Child protection experts say sexual exploitation of children by
tourists is on the increase in The Gambia, despite national laws
against it. "More
and more children are working in the sex industry with tourists," said
Bakary Badjie, programme officer with the non-profit coalition the
Child Protection Alliance (CPA). "Sexual relations between children and
tourists are shifting from hotels, deeper into communities, where it is
harder to track." Though the
latest comprehensive report on the problem – by the UN Children's Fund
(UNICEF) – is from 2003, anecdotal evidence shows the practice has
grown since then, said Badjie.
A sex worker, 23,
who asked not to be named, told IRIN many of her fellow sex workers are
under 18, and most of her clients are Western male tourists. They work
in Bakau, a suburb of Banjul popular with tourists. At least half of
the female Gambian sex-workers UNICEF talked to for its 2003 report
said they started as a sex worker before the age of 18, some as early
as age 12. Why Many of the girls
involved come from deprived socio-economic backgrounds, have dropped
out of school, or have been uprooted from rural areas and lost the
protection of their extended families, according to Badjie.
The
girls can earn up to 2,000 Dalasi (US$83) a day through this work, he
said, versus the $1 a day majority of working Gambians earn, according
to World Bank figures. They may receive presents
such as watches or mobile phones, and some consider themselves the
'girlfriends' of return tourists, according to Ousman Kebbeh, tourism
resource officer for GTA. He told IRIN many of the girls are
also "duped" into getting involved in the sex industry, through offers
of payment of school or medical fees. "Tourists…take advantage of poor
girls…they approach them and say 'I will sponsor your education'.
They
do not just stop at the girls…they even approach the parents," he said.
According
to UNICEF's research, some of the girls' families do not view the work
as exploitative child labour, and many of the girls involved no longer
consider themselves children. Many
of the mainly European tourists involved come to Gambia specifically
looking for "cheap sex" with young girls, and some tour operators even
promote these services to their clients as a lure, said Badjie.
Tourists meet girls in clubs, on the beaches, in the streets, through
"bumsters" – local men who act as intermediaries – and even at school
gates, according to the non-profit group End Child Prostitution,
Pornography and Trafficking. Government response UNICEF
representative in The Gambia, Min Whee Kang, told IRIN the government
is reluctant to emphasise child sex tourism as a problem because the
country relies so heavily on tourist dollars. This is particularly the
case for the upcoming 2008-09 season, she said, given concerns that the
global financial crisis could force many tourists to cancel holidays. With an average of 100,000 travelers per
year, according to the Gambia Tourism Authority (GTA), tourism brings
in approximately 16 percent of The Gambia's national income, and 30
percent of its export earnings, according to the World Bank. One in
five private sector jobs in The Gambia is in the tourism sector,
according to a 2008 Overseas Development Institute report. Kang
and other child rights experts say the government has made some
positive steps. The Gambia in 2005 passed the Children's act, which
harmonises Gambian laws relating to children with the UN Child Rights
Convention, the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child
and other international conventions, according to UNICEF. "The [2005]
act is quite strong," said Badjie. UNICEF's Kang calls it "a good
start…it provides the framework for a protective environment." The
government also passed the Tourism Offences Act in 2003 to regulate
tourists' behavior and outline how hotel owners should act when
tourists break the law, Kang said. The government has also set up an
army-led tourism security unit to protect tourists and Gambians. The
GTA now has a code of conduct for tourists outlining punishments for
child protection abuses, which UNICEF and the CPA helped develop. Under
current law, tourists who sexually abuse a child, whether or not they
believed the child to be over 18, could face up to 14 years in prison
if convicted. "These
[laws] have done a lot to curb the situation," Kebbeh told IRIN, citing
the case of a Norwegian teacher who was recently tried in Norway for
having sexual relations with a child in The Gambia. A child pornography case involving tourists is currently being reviewed by a court in the capital Banjul. Enforcing the law But
it has been difficult for the GTA to enforce tourist-related laws,
according to the child protection group CPA. The GTA's Kebbeh said some
hotels such as the Ocean Bay in Bakau proudly display the code of
conduct in their lobbies, which helps to raise awareness, but no one is
tasked with evaluating whether staff adhere to it. The CPA and UNICEF train immigration and department officials as well as
hotel staff, from security guards to receptionists, in the code. "If
we see an underage girl who is not a guest entering the hotel, the
security guards now automatically refer her to reception," said
Suleyman Corr, duty manager at the Ocean Bay hotel. "We don't allow
teens to be used.
And guests now have to pay for all additional
visitors who go to their rooms." When asked if he knew of
security guards accepting bribes to let girls through, he said, "Of course it is a possibility but we haven't heard of it." Other
hotels are stricter and stipulate that no one other than the person
booked can stay overnight, or ban "bumsters" from their premises.
"These are basic but effective measures," a hotel manager told IRIN. Kang
said UNICEF would be willing to help the GTA monitor sex tourism, but
ultimately the responsibility lies with the GTA. According to her it is
also up to tour operators to promote responsible tourism. Tour
operators IRIN contacted did not wish to comment on the issue. But the practice will not end, hotel manager Corr
said, unless the GTA goes into villages and communities where tourists
are increasingly renting houses or staying at smaller, less regulated
hotels. "We have to take the fight to the community
level, to get families, teachers and community leaders involved in
better protecting children if we're going to be able to reduce the
rates [of child sexual exploitation]," Badjie said.