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Child sex tourism study 'blames Aussies'

Von: Cub Reporter (me@privacy.net) [Profil]
Datum: 13.09.2009 22:09
Message-ID: <h1kqa51ios77h6q271icuk027q024dfrmb@4ax.com>
Newsgroup: alt.support.girl-lovers alt.support.boy-lovers alt.activism.children
This report is probably most misleading, knowing what liars these
international child advocacy organisations are.

"1.8 million children as young as eight years old being sold for sex"
- probably most of this number consists of 16 - 25 year olds, with a
handful in their early teens. (The 8-year-old is probably a younger
sister or child of one of the prostitutes - where else would you
describe a quantity by one end of its range?)

News article:
=======================================
Child sex tourism study 'blames Aussies'
By Steve Lillebuen

Sydney Morning Herald, Australia: 14 September 2009
http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-national/child-sex-tourism-study-blames-aussies-20090
914-fme1.html
[ http://tinyurl.com/no6w5t ]

With a middle-class background and an internet connection, the
Australian man is keen to explore travel deals advertised across the
web.

He is the co-worker, relative and mate who awaits cheap flights to
Southeast Asia that the economic downturn has made all the more
plentiful.

But he is drawn to such tropical places not for the beaches, cheap
drinks and a brief escape from the rat race.

He is the customer in a growing global issue that sees over 1.8
million children as young as eight years old being sold for sex -
sometimes up to ten times a day - until they're considered "worthless"
before they reach their 30th birthday.

And new studies reveal this man has more mates than ever who think and
act just like him.

Australians make up the largest portion of foreign sex offenders
against children in Thailand, according to research at John Hopkins
University in Baltimore that studied patterns of arrests and
prosecutions between 1995 and 2006.

His money is fuelling a $US31.6 billion ($A36.5 billion) industry in
trafficking in what a recent report by a global network of groups
against child sex slavery concludes is a "massive human rights
violation that is currently going largely unnoticed around the world".

Bernadette McMenamin, CEO of Child Wise Australia, says child sex
trafficking remains a hidden problem that most Australians have become
complacent about - even though a main root of the global crime is the
Australian offender.

"People tell us, 'It happens overseas. Isn't that an issue we talked
about years ago?' But what we've found is that... the supply and
demand factors fuelling child sex slavery have actually grown," she
told AAP.

"The number of children entering the trade has grown. Efforts to
combat this problem have not succeeded despite pouring money into
overseas governments."

A new global campaign called "Stop Sex Trafficking of Children and
Young People," will be launched on Monday to help reverse the trend
and bring the issue back into the homes of the average Australian.

Being run across 45 countries, the campaign aims to raise awareness,
conduct a survey on people's attitudes and lobby national governments.

In February, Child Wise will step up the campaign by backing stalled
amendments to child sex tourism laws in the federal parliament.

Rather than seeing authorities wait for child sex to occur before
acting, the amendments seek out preparatory offences: stopping sex
offenders from travelling overseas, buying flights and possessing
child pornography.

"We've waited long enough," Ms McMenamin says of the proposed changes.
"We're simply not keeping up with travelling sex offenders."

Only small changes are required to save Asian girls from being sold
into a life of slavery, she says.

The Body Shop has already joined the Child Wise campaign by selling a
hand cream that directs profits to Cambodian outreach programs.

Such programs can provide support for girls and keep them in school
with books, pens and bicycles.

It may not seem like a lot but the average child sex slave is sold for
only a few hundred dollars by a family or boyfriend in poverty
desperate for cash, she says.

In Cambodia children are brought in from Vietnam or taken from village
to village, then off to Thailand.

All these victims suffer lifelong mental and physical damage. Some
contract HIV/AIDS while most find it hard to reintegrate into society
after a decade of such slavery.

Ms McMenamin says most Australians view the price of petrol as a
greater concern than the welfare of foreign children.

"We have increased awareness and there have been some arrests but
overall we're not putting a dent in the problem," she says.

"We need people to try and think beyond what's going on in their
lives."

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