Europe, such as Belgium, Germany and the
Netherlands, with the promise of respectable jobs.
Instead they are snared into prostitution.
Less than a quarter of them are aware of what they are getting
into, according to La
Strada, a programme in Central and Eastern Europe to address the issue
of trafficking of women.
The production of pornography by both Eastern and Western European
producers has increased, with pornographic videos marketed throughout
Europe.
In
Estonia, estimates given during a 1995 ECPAT study project suggest there
are about 4,000 prostitutes, of whom 20 to 30 per cent are minors.
In Tallinn, some girls aged 10 and 11 have been found soliciting
near the railway station.
Up
to 10,000 children in Latvia and Lithuania are no longer in school but
spend their time on the streets.
Many sell themselves for small sums of money.
A recent report on Eastern Europe indicated that children in
Romania are especially vulnerable.
Street children number around 2,000 according to Save the Children
(1996).
Many of them sell sexual services or are forced to exchange sex for
a place to sleep.
A large proportion of the boys who are trafficked into Western
Europe for sexual exploitation are from Romania.
In
the Russian
Federation, organised crime is heavily involved in the commercial sexual
exploitation of girls aged 13 to 17 (younger girls and boys have also been
identified).
Street gangs of children are said to sell sex as one of many
activities, and younger siblings are sold by older ones.
Many children also prostitute themselves on street corners and at
railway stations.
In
the United States it is estimated that between 100,000 and 300,000
children are sexually exploited through prostitution and pornography.
A study by the US arm of Defense for Children International reports that the children
are often runaways who have suffered incest, rape or abuse at home.
They are driven into prostitution by poverty and/or to make money
for drugs or consumer goods otherwise out of reach.
Similarly,
in Canada a number of young boys and girls are exploited in this way.
Paedophile rings are also reported to be involved, operating
between Europe and North America, and are closely connected with the
demand for child pornography.
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