Mut pidetään faktat kuitenkin paikallaan. Thaimaa ei ole mikään lapsiprostituution maa, oon siellä paljon pyöriny, ikinä en ole nähnyt enkä kuullut keltään mitään siihen viittavaa. Tuo 800 000 lapsiprostituoitua on aivan järkälemäinen vale, elkää nyt herranjumala ainakaan Thaimaalaiselle menkö laukomaan tollasia juttuja. Kuulostais suurin piirtein samanlaiselle kuin Thaimaalainen tulis sanomaan et onpas tuo teidän Suomi kamala maa kun joka vuosi tehdään 150 000 itsemurhaa. Ainut varma ero meidän välillä on että Thaimaassa kiinni jäänyt saa todella pitkän kakun todella karuissa oloissa, Suomessa kiinnijäänyt kattoo puol vuotta DVD leffoja jossain kerhohuoneella mitä vankilaksi kutsutaan ja jatkaa sitten elämäänsä vapaudessa.
Jooh, pidetään faktat paikoillaan. Alla suora lainaus yhdestä linkitetystä lähteestä. Näitä voisi kaivaa koko päivän lisää.
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Thailand is the main receiving country in the Mekong region for trafficked persons, and the largest numbers come from Myanmar, followed by Yunnan (China) and Lao PDR. In 1999, an estimated 80,000 women and children were trafficked into the commercial sex industry in Thailand, of whom
30 percent were under 18 years of age. In total, the International Organization for Migration estimates that around 300,000 women and children are trapped in slavery-like conditions in the Mekong Delta region, which encompasses Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand, Myanmar, Vietnam and the two southern Chinese provinces of Yunnan and Guangxi. It is believed that 90 percent of trafficking in the Mekong region is related to forced prostitution, and that 50 percent of women in the commercial sex industry have been trafficked.
Within Thailand itself, most of the trafficking takes place from the hill tribes of the north/northeast to Bangkok, Pattaya or Phuket, and involves mostly girls aged 12-16. Thailand is a major hub for international trafficking to other parts of South East Asia. From Bangkok, foreign and Thai women are sent to other countries, including Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Germany, Australia and the United States. Thai women are frequently trafficked to Japan to work in domestic service and the “entertainment” industry. In 1993, The Thai Embassy in Tokyo estimated that there were between 80,000 and 100,000 Thai women working in Japan’s sex industry. In 1997, a Japanese gang leader was arrested in Thailand for smuggling over forty women through the airport inside large suitcases! The U.S. State Department in 2001 stated that 50,000 people were trafficked annually to the U.S. and that the highest percentage of these were women from Thailand. These women are kept hidden and often moved from state to state. In 2001 an NGO called FIZ in Germany said that there were 80,000 Thai women officially living in Germany and that twenty to twenty-five percent above that figure were illegal. The trafficking of Burmese women and children into brothels in Thailand is also a critical problem. During the 1990’s, the organization Human Rights Watch documented over 50 cases of Burmese women and children being lured by Thai recruiters with promises of good jobs and a cash advance, usually paid directly to the girl’s parents. The girls are forced to work off their debt, often with 100 percent interest, in sweatshops or through prostitution. The girls live in debt bondage, confined to their brothel or factory, and generally experience some level of rape or violence to keep them subdued. Burmese women working in low-class brothels work 10-18 hours per day, 25 days per month, and serve anywhere from 5-15 clients per day. In most brothels that have been raided, between 50 and 70 percent of the women tested HIV positive. Thai NGOs estimate that over 20,000 Burmese women and children are currently in Thai brothels, with 10,000 new recruits entering the country each year. Women are also trafficked from Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, and the Unnan Province of Southern China."
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/top-five-countries-highest-rates-child-prostitution-1435448
http://www.wouk.org/rahab_internati...king in Women for Prostitution - Thailand.pdf
http://digitalcommons.law.seattleu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1037&context=sjsj