UNICEF calls for action to stop trafficking of Laotian children
October 27, 2004
Children - often girls forced into prostitution - are being trafficked
throughout Laos and across its borders, the United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF) said today, calling for urgent measures in response.
"Child trafficking is a criminal act that violates the fundamental rights of
the most vulnerable children," said UNICEF's Desiree Jongsma in Vientiane, the
capital of the Lao People's Democratic Republic.
For a new study, Broken Promises, Shattered Dreams, representatives of UNICEF
and the Lao Government interviewed 253 trafficking victims, along with their
families, and found that 60 per cent were girls 18 or younger. More than one
third of them were forced into prostitution, while others were held as virtual
slaves and forced to do domestic or factory work.
About one third of the global trafficking in women and children takes place in
and from East Asia, according to UNICEF, which reported that the traffickers
are often people known to the children, who come to believe their captors'
false promises.
UNICEF has been supporting the Government and local non-governmental
organizations (NGO) by providing training on anti-trafficking strategies,
HIV/AIDS prevention, the principles enshrined in the Convention on the Rights
of the Child and the maintenance of village child protection networks.
"This study has a deeper lesson to teach us: we can only counter the lure of
the traffickers by creating real opportunities for children and young people,"
Ms. Jongsma said. "If they believe they can realize their dreams for a bright
future at home, they will no longer feel compelled to leave their communities
for distant cities or neighbouring countries."
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