With
Brazil hosting the World Cup next year, officials fear an explosion in child
prostitution as sex workers migrate to big cities and pimps recruit more
underage prostitutes to meet the demand from local and foreign soccer fans.
“We’re
worried sexual exploitation will increase in the host cities and around them,”
said Joseleno Vieira dos Santos, who coordinates a national program to fight
the sexual exploitation of children at Brazil’s Human Rights Secretariat.
“We’re
trying to coordinate efforts as much as we can with state and city governments
to understand the scope of the problem.” Child prostitution is driven mostly by
local demand in Brazil, with more than 75 per cent of clients coming from the
same or nearby states as their victims, according to estimates from the
secretariat. Sex tourism targeting children is active in larger cities along
the coast and increases at times of big events such as Carnival or New Year’s
Eve festivities.
It
won’t be different with the World Cup, and authorities face a big challenge as
sex workers of all ages, and the people who control them, look to cash in.
The Minas Gerais State
Association of Prostitutes, an organisation that represents sex workers in one
of Brazil’s largest states, is even offering free English lessons to
prostitutes in Belo Horizonte, another World Cup host city.
- There’ll be a lot more people circulating in this area during the games for sure and the city will be full of tourists, said Giovana, a 19-year-old transvestite working a corner near Fortaleza’s Castelão stadium.
- “I know there’ll be more work for everybody — women, girls, everybody.” BIG BUCKS The World Cup tournament is expected to attract 600,000 foreign visitors to Brazil and they will spend an estimated 25 billion reais ($11 billion) while travelling in the country, said the Brazilian tourism board, Embratur.
- The championship as a whole could inject 113 billion reais into the Brazilian economy by 2014, FIFA has said, citing an Ernst & Young report.
- For its part, Brazil’s government will have spent 33 billion reais on stadiums, transport and other infrastructure by the time the tournament kicks off, plus $10 million on advertising.
In contrast, very
little is being spent on fighting the sexual exploitation of minors,
campaigners say.
Despite more than a
decade of government vows to eradicate child prostitution, the number of child
sex workers in Brazil stood at around half a million in 2012, according to the
National Forum for the Prevention of Child Labor, a network of non-profit
groups.
Source: Gulf News...More...
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