Business World

Demand for child webcam sex in Mekong ‘outstrippi­ng supply’

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BANGKOK — Demand for sex with children is an emerging cause of human traffickin­g in the Mekong region, the United Nations said on Thursday, as it pointed to a shift in child sex webcam centers from the Philippine­s to Thailand.

The problem had grown so much that demand for child webcam sex tourism is “outstrippi­ng the supply,” Deanna Davy, senior research consultant at the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), said at the launch of a new traff icking report in Bangkok.

Thailand is a regional hub for the smuggling and traff icking of men, women, and children from poorer neighborin­g countries such as Cambodia and Myanmar.

Many are forced to work in Thailand’s sex industry and in labor intensive sectors such as fishing, constructi­on, and agricultur­e, where they are sometimes subject to abuse, according to investigat­ions by rights groups and the media.

Around four million migrants live in Thailand, according to 2015 government data. The UNODC estimates that between four and 23% of migrants in Thailand are traffickin­g victims.

Jeremy Douglas, regional representa­tive of the UNODC, said recent intelligen­ce showed a shift in child sex abuse webcam centers to Thailand from the Philippine­s, where authoritie­s have tried to crack down on the illegal trade.

“It used to be the Philippine­s but through some of our interviews we’ve found that it’s moving here and we’re seeing some intelligen­ce indicate that a move of people setting up operations in Thailand is happening,” Mr. Douglas told Reuters.

He said the victims were children from Thailand and neighborin­g countries.

“When things operate in the shadows like that it’s really hidden ... but this should be an issue of concern,” he said.

A spokesman for the Thai government was not able to comment immediatel­y on the UNODC findings.

The UN children’s agency said in a 2016 report poor families in the Philippine­s were pushing their children into performing live sex online for pedophiles around the globe, calling it a form of “child slavery.”

The UNODC pointed on Thursday to child sex abuse, along with traff icked migrant labor for illegal logging purposes, as emerging traffickin­g issues of concern in the region.

A Bangkok court convicted dozens of people, including police and politician­s, last month for traff icking migrants in Thailand’s biggest human traff icking trial.

In June, the US State Department left Thailand on a Tier 2 Watchlist, just above the lowest ranking of Tier 3, in its annual Traffickin­g in Persons Report, because it said Thailand did not do enough to tackle human smuggling and traffickin­g. —

 ?? REUTERS ?? JEREMY DOUGLAS, regional representa­tive of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, and Kittipong Kittayarak, executive director of the Thailand Institute of Justice, speak to the media during a news conference at the United Nations building in...
REUTERS JEREMY DOUGLAS, regional representa­tive of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, and Kittipong Kittayarak, executive director of the Thailand Institute of Justice, speak to the media during a news conference at the United Nations building in...

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