The sexual abuse of children by tourists and travellers is a growing scourge around the globe that has largely managed to outwit attempts to curb it in the last two decades, a major study warned Thursday.
The landmark report makes for grim reading, with researchers concluding that “no region is untouched by this crime and no country is ‘immune’.”
More than 70 child protection agencies, charities and academics contributed to the UN-backed “Global Study on Sexual Exploitation of Children in Travel and Tourism” — trailed as the most comprehensive review of its kind.
Covering the last 20 years, researchers found that child sex abuse “has expanded across the globe and outpaced every attempt to respond at the international and national level.”
While the nature and level of child sex abuse by travellers varies region to region, the report’s authors pinpoint two major contributing causes for its spread: cheap travel and new technology that allows predators to share information and abuse more easily.
The authors say public and policing perceptions of child sex tourism are often outdated.
“White, Western, wealthy, middle-aged men are no longer the typical offender,” they write.
Instead offenders can come from all walks of life, with many perpetrators opportunists and not people who would not consider themselves serial paedophiles.
Local and regional abusers
An example of child sex tourism’s changing nature can be seen in Southeast Asia, long one of the globe’s biggest child sex tourism hotspots.
The authors note that while white Western paedophiles are still a problem, enforcement has tightened thanks to increased cooperation between Western governments and Southeast Asian nations.
However victims are more likely to be targeted by local or regional travellers in Southeast Asia — such as Japanese, Chinese and South Korean tourists — primarily because they travel throughout the region in far greater numbers.
“Research into the scope and nature” of that change, the authors say, is “urgently required”.
Europe, once known as primarily a source of paedophile tourists, is now emerging as a destination, especially in some Central and Eastern European nations that are lacking child protection laws.
In the Middle East and North Africa, the authors cite ongoing conflicts, the low status of women in many cultures and traditions such as “temporary marriage” as contributing factors.
Poor countries in South Asia and Latin America that already have a reputation for weak law enforcement, meanwhile, have seen huge expansion in both local and foreign travel.
Predators are also able to abuse in increasingly remote places.
Researchers say, for example, that there is anecdotal evidence that children can be increasingly bought for sex in places such as Myanmar, Laos, Moldova, Peru and some Pacific Island nations.
“Twenty years ago, it might have been possible to sketch a rough global map showing where international travelling sex offenders were from, and where they were going,” the study says.
“Today, the distinctions between countries of origin and countries of destination are blurring.”
With convictions remaining low, “more collective actions” are needed “to prevent this crime and better protect children,” according to Dorothy Rozga, executive director of ECPAT International, which oversaw the report.
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