
-An estimated 2 million children worldwide are commercially sexually exploited every year
Calcutta girl vulnerable to CSEC. Photo credit: Dario Mitidieri
"We
have to act now and we have to act forcefully. We owe this to the
children that have been abused, tortured, and even killed by sex
offenders and to the children who are at risk of becoming victims. This
modern form of slavery has to be stopped!"
- Queen Silvia of Sweden
(presented for use in our book on CSEC)
An International Problem
Commercial
sexual exploitation of children (CSEC) has prospered for centuries with
little information about the number of children involved and even less
public awareness. However, we now know there are an estimated 2 million
children that are commercially sexually exploited every year, with as
many as 300,000 of these children in the United States, some of whom
have been trafficked from other parts of the world. This is no longer
surprising to many NGOs considering that the trafficking and sale of
people is now the third largest organized crime industry (next to the
sale of arms and drugs).[1]
The
Declaration of the World Congress Against Commercial Sexual
Exploitation of Children (1996) defines the practice in general:
“It
(commercial sexual exploitation) comprises sexual abuse by the adult
and remuneration in cash or kind to the child or a third person or
persons. The child is treated as a sexual object and as a commercial
object. The commercial sexual exploitation of children constitutes a
form of coercion and violence against children and amounts to forced
labour and a contemporary form of slavery.”
Forms of CSEC
There
are three primary, interrelated forms of commercial sexual exploitation
that comprise the sex trade: prostitution, pornography, and trafficking
for sexual purposes. The United Nations defines child prostitution as:
“the act of engaging or offering the services of a child to perform
sexual acts for money or other consideration with that person or any
other person.”[2] Child pornography consists of material representation
of children engaged in sexual acts, real or simulated, intended for the
sexual gratification of the user. Sex trafficking is defined as “…a
pernicious form of slavery; it is the purchase of a body for sexual
gratification and/or financial gain.”[3] Children who are victims of sex
trafficking are transported across borders or within countries, across
state lines, from city to city, or from rural to urban centers.
Both
boys and girls are victims of commercial sexual exploitation, although
the prostitution of girls is far more prevalent in most countries.
Geographic areas where male-to-male prostitution is more prominent
include the United States , Western European countries, and Sri
Lanka.[4]
How many children are involved in CSEC?
The
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the United Nations
Population Fund (UNFPA) estimate that 2 million children are exploited
in prostitution or pornography every year. However, due to the
clandestine nature of the practice, lack of concrete evidence, national
embarrassment, varying methods and terminologies of different countries,
and other situational factors, it is virtually impossible to estimate
how many other children are victims of trafficking, prostitution, or
pornography, on a global scale.
Where CSEC is occurring today?
Child
sexual exploitation of children occurs on every continent, except
Antarctica, and is most prevalent in countries stricken by poverty,
political turmoil, and corruption. In Cambodia , a nation still
recovering from the war, famine, and brutal dictatorship of the 1970s
and ‘80s, sex tourism thrives. The prostitution of girls as young as 5
years old is prevalent, particularly with many tourists visiting
Cambodia with the specific purpose of having sex with prepubescent
girls.[5] However, the practice is not limited to developing countries.
For example, girls and young women from many countries are trafficked
into the United States, often through Mexico, to become sex slaves.
Abducted, sold or abandoned by family, or lured by hollow promises of
jobs, school, and a better life, girls and women find themselves
trapped, earning no money, and living in highly restrictive settings
with no personal freedoms.[6]
Vulnerability and CSEC
Among
the factors that increase children's risk of entering the sex trade,
extreme poverty that either forces families to sell or give away their
children, or encourages children to voluntarily leave their homes in
search of a better life, may be the principal catalyst. However, other
children who are vulnerable to commercial sexual exploitation include
those who suffer physical or sexual abuse in their homes, come from
families involved in the sex trade, lack family support and protection,
have uncertain legal status, or live near tourist destinations or
military bases. Research by the non-governmental organization ECPAT (End
Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for
Sexual Purposes) suggests that in many tourist destinations, the public,
tourists, and law enforcement agencies alike assume that more lenient
laws and social considerations apply, and thus child prostitution is
tolerated or goes unnoticed. Military bases, historically breeding
grounds for prostitution due to the presence of large numbers of men
separated from their families and not living in normal societal
conditions, continue to play host to sex trade businesses of adults and
children.
Impact on Children
Children
suffer several physical and psychological problems as a result of
commercial sexual exploitation. Physically, they are at even greater
risk of contracting diseases like STDs, HIV infection, and AIDS, because
they often have no control over choosing their sex partners or forcing
them to wear condoms. Girls are also at risk of pregnancy. Many children
in the sex trade are also drug users. In some cases, drug use is a
result of children trying to cope with the pain of their reality, while
other times pimps and madams drug children in order to have greater
control over them. Prostituted children experience stigmatization,
betrayal, and powerlessness, all of which impede their chances to escape
the trade and successfully reintegrate into society. People working
with prostituted children say that depression, disassociation of
emotions from memory, and post-traumatic stress disorder are often
exhibited by prostituted children as a result of repeated trauma.
Who is involved in CSEC?
Adult
men, both heterosexual and homosexual, are the predominant customers of
prostituted children. There are preferential users who specifically
choose to have sex with children, among them people who suffer from the
psychiatric disorder, pedophilia. Situational users on the other hand
may not prefer children, and have sex with adults, but will exploit
children sexually if they are conveniently available. Youth and beauty
are qualities considered desirable by patrons of prostitution, and youth
is correlated with beauty worldwide; these standards allow the market
for commercial sexual exploitation to prosper. Other factors that
contribute to the prospering sex trade of children include the fact that
many men value the experience of taking a girl's virginity, feel they
are less likely to contract disease with a child, do not consider the
children as children because of the nature of their work, as tourists
carry racist or insensitive attitudes about the culture of the country
they are visiting, and in some cultures people believe having sex with a
virgin will cure them of HIV/AIDS by passing the disease to the child.
In
addition to patrons of child prostitutes and child pornography who fuel
the industry with their money, the other adults involved in the
commercial sexual exploitation of children are those who earn money
through supplying services. Prostitution, pornography, and sex
trafficking of children have proven to be profitable businesses for
pimps and madams, the tourism and hospitality industries, organized
crime groups, pornographers, and, in some cases, families.
Protecting Children
Public
awareness of the issue is growing as the committed efforts of
grassroots groups have led to significant media coverage worldwide. The
New York Times published a series of four articles in January 2004 about
two girls in Cambodia working in brothels. An article published on
January 25, 2004 in the New York Times Magazine detailed sex trafficking
and the prostitution of girls in the United States. Also, a special
report was televised in January 2004 by Dateline NBC, which went
undercover in Cambodia to expose the commercial sexual exploitation of
children. News groups in Latin America have also publicized the high
incidence of CSEC in their respective regions, such as the online
newspaper El Tiempo that published an article on increasing child
prostitution in Colombia.
There
has been progress in the legal arena as well, with many international
conventions that provide protection for children who are exploited in
the commercial sex industry. Articles 34 and 35 of the UN Convention on
the Rights of the Child calls for State Parties to take all actions
necessary to prevent a child from being forced to in engage in unlawful
sexual activity, and from exploitation through prostitution,
pornography, and/or trafficking. The Optional Protocol to the Convention
on the Rights of the Child (CRC), adopted in 2000, addresses the
specific issue of the commercial sexual exploitation of children. The
Trafficking Victims Protection Act and the Protect Act are among other
pieces of legislation that have also advanced the fight against CSEC.
Several countries known to have a high number of offending sex tourists have enacted legislation that provides stiff penalties for those citizens engaging foreign children in sexual activities. The United States has made it a felony for U.S. citizens or legal residents to travel to a foreign country for the purpose of engaging in any sexual act with a child. Greater law enforcement efforts have been undertaken in several countries (although much remains to be done), and some countries have revised national laws that specifically recognize children's rights to be protected from commercial sexual exploitation. More public funds are being committed to awareness and fighting child pornography in several countries. Finally, many United Nations agencies and local to international NGOs are implementing prevention, rescue, and reintegration programs in numerous countries.
Get Involved
Anyone
who is concerned about this issue can help. First, become informed on
these issues and then raise awareness by communicating to peers,
colleagues, friends, and your representatives about the need to stop the
commercial sexual exploitation of children. Educators can introduce
material about the practice in their classrooms; journalists can use the
media to inform the public; business, community and religious leaders
can support children's clubs or street shelters.
You
can also make a difference by supporting organizations like Youth
Advocate Program International and our partners in the fight against the
commercial sexual exploitation of children worldwide.
Want to learn more? Check out the following links
Advocacy
Publications
Education
Glossary
Links and Resources
Endnotes:
[1] U.S. Campaign against the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children.
[2]
World Health Organization, “Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children:
The Health and Psychosocial Dimensions,” (written for the World
Congress against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children, June 1996),
10.
[3] Women's Environment &
Development Organization, “Root Causes: A Gender Approach to Child
Sexual Exploitation,” (written about the Congress against Commercial
Sexual Exploitation of Children, 1996), 25.
[4] Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children: Youth Involved in Prostitution, Pornography & Sex Trafficking , Youth Advocate Program International: p. 10.
[5]
Chris Hansen, “Children for Sale: Dateline goes undercover with a human
rights group to expose sex trafficking in Cambodia,” MSNBC, [report
on-line]; available at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4038249; accessed 28
January 2004 .
[6] Peter
Landesman, “The Girls Next Door,” NYTimes Magazine, 25 January 2004,
[article on-line]; available at
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/25/magazine/25SEXTRAFFIC.html; accessed
28 January 2004 .
Edited by:
Carol Smolenski, Executive Director, ECPAT-USA
Joanne Selinske, International Social Services (ISS)
© copyright - Youth Advocate Program International 2003-04
Last updated 7/26/2004