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Purple36
22 February 2010, 06:41
http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/02/19/angeles.philippines/index.html?iref=mpstoryview

Angeles City, Philippines (CNN) -- Sitting in the backyard garden of a women's outreach center, a woman recounts a life that seems to belie her young age of 20 and her name, Joy.
"I started working as a prostitute in Fields Avenue when I was 15," said Joy, a native of this city in the northern Philippines.
"I needed the money to support my baby, as I was already so poor. But after awhile the bar's "mamasan" (the name given to a woman who oversees work in businesses such as brothels and bars) said I should go to Malaysia to work, where I could make a lot more money."
After her mamasan organized the contract, Joy found herself working in Sandakan in eastern Malaysia, but the promise of good money and working conditions quickly evaporated.
"First I was made to take drugs. Then I was made to service as many as 20 men a day. If I refused they threatened to put me in jail without food," she said. The traffickers refused to let her go home, and she was only able to make her way back after her grandmother's continual pleading with Philippine government officials. Six weeks later, Joy returned to Angeles without having received a cent.

Broken financially and in spirit and determined to leave Angeles' sex industry, Joy was able to make contact with a non-government organization called the Renew Foundation (http://www.renew-foundation.org/), established in Angeles in 2005 in order to help eradicate trafficking and empower victims of prostitution.
Funded by individual donations, as well as grants from UNAIDS and the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, Renew offers shelter-based programs, housing, food, legal representation and education courses, all of which aim to help women return to their families or reintegrate into the community.

<!--endclickprintexclude-->Renew also has a keen interest in helping child victims of the sex trade; an estimated 60,000 to 100,000 children in the Philippines (http://topics.cnn.com/topics/Philippines) are involved in prostitution rings, according to Minette Rimando, a spokeswoman for the U.N. (http://topics.cnn.com/topics/United_Nations/)'S International Labour Organization's Manila office.
"Most child prostitutes are recruited from rural areas to work in urban areas or even abroad," she said. "They are exposed to hazards that include contraction of STDs, physical violence and harmful psychological effects."

Cities such as Angeles can present all of these hazards for girls and women.
A two-hour drive north of Manila, Angeles (pronounced "angle-ease") sits opposite what used to be the massive Clark U.S. Air base.
In 1991 the cataclysmic volcanic eruption of nearby Mount Pinatubo helped prematurely close the base, culminating in some lean years for Angeles' well-established prostitution trade, experts said. But the city's sex industry has since come back, fueled by sex tourists who travel here from all over the world. Many are older men, looking for their version of fun with some help from so-called "Viagra" pills -- sold on street corners like candy, chemical makeup unknown. The city appears grimy and soulless. There are no pristine beaches or tropical forests, the traffic snarls and the poverty is endemic. But there is sex for sale, it's cheap, and there's a lot of it.

"Mate," an overweight, chain-smoking Australian growls in between gulps of a San Miguel beer as he teeters on a bar stool. "This place is heaven -- the girls are young, the beer's cheap, and it's never cold. What's there not to like?"

Along Angeles' main road of Fields Avenue where Joy once worked, the bars are filled with inebriated men leering at young women walking by. Most of the women are dressed in skimpy outfits and walking shakily as they plod along in poorly made high-heels.
The road is lined by countless bars where sex is readily available from dancers for about 1,200 pesos ($26).
<!--startclickprintexclude-->Just over 80 percent of women who enter our program don't return to prostitution
--Paulo Fuller, Renew Foundation director

Focusing on those bars and brothels in Angeles City, Renew uses outreach workers to identify women who have been trafficked or abused, said director Paulo Fuller. "If someone needs help escaping from the industry," he said, "our outreach workers liaise with police and authorities to help initiate a rescue. We also have cards with contact numbers that are distributed throughout the area, and flyers."
Most of those helped fall into four categories: Girls and women subjected to sex trafficking; girls exploited in the commercial sex industry; and girls who are at risk of being prostituted and/or trafficked.
Renew director Fuller claims a high success rate. "Just over 80 percent of the women who come into our program don't return to prostitution," Fuller said. "After providing them with the support they need, like housing, education courses and employment, that's the figure that don't return back to the bars."
Joy has been living at Renew's shelter now for just over two months. She says she's not sure when she'll leave, but wants to try and finish her studies first. "After I leave I hope to get work to support my son and work as a hairdresser or in a beauty salon," she said enthusiastically.

Back at the bar, the chain-smoking Aussie is informed of Joy's harrowing experience in Angeles. He shrugs his shoulders half heartedly, weighing his reply as a bunch of Harleys driven by riders adorned in Swedish flags rumble past.
"I don't know, I mean it's just all a bit of fun. Those girls have a free will, right?" he asks. "Live and let live, I say."

And with that, he walks off down Fields Avenue through the stifling heat, dodging the tumult, lighting up another cigarette.

Gryfen-FL
22 February 2010, 06:52
Sad truth.

There are few 'good' people in this world. For everyone else, it's just the threat of consequences.

Take away that threat and, well, there you have it.

Oldpogue
22 February 2010, 08:50
I see that Angeles City has not changed much in the 43 years since I was stationed at Clark AFB. Poverty and military bases seem to have a symbiotic relationship. Its too bad the Angeles could not move on once the base closed, but I guess it was an ingrained way of life.

Tracy
22 February 2010, 10:13
I don't know the statistics, but it seems to me that foreign 'Johns' are driving the demand the pimps are providing. Obviously, these governments have no real reason to intervene (source of income and 'jobs'); likewise first-world countries supplying the Johns aren't interested either (war on terror, economy...).

Personally, I'd contact the traffickers and put a bounty on US Johns: Give us photographic proof of a bad act and we'll take it from there. Here's your check. I'd even engage in some Grey/Black PSYOPs to make it look like a hugely successful campaign in the pimp's country.

In other words, make the 'supply' of Johns harder, then adjust fire...

magician
22 February 2010, 11:09
One thing that could be happening more, that is not happening enough, is the prosecution of US citizens for pedophilia.

Pedophilia is a crime for US citizens, no matter where they may commit the offense.

Weak states with corrupt or poor enforcement are magnets for this sort of thing. You see it rampant in the PI, in parts of Thailand, and very frequently in Cambodia and Vietnam, not to mention parts of Africa and Latin America.

I carry a camera with me at all times. If I see it, (and I rarely have), I take a picture.

Believeraz
22 February 2010, 13:08
Purple,
If this is a topic you care about, I'd recommend looking into the International Justice Mission (IJM (dot) org). It's based in NoVA, and has done some groundbreaking work in this area.

SOTB
22 February 2010, 14:04
Obviously, these governments have no real reason to intervene (source of income and 'jobs')....I think a lot of it has to do with what Tracy comments to -- although I think that in THIS case, supply ranks higher in my mind as to the driver, than the demand. By that, I mean that if you look at the Philippines, it almost appears as if the govt has long ago decided that their most exportable item is their human resource. Whether hookers, accountants, welders, mechanics -- you name it, the PI can supply you with an endless stream of willing and generally able bodies. All that cash coming back home/generated at home has to be as important to them as the dollars sent home to Mexico from Mexicans working in the US, or at maquiladoras on the US border.

Add into this the fantastic amount of corruption and apathy for the same, and you simply have a formula for abuse -- hell, I'd be surprised if there was not abuse of the system.

I think certainly countries such as the US could turn up the screws on their citizens, but I honestly -- sincerely -- believe this will do NOTHING. In my forays into the PI, or where citizens from the PI are found, if a US citizen doesn't want the product or service offered, there are many others that do. By many others, while of course you have to include the Aussies, I am specifically referring to the Arabs (not Muslims, but Arabs -- religion of no importance, although most I saw were likely Muslim). Hedonistic values? Yeah, the fucking Arabs have practically put a patent on them.

So while the US shouldn't turn a blind eye to this type of situation, at the same time, we are NOT the answer. From the article above, the girl in the story found herself in Malaysia. While I accept that tourists may have been a large part of the guys she serviced, I also think that a great deal of those guys were Malays. So if you told that US ecotourist he was likely to spend time in a federal-pound-you-in-the-ass prison if he didn't watch his steps, there would be no shortage of citizens from other countries who would gladly take his place.

The PI, then, is the key here (supply). It isn't going to happen (not in my lifetime, I bet), but the answer is that the economic conditions and the societal acceptance of what goes on have to change before you will see girls like the one depicted no longer in these stories....

random
22 February 2010, 17:54
Purple,
If this is a topic you care about, I'd recommend looking into the International Justice Mission (IJM (dot) org). It's based in NoVA, and has done some groundbreaking work in this area.

+1.

I'm not affiliated in any way, but this is an amazing organization. There are numerous articles detailing their work, and the coolest part is how they're not government, law enforcement, etc, and still manage to accomplish so much.

Polypro
22 February 2010, 18:52
Shouldn't we clean up our own house first? Legislative and Judicial branches, and clergy? From DC to Po-dunk, USA

P

Purple36
22 February 2010, 19:07
Purple,
If this is a topic you care about, I'd recommend looking into the International Justice Mission (IJM (dot) org). It's based in NoVA, and has done some groundbreaking work in this area.

Thanks, I'll take a look at it.

Add: Checked out that website. Very interesting..who knows..maybe a new career....

random
22 February 2010, 19:08
I carry a camera with me at all times. If I see it, (and I rarely have), I take a picture.

Forgot to say this earlier, but that's very awesome. I wish more people did that.

arizonaguide
22 February 2010, 22:33
Shouldn't we clean up our own house first? Legislative and Judicial branches, and clergy? From DC to Po-dunk, USA

P
No No, from what I hear, all our issues start on that damn Canadian border and with cyber crime...:rolleyes:

magician
23 February 2010, 01:29
I think that SOTB has nailed a key point, which is that developed countries with activist media are good at wailing about this sort of thing, but we absolutely suck at addressing it, and you ultimately get to a point where you have to accept that we cannot impose solutions on anybody.

The ultimate solutions are to be found in the source countries, and that means that you are addressing historical disparities in social, economic, and cultural spheres. The PI is a dirt-poor country, and those people just keep on fucking, and making more kids that they cannot feed. Same with Cambodia and Thailand. Not to mention Africa.

The true face of human trafficking, in my experience, is economic desperation.

Believeraz
23 February 2010, 06:32
Thanks, I'll take a look at it.

Add: Checked out that website. Very interesting..who knows..maybe a new career....

I'm gonna PM you about this.
B

Tracy
23 February 2010, 10:29
Shouldn't we clean up our own house first? Legislative and Judicial branches, and clergy? From DC to Po-dunk, USA

P

Offering a bounty on US Citizens who engage in this behavior would be a step in the right direction, regardless of location. Plus FULL publication of the details of his actions...

No posses, task-forces, fact-finding, etc. Just give us the evidence we need and we'll take it from there. Get the host government to PNG his butt and put him on wanted lists. Roman Polanski could use some company...

Polypro
23 February 2010, 11:15
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Foley_congressional_page_incident

When guys like this are actually in jail, I'll worry about the third world. All efforts and money should be focused at home first. Just my opinion.

P

Polypro
26 February 2010, 13:44
Sorry to add to my own reply, but once again, proof that those that are supposed to protect kids, are the ones hurting them. This from the UK. Don't think that this doesn't happen here.

http://www.ukcolumn.org/2010/02/02/child-rapists-protected-by-the-state/

P