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A Living Hell;
A cultural perspective on Child Prostitution in the Far East.

Jim Blaylock

27 Feb, 2001

In this treatise, we will examine the cultural attitudes and spacial relations regarding the plague of sexual abuse of children in the Far East. In doing so, we will be comparing the various views and actions of the Philippines, Japan, Thailand and Cambodia against the definition that any sexual activity with a child under 18 years of age, or any act that sexually exploits a child is abusive. This standard is needed, as the age of majority varies greatly. In fact, "the definition of a child varies so widely as to make it impossible to have a cooperative effort protecting children from sexual exploitation. In Tanzania, the Philippines and a dozen other countries, the age of majority is 14. Over 100 countries set the age of majority as 18. However, these same countries have variations on age of consent to sexual relations. Thus what may be illegal sexual relations or statutory rape in England may be legal in a Southeast Asian country. A country that prohibits child prostitution but makes the age of majority 12 has no protection for a teenage child targeted by an adult exploiter."(Lederer11). As we explore, compare and contrast these four nations, we will see the common cultural threads that bind them together and the result of their evolution, namely the sexual exploitation of children in the Far East.

We will start our journey into the dark world of sexual child abuse in the Far East where 60% to 70% of women who have been interviewed claim that they have suffered sexual abuse (Parekh 34). While records of child abuse in these countries are suspect, and records in many countries are negligently kept, researchers have concluded that "incestuous sexual abuse is so prevalent that it is almost the norm; it is something we expect South Asian girls to go through."" (Parekh 34). Although the reported incidence of incest is high, it is not the only sign of child sexual abuse we see in the region. Child prostitution is so pervasive that "1 million children are trafficked into prostitution each year in Southeast Asia alone, estimating that 10,000 children between age 6 and 14 are enslaved in brothels in Sri Lanka. Approximately 15,000 children were sold into sexual slavery in Cambodia between 1991 and 1997, and the Thai government reports that 60,000 Thai children are sold into prostitution" (Meier 239). As a result, in South East Asia, "the number of prostituted children range between 200,000 and 800,000". (Meier 239)

In the Philippines "a population of child prostitutes estimated by the United Nations at more than 60,000 provides a stream of cases like that of young Pia Augustin. She became a prostitute at the age of 9. An aunt who raised her in a Manila slum rented her to foreign men with Pia receiving 120 pesos--$3--for each encounter. After three years, according to a social worker's report, she was sold to a visiting German pedophile." (Satchell 32) Pia’s story is not uncommon on the island, as one of its most robust economic sectors is that of providing sexual services. Many factors have helped to spur on the child sex trade. One major factor was the "huge United States naval base at Subic Bay, and Angeles City, where the U.S. Air Force operated a large base at Clark Field. Each had a long established vice trade involving underage girls and catering to American service personnel. After the U.S. military departed in 1992, aggressive marketing by Philippine red-light entrepreneurs turned Angeles and Olongapo into two of the Pacific region's most rancid fleshpots" (satchel 32). This has worked in conjunction with other factors such as "poverty, the rise of criminal Mafia’s in Russia and Eastern Europe, the spread of sex tourism, and the Internet pornography boom. Fear of AIDS is driving men to seek younger partners in the mistaken belief that they are less likely to be infected. Global child sex trends, says the demand comes not only from pedophiles but from men eager to push the envelope of carnal exploration." (Satchell 32)

As we saw in the Philippines, the practice of selling children into prostitution is a long and well-established trade. While there are laws forbidding the practice, there are no enforcement measures to prevent the tragedy. Part of this pathology comes from the ideology that children are not people, but property. "After decades of complacency, Philippine authorities are cracking down on foreigners drawn here by entrenched pedophile networks, rampant sex tourism, but it is difficult to contain the sexual abuse of children in the region" (Satchell 32).

While we see that authorities are cracking down on foreigners who are entering the country for the purpose of sex tourism, there are no equivalent moves to stop abuse of children by their own citizens. One major reason is the common belief that it is the fathers’ prerogative to have sex with their children first. Children may also be used to pay off debts or as collateral on loans (Parekh 34). This falls closely in line with the feminist concept of the male prerogative, which argues that male dominance lead to violence against women and children (Becket 57). Although there may appear to be some evidence in this area, we see that in many cases like Pia’s, we actually see that the women are pimping out the children.

In response to the growing trade of sex tourism, "21 nations have passed laws to prosecute molesters for crimes committed overseas" (Satchell 32). A prime example of the new laws is Australia’s response to a trip made in by Anthony Carr in 1994. "During his visit, he paid a man $45 for his five-year-old niece to perform in a pornographic video, which Carr taped. It was that tape…[which] an Australian court used in April to sentence him to two years in prison for aggravated assault. Carr became the first Australian to be convicted under the country's two-year-old extraterritorial child- sex tourism law."(Hunter 22).

Although some countries convict their citizens who engage in the child sex trade on foreign shores where such laws are not enforced, how should it be handled in a country like Japan where child prostitution is legal? In 1997, "the Tokyo Metropolitan Government took the first steps to curb "obscene" acts when adults pay for sex with children below the age of 18. The legal age of consent in Japan is as low as 13"(Butler 44). This was in response to the use of telephone clubs where teens could meet men and arrange a meeting. The problem is that "Japanese teenage prostitution did not begin with the telephone clubs and even today it is not the only means girls use to meet men. According to reports by the National Police headquarters, the number of teenage prostitutes started to climb around 1974, and by 1984, the number of teenage girls willingly taken into police custody had reached alarming levels. Nearly all of these girls willingly became involved in prostitution primarily to earn money" (Morrison 475). Here we are not faced with children being kidnapped, placed into brothels, being beaten or raped, nor do we see any law prohibiting the practice. Rather we see raw capitalism compelled, not by need, but by greed. What is to be done when the child lives in a society where it is seen as a basic human right for children to sell sex? Can a fourteen-year-old fully understand the consequences of prostituting herself for a new trinket? "Today's teenage prostitutes are similar to their predecessors in that their goal is often money, but they are far more sophisticated in nearly every other respect"(Morrison 475).

While we as Americans might see this as unacceptable, when the Japanese government proposed to take action to stop teenage prostitution, "the action wasn't endorsed by everyone: An advisory panel lent its support reluctantly, with some members opposed on grounds that sex decisions, even for minors, are personal" (Butler 44). There is no surprise that government intervention in child prostitution fails in Japan. The Japanese government, Shogun Lyenari tried to outlaw prostitution in 1822, but failed as prostitutes were still hired by parties and families (Durant 862). Evidently, prostitution, even that of children is a long and established custom that will not soon disappear.

So, should we accept the old axiom that the tourists follow the traditions of the country they are visiting, in this case to do as the Japanese do, even if it allows the sexual exploitation of children? Alternatively, would the abuse of children in the visited country be reduced if the tourist were held to the legal, moral and ethical standards of their parent nation? Although sex tourism may slow somewhat, I see no logical stance showing that the sex industry would change with the new legislation. Laws passed in America and Europe will not change the long standing attitudes of people in Japan or any other nation.

While child prostitution is legal in Japan, this is not the case in most of Asia. The problem is so pervasive that in the Mekong Subregion, kidnapping has become a common recruitment tool. This has led to actions being taken by the United Nations to help the victims as "few, if any, resources are available to women and children smuggled across international borders primarily for sexual purposes. They have no legal status as illegal immigrants, their social image is scarred by stigma, their health is all too often imperiled. A three-year, $2.3 million project brings together UNDP and six other UN agencies in partnerships with government ministries in Cambodia, China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Viet Nam, to develop community-based initiatives to prevent trafficking" (United Nations 76).

With the influx of funds and support, one would hope that there would be a change in the status of child prostitution in Asia. Unfortunately, as we examine attitudes on this problem we find that they are well entrenched. In Cambodia for example, we find that "unlike Thailand or the Philippines, pedophiles in Cambodia have had little to fear if caught. Cambodia's problem goes beyond foreigners, though. Activists say sex tourists are tolerated in part because many locals find it acceptable to buy children for sex"(Penh 29). Even with aid, child exploitation in Cambodia will not be reduced as it is the attitudes, customs and traditions of each culture that transcend the laws, allowing community standards to reign. The problem that we see with these cultural traits is that "The country's brothels are filled with an estimated 20,000 child prostitutes. The youngest--usually in their early teens but some as young as 10--are sold to those wealthy enough to pay a premium. According to activists, buying a young virgin has become popular with certain rich and well-connected Cambodian men. New wealth and power, coupled with a fear of AIDS, is fueling the desire for younger and younger girls" (Penh 29). As we can see, it is in the popularity, the societal demands and the willingness to trade children as commodities, which are the factors that create the problem. Although poverty may play a role, the underlying ideology makes child prostitution an acceptable practice within the culture. Lunacy is the concept that laws preventing sex tourism will eradicate the problem, as Cambodian men see having a virgin as a status symbol. It is like owning a particular car, living in a certain neighborhood, or having the best seats at a sporting event.

Despite Cambodian laws designed to stop the sex slavery, "the girls the men buy are often prisoners: as many as half may have been sold into the business. Sovannara, a 15-year-old with wide-set eyes and a soft voice, was looking for a part-time job when a woman took her to a brothel…"(Penh 29). Again, we see that this is not about the male prerogative, but the culture of child trading. "Before she realized what was happening, she had been sold and locked in a room. "I cried and I cried, but the mama-san said she would have me beaten to death if I refused,"" (Penh 29). Sovannara had a reason to be scared. While her captivity was only a month, she lives in a society were this practice is known and condoned regardless of any laws drafted to stem the problem. We know that she would have received little or no help from authorities as "rescued sex workers report that many of their clients are uniformed military or police. Those cops who aren't corrupt find it hard to take on the powerful forces behind the traffickers" (penh 29). And they are fighting entrenched attitudes as well: in 1996, police students at an evidence-gathering seminar chuckled during a case study of a 14-year-old girl sold to a brothel. He [the instructor] realized most of the class didn't view this as a serious crime. "When I said under 16 was rape, they laughed because 14 to 16 is considered the best age in the brothels" (Penh 29).

The attitudes of these cultures are understandable only in the light of history. The sex trade in the Far East is well established as "Marko Polo described the courtesans of Kublai Kahn’s capital as incredibly numerous and ravishingly beautiful" (Durant 790). Prostitution is seen in the region as a necessary evil. While women need to stay chaste, it has been the historical attitude in China and the surrounding region as "it was considered normal and legitimate that he [an unmarried man] should visit the brothels; sex (in the male) was an appetite like hunger, and might be indulged in without any other disgrace…" (Durant 790). With such ideologies having such a long documented history and such entrenched attitudes, combined with willingness by the people to sell or rent children, it is unlikely that any law or amount of aid will arrest the problem. It is incomprehensible that there will be any quick changes in these societies.

While we see that inadequate action is taken in the Philippines, and none is taken in Cambodia, some countries like Thailand seem to promote child prostitution. "For years, child-welfare organizations have criticized Thailand's tourism industry for often helping to promote the image of Thai women and children as passive sex objects. The symbols are almost everywhere: in Pattaya, one bar dresses its teenage strippers in school uniforms" (Thailand).

However, the businesses are not the only ones to blame. When Thailand did pass laws, everyone quickly learned that there would be no effective laws regulating child prostitution in the country. Therefore, "officialdom must also share the blame. Policemen and Judges can be bribed to release foreign sex criminals" (Thailand). Two perfect examples are that of "two alleged pedophiles, one Japanese and the other British, were caught by Pattaya police in hotel rooms with under-age boys. Neither was convicted. The Japanese man later alleged he had paid 600,000 baht for an acquittal" (Thailand).

With such high levels of corruption in the various law enforcement bodies combined with cultural legacies of child prostitution and the perceived financial benefits of the sex trade, we can expect the exploitation of children in the Far East to continue. It is unfortunate that the attitudes are as shortsighted as they are. If the nations of the Far East were able to divert their resources from prostitution and into education, they could soon see the economic growth that would enrich the lives of the people. This is unfortunately a case of cultural possibilism gone ary. Nevertheless, even with a wealthy and highly educated nation like Japan, we see that the cultural attitudes will continue to condone child exploitation regardless of economic status. Therefore, we must conclude that child exploitation will continue to be a pervasive issue in the Far East.



Bibliography
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Infoseek 2001
Butler, Steven. "Prostitution Has its Limits"
U.S. News & World Report, April 14, 1997, p44. Online
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Durant, Will. The Story of Civilization: Our Oriental Heritage.
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Hunter, Maclean. "Hitting sex tourists. (Canada, 10 other nations now prosecute juvenile
sex crimes committed abroad)" Maclean's Sept 2, 1996 p22. Online
Infoseek 2001
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National Catholic Reporter, Nov 22, 1996 p11. Online.
Infotrack 2001
Meier, Eileen. "Legislative Efforts to Combat Sexual Trafficking and Slavery of Women
and Children." Pediatric Nursing, May 2000, p329. Online.
Infotrack 2001
Morrison, Andrew D. "Teen prostitution in Japan: regulation of telephone clubs"
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law. March 1998, p457. Online
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Newman-Wlliams "Trafficking in Women and Children in the Mekong Subregion"
UN Chronicle, Vol.2 1999 p76
http://www.un.org/Pubs/chronicle/1999/issue2/0299p76.htm (Feb 2, 2001)
Parekh, Niel. "Documentary focuses on child abuse".
News India Times 3 0ct 2000, pg34. Online
Ethnic News Watch 2001
Penh, Phnom. "Pedophile Playground: Cambodia says it wants to crack down on
child-sex offenders. A British teacher's trial will test its resolve"
Time International. Nov 13, 2000, p29. Online
Infoseek 2001
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The Economist (US), April 1, 2000, p39. Online
Infoseek 2001

 

 

 

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