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Cambodia: Girl, 6, embodies
Cambodia's sex industry
By Dan Rivers
January 26, 2007 - (CNN) At an age when most children
might be preparing for their first day of school, Srey, 6, already
has undergone trauma that is almost unspeakable. She was sold to
a brothel by her parents when she was 5. It is not known how much
her family got for Srey, but other girls talk of being sold for
$100; one was sold for $10.
Before she was rescued, Srey endured months of
abuse at the hands of pimps and sex tourists. Passed from man to
man, often drugged to make her compliant, Srey was a commodity at
the heart of a massive, multimillion-dollar sex industry in Phnom
Penh, Cambodia.
"It is huge," said Mu Sochua, a former
minister of women's and veteran's affairs who is an anti-sex trade
activist. The precise scale of Cambodia's sex trade is difficult
to quantify. International organizations -- such as UNICEF, ECPAT
and Save the Children -- say that anywhere from from 50,000 to 100,000
women and children are involved. An estimated 30 percent of the
sex workers in Phnom Penh are under the age of 18, according to
the United Nations. The actual figure may be much higher, activists
say.
Global sex industry
Around the world, more than 1 million children
are exploited in the global commercial sex trade each year, according
to the U.S. State Department. The State Department believes Cambodia
is a key transit and destination point in this trade.
"Trafficking for sexual exploitation also
occurs within Cambodia's borders, from rural areas to the country's
capital, Phnom Penh, and other secondary cities in the country,"
the State Department wrote in a 2006 report. "The Government
of Cambodia does not fully comply with the minimum standards for
the elimination of trafficking; however, it is making significant
efforts to do so."
Sochua said that with millions of Cambodians struggling
to live on less than 50 cents a day, many women turn to the sex
industry. Poverty is also often what drives parents to sell their
child or themselves on the streets. "Always a child is left
behind, often a girl, who is preyed on by traffickers," Sochua
added.
An unlikely savior
Srey was rescued from the life of a sex slave by
Somaly Mam, a former prostitute who runs shelters for the victims
of Cambodia's sex trade. Somaly has rescued 53 children, so far.
Many of them have profound psychological trauma. Some clearly are
mentally ill. "A lot of them, when they arrive, have psychological
problems ... very big problems. ... And they never have love by
the people, by their parents," Somaly said.
One girl at Somaly's shelter appears especially
disturbed. She was rescued after being imprisoned for two years
in a cage, where she was repeatedly raped. She needs psychiatric
care, but there is none available. Somaly says she does her best
to give this girl love and support, but that it's not easy with
so many other needy children around.
Somaly herself suffered terrible ordeals when she
worked the streets, including seeing her best friend murdered. She
is determined to build something positive out of so much despair.
Her work has caught the attention of world leaders, celebrities
and religious figures. Her office in Phnom Penh is adorned with
photos of her meeting Pope John Paul II and messages of support
from governments and charities.
Despite the attention, Somaly said the situation
on the street is not getting better. Gang rapes of prostitutes are
becoming more common, she said, and many of the attackers don't
use condoms. Instead, they share a plastic bag. "Poor women,
they have been raped by eight, 10, 20, 25 men ... they hit them.
They receive a lot of violence," she said.
HIV-AIDS also remains a persistent, though declining,
problem among Cambodia's female sex workers. About 20 percent of
Cambodia's female sex workers are HIV-positive, according to Cambodia's
Ministry of Health. This compares with the 39 percent of sex workers
who tested positive in 1996, according to the Health Ministry.
To help sex workers transition to a more normal
life, Somaly is hoping to expand her refuge in the countryside outside
Phnom Penh, where former sex workers attend school and learn skills
like weaving and sewing.
Asked what the future holds for Srey, Somaly stroked
the girl's hair and paused. Srey is HIV-positive, she said. In such
a poor country, without decent hospitals or medical care, Srey's
future is bleak. Somaly just hopes she can make this girl's life
bearable for as long as it lasts.
From : http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/01/23/sex.workers/index.html
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