Hot Sex Children

Hot Sex Children



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Jocelyn, 31, and Hearty, 5 years old. Hearty’s father, a 55-year-old Australian, had a three month paid “girlfriend experience” with Jocelyn. Most men coming to Angeles city are looking for a “girlfriend experience”, a long term paid relationship. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
IN ANGELES CITY, 80 kilometres north of Manila, a generation of children are growing up with no idea who their father is.
These children are the focus of a heart-breaking new photo series titled Dad is Gone.
Photographers Stephanie Borcard and Nicolas Metraux spent time in Angeles City in 2014, taking pictures of the children born from sex tourism. This particular area of the Philippines is known for its red-light district. Until 1991, the city was the home of Clark Air base, the largest US Air Base outside the United States of America. This saw an influx of brothels and “girlie bars” in the area, turning the city into one of the most popular sex tourism destinations.
Today, about 12,000 women are working in the bars that flank Fields Avenue.
Unlike in Thailand, international customers in the Philippines tend to seek a “girlfriend experience” that can last for several weeks or months.
Each year, thousands of children are born from these paid relationships. The fathers, whether American, Australian, British, German, Swiss, Korean or Japanese often abandon their offspring. In this very Catholic country, abortion is considered as a crime and punished by law.
Left behind, these children grow up in search of their own identity, where the father figure is still a question mark ...
Jayvee, 5 years old. His mother still has e-mail exchanges with his father, 45, from Wisconsin, USA. However, they get no financial support from him. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
4-year-old Angela Paula at her school in Mabalacat. Her father is a 47-year-old Korean architect. It seems he wanted to meet his daughter, but her mother refused, scared that he will take Angela to Seoul. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
Samantha Elise, 6, and her half-sister Briana Louise, 3 years old. Samantha’s father is from India and Briana’s father from Canada. Their aunt raises the siblings. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
Benny, 3 years old. His father is from Australia and supports his son financially with 10,000 pesos per month (approx. $289/month). Benny’s mother continues to work in Fields Avenue. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
The 'Las Vegas' one of the many nightclubs in Balibago, the red light district of Angeles City. There are about 12,000 women working in Fields Avenue. Foreigners hold most of the bars: Americans, Australians, Germans and more recently Koreans and Japanese. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
John Peter, 12 years old. His father was British and sponsored him until he passed away in Bangkok in 2013. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
Mary Ann, 36 and Michael, 4 years old. Michael’s father, a German citizen, signed the birth certificate but does not support his son financially. He still lives in the Philippines and works in the region. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
Kayla Jolie, 6 years old. Her father, an Irishman, supported her and her mum financially for 10 months, before vanishing. They remain without any news from him. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
Princess Ann, one year old. Her father, around 60, comes from Spain and spent one week in Angeles City as a tourist. He does not know about his daughter. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
Sara Jane, 20 years old. Her father is American. She has no information about him and her mother doesn’t want to talk about it. A relative living in Las Vegas has sponsored her for her education. After graduation from college, she studied computer programming at the University of Angeles. Today she is looking for a job. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
Mary Grace, 16 years old. She never met her father, a Swiss citizen, but knows his name. Mary used to have a picture of him, but the humid climate destroyed the print. She grew up with her aunt. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
Mechelle, 19, works in a bar in Fields Avenue. While walking with her mother on Fields Avenue when she was 9 years old, her mum pointed at a man: “That’s your dad”. Today, she can’t remember his face. She only knows his first name and that he is an American doctor from Santa Maria, California. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
Angelica, 24, and her daughter Azumi Rain, 1 year old, at the Renew Foundation shelter. Her father, a German is managing a hotel in Balibago. He does not recognise Azumi as his daughter and refuses to make a DNA test. He cut all contact with Angelica. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
A large number of girls who come to Angeles tend to be provincial, especially from Samar, Leyte and Visayas, having seen their friends live a “better life” because of their job in the prostitution industry. Other young females turn to prostitution after they become single unwed mothers — condoms are rarely used in the Philippines because of a strong Catholic Church opposing it.
The dance floor at the Tao Bar in Fields Avenue. The manager is German. There are about 12,000 women working in the bars in Fields Avenue. Foreigners, such as: Americans, Australians, Germans and more recently Koreans and Japanese hold most of the bars. (Picture: Stephanie Borcard/Nicolas Metraux/INSTITUTE)Source:Supplied
Prostitution in the Philippines is illegal — penalties range up to life imprisonment for those involved in trafficking. Despite this, in 2013 it was estimated that there were up to 500,000 (majority female) prostitutes in the Philippines.
In her “Anti-Prostitution Act”, Senator Pia S. Cayetano claimed that the total number of people involved in prostitution in the Philippines could actually be as high as 800,000.
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Child sex tourism (CST) is tourism for the purpose of engaging in the prostitution of children, which is commercially facilitated child sexual abuse.[1] The definition of child in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child is "every human being below the age of 18 years".[2] Child sex tourism results in both mental and physical consequences for the exploited children, which may include sexually transmitted infections (including HIV/AIDS), "drug addiction, pregnancy, malnutrition, social ostracism, and death", according to the State Department of the United States.[1] Child sex tourism, part of the multibillion-dollar global sex tourism industry, is a form of child prostitution within the wider issue of commercial sexual exploitation of children. Child sex tourism victimizes approximately 2 million children around the world.[1][3][4][5] The children who perform as prostitutes in the child sex tourism trade often have been lured or abducted into sexual slavery.[6][7][8]
Users of children for commercial and sexual purposes can be categorized by motive. Although pedophiles are popularly associated with child sex tourism, they are not the majority of users. There are two types of offenders: preferential abusers who specifically prefer children, because they seek to build a relationship with a child or because they perceive the risk of sexually transmitted infections to be lower; and situational users, which are abusers who do not actively seek out children but for whom the actual act is opportunistic. For situational users, there may be a lack of concern to check the age of a prostitute before engaging in sexual activity.[9]
Travelling child sex offenders can use the Internet to plan their trips by seeking out and trading information about opportunities for child sex tourism and where the most vulnerable children can be found, generally in areas of low income.[5] A few governments have enacted laws to allow prosecution of its citizens for child sexual abuse committed outside of their home country. However, while laws against child sex tourism may deter situational offenders who may act impulsively, pedophiles who travel specifically for the purpose of exploiting children are not easily deterred.[5]
Child sex tourism has been closely linked to poverty, armed conflicts, rapid industrialization, and exploding population growth.[10] In Latin America and Southeast Asia, for instance, street children often turn to prostitution as a last resort. Additionally, vulnerable children are easy targets for exploitation by traffickers.[10] Thailand, Cambodia, India, Brazil and Mexico have been identified as leading hotspots of child sexual exploitation.[11] Also, child victim ages have been found in Cambodia, Myanmar, the Philippines, and Thailand to range from 6 to 11 years old, followed by 12 to 15 years old, and 15 to 17.[12] Child sex tourism has also been complicated by varying ages of consent laws where, for example, the age of consent is 13 in Japan while it is 21 in Bahrain (see ages of consent in Asia).
In 2012, the Special Rapporteur on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography reported: "Countries of origin of international child sex tourists vary depending on the regions, but the demand is usually recognized as coming from the industrialized countries, including the richer countries of Europe, North America, the Russian Federation, Japan, Australia and New Zealand. Australians, for instance, have been identified as the largest group of sex tourists prosecuted in Thailand (31 percent of the total). Of the 146 cases investigated by Action Pour Les Enfants (APLE) in Cambodia between 2003 and April 2012, 32 were American, 24 French and 20 Vietnamese. In the coastal regions of Kenya, for example, 30 percent were residents and 70 percent of the abusers were foreign: Italians (18 percent), Germans (14 percent), Swiss (12 percent), with tourists coming from Uganda and the United Republic of Tanzania fifth and sixth on the list. In Costa Rica, according to available information, between the 1999 and 2005, the Child Exploitation Unit had arrested a total of 74 persons on suspicion of commercial sexual exploitation of children. Of those arrested, 56 were Costa Rican nationals and 18 foreign nationals".[13]
In Thailand, the exact number of child-prostitutes is not known, but Thailand's Health System Research Institute reports that children in prostitution make up 40% of prostitutes in Thailand.[14] In Cambodia, it has been estimated that about a third of all prostitutes are under 18.[15][16] In India, the federal police say that around 1.2 million children are believed to be involved in prostitution.[17] Up until recently, Brazil has been considered to have the worst child sex trafficking record after Thailand.[18] As per Chris Rogers report on BBC World[19] "Now Brazil is overtaking Thailand as the world's most popular sex-tourist destination". DLN reports that "Brazil at the moment is on a high trend of child sex tourism and is all geared to take up the first spot beating out Thailand."[20]
Sex tourism targeting children creates huge monetary incentives for traffickers. Human trafficking impacts an estimated 1.2 million child victims.[21][22] The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crimes (UNODC) recently stated that 79% of all global trafficking is for sexual exploitation, which is one of the fastest growing criminal activities in the world.[22]
UNICEF notes that sexual activity is often seen as a private matter, making communities reluctant to act and intervene in cases of sexual exploitation.[22] These attitudes make children far more vulnerable to sexual exploitation. Most exploitation of children takes place as a result of their absorption into the adult sex trade where they are exploited by local people and sex tourists.[22] The Internet provides an efficient global networking tool for individuals to share information on destinations and procurement.[22]
In cases involving children, the U.S. has relatively strict domestic laws that hold accountable any American citizen or permanent resident of the U.S. who travels abroad for the purpose of engaging in illicit conduct with a minor.[23] However, child pornography, sex tourism and human trafficking remain fast-growing industries.[23] Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J. recently introduced H.R. 1623, the international Megan's Law. Similar to the domestic Megan's Law (named after Megan Kanka of New Jersey), which provides for community notification when a sex offender is living in the area, H.R. 1623 would alert officials abroad when U.S. sex offenders intend to travel, and likewise encourage other countries to keep sex offender lists and to notify the U.S. when a known sex offender may be coming to the United States for sex tourism.[23] While there are serious problems with the sex offender registries in the United States, human rights organizations such as ECPAT and UNICEF believe this would be a step in the right direction.[23]
One of the factors pushing Brazil to the top of this list of destination countries is the extensive use of the Sport Fishing industry in the Brazilian Amazon as a front. The 2008 U.S. State Department Report[24] states "At midyear Federal Police in Manaus began investigating allegations that a foreign-owned travel company arranged fishing expeditions to the Amazon region that were in reality sex tours for U.S. and European pedophiles. At year's end the investigation was continuing in coordination with foreign law enforcement officials." Another US State Department report states (page 85) "In a newer trend, some arranged fishing expeditions to the Amazon were organized for the purpose of child sex tourism for European and American exploiters."[25] Recent Reports on Fox Atlanta and ABC World News Tonight have helped shine the light on this.[26][27][28][29][30] ECPAT-USA has recently posted a Brazilian National News story with English subtitles.[31]
According to the Federal Bureau of Investigations estimate, there are 750,000 predators online at any given time in 40,000 public chat rooms. Offers from 20,000 internet users to pay for webcam sex performances were found in a 10-week investigation conducted from a warehouse in Amsterdam, in the Terre des hommes Dutch action against WCST, using "Sweetie", a 3D computer model. Out of 21,000 perpetrators, 1,000 were identified from Australia, Canada, Germany, Ghana, India, Italy, Mauritius, the Netherlands, South Africa, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and United States. 110 of the alleged online abusers were based in the UK and another 254 were traced to computers in the US.[32] Together with Avaaz.org, Terre des Hommes Netherlands has created an online petition to pressure governments to adopt proactive investigation policies in order to protect children against webcam child sex tourism.
In recent years[when?] there has been an increase in the prosecution of child sex tourism offenses. At least 38 countries have extraterritorial laws that allow their citizens to be prosecuted specifically for child sexual abuse crimes committed while abroad, and another 31 nations have more general extraterritorial laws that could be used to prosecute their citizens for crimes committed during child sex tourism trips.[1] As of May 2016, 173 countries have signed and ratified the Optional Protocol on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography which is "Deeply concerned at the widespread and continuing practice of sex tourism, to which children are especially vulnerable". It also obliges parties to pass laws within their own territories against these practices "punishable by appropriate penalties that take into account their grave nature".[33] In response to CST, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), the tourism industry, and governments have begun to address the issue. The World Tourism Organization (WTO) established a task force to combat CST. The WTO, ECPAT (End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes) and Nordic tour operators created a global Code of Conduct for the Sexual Exploitation of Children in Travel and Tourism in Travel and Tourism in 1996. As of April 2013, over 1200 travel companies from 40 countries had signed the code.[34]
The United States' Homeland Security Investigations participates in investigating and capturing child sex tourists. In 2003 ICE launched “Operation Predator”, leading to the arrest of over 11,000 child sexual abusers, including more than 1,100 outside the United States. While ICE agents refuse to comment on their means and methods of operation, media reports have suggested the use of undercover agents, internet sting operations, and sophisticated technologies. ICE agents in Bangkok did say however that they often receive information from local NGOs about foreigners in Thailand whom they suspect of engaging in child sexual abuse. Sometimes U.S. based law enforcement, such as local sheriffs' departments and parole officers, inform them of known sex offenders who are traveling to the region. In both cases, local ICE agents work with their Royal Thai Police counterparts to monitor the suspects’ movements while in Thailand.[35] The UK police and the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP) are actively involved in monitoring child sex tourists and do prosecute.[36]INTERPOL actively pursues offenders as well.[37]
A growing number of countries have specific extraterritorial legislation that prosecutes their citizens in their homeland should they engage in illicit sexual conduct in a foreign country with children. In 2008, ECPAT reported that 44 countries had extraterritorial child sex legislation.[51] The following list includes specific citations:
Australia was one of the first countries to introduce laws that provide for jail terms for its citizens and residents who engage in sexual activity with children in foreign countries. The laws are contained in the Crimes (Child Sex Tourism) Amendment Act 1994 that came into force on 5 July 1994.[52] The law also makes it an offence to encourage, benefit or profit from any activity that promotes sexual activity with children.
It is a crime for Australian citizens, permanent residents or bodies corporate
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