The
Kenyan government has been urged to implement the laws on sex tourism. Truth,
Justice and Reconciliation Commission acting chair Tecla Namachanja said lax
laws are to blame for sexual exploitation of children in Coast province.
"Many young girls in the area are now selling themselves to touristsa
making the region lag behind academically," she said.
During
the TJRC's hearings in Mombasa yesterday, parents recorded statements on how
their children are engaging in sex tourism. Namachanja said: "It appears
that all the government does is to enact laws in order to conform to
international obligations without the will to enforce them. Otherwise how does
one explain the fact that despite the laws it has enacted, thousands of
children continue to be defiled and exploited in sex tourism at the
Coast?" She said most parents attributed the problem to the high level of
poverty in the region and challenged residents to take more interest in
education to uplift their living standards.
According
to the United Nations Children's Fund, some 30,000 children in Mombasa, Kilifi,
Malindi, Ukunda and Kwale are being exploited in the sex tourism industry and
this is likely to be an underestimation due to the lack of monitoring and the
social stigma that inhibit children from reporting some of the cases. In 2006 a
UNICEF report showed that Kenyan citizens topped the list of abusers,
accounting for 38% of pedophiles; Italians, Germans and Swiss were the worst
culprits among the tourists, representing 18%, 14% and 12%, respectively.
British, French, American, Ugandan, Tanzanian, Congolese, Japanese, Indian, Austrian
and Arab clients were also recorded.
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