Child prostitution in Cebu alarming — ILO
By Wenna Berondo
June 13, 2005
Cebu — There are more child prostitutes in Cebu City than in the cities of
Mandaue and Lapu-Lapu, last year’s study of the International Labor
Organization-International Program for the Elimination of Child Labor
(ILO-IPECL) revealed.
The ILO-IPECL, with the help of the University of San Carlos, conducted the
study from December 2003 to January 2004 and came up with the numbers which it
said were alarming.
Cebu City had 149 child prostitutes, while Mandaue City had 22 and Lapu-Lapu
City, 10. The ILO, however, admitted that this count was only a small portion
of the actual number that remains unreported.
Jesus Macasil, ILO-IPEC representative, said, "This is very alarming because
this only involves a portion of the real number. This does not include yet
prostitution in schools or the ‘prosti-tuition,’ the akyat-barko, and those who
work in spas and bars."
In Cebu City, Macasil said the study covered only 20 barangays, and topping the
list was Kamagayan with 30 child prostitutes, followed by Lorega-San Miguel
with 26, Suba with 16, and Ermita with 14.
Most of these children aged 11 to 17 are classified as "freelancers," or doing
their trade while they roam the city streets.
The study may not be extensive as it should have been, but the ILO-IPECL said
this should be enough to be alarmed and to do something about child
prostitution.
The agency timed its announcement with yesterday’s observance of World Day
Against Child Labor as a way to gain support for the campaign against child
labor, which apparently includes prostitution.
Ligaya Abadesco, of the Visayan Forum Foundation Inc., said everybody should be
alarmed because more and more children are being prostituted or forced to work
in hazardous environments.
Abadesco said children should have education, but poverty, lack of value
formation and peer pressure, among other factors, have led them astray.
In another ILO survey last year, Southern Luzon was found to have the most
number of child laborers in the country with 416,000, but this did not include
child prostitutes.
Central Visayas ranked second with 388,000, followed by Eastern Visayas with
349,000. Western Visayas was fifth with 328,000.
Of the total number of child laborers in Central Visayas, 217,000 or 55.8
percent were exposed to hazardous working conditions, with the males
outnumbering the females.
Of these child laborers, 63.3 percent were in the agriculture sector, 21.3
percent in services, and 8.8 percent in the industrial sector.
Freeman News Service
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Tackling
the demand factor for child sex
5-1-2005
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