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Roatan and Bay Islands Discussion List Archive
| Posted On: | 23-Mar-2005 | | From: | "Tatem, Tim" [ttatem.....com]
| | Subject: | [roatan] Honduras Unwanted Tourism
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Ref the below news article from The Economist...
Is there any chance "somebody" on this board might be in a position to broach this disturbing topic (childhood prostitution on Roatan via cruise ship passengers) with the representatives from the Canadian, British and (possibly) American Embassies who will soon be visiting Roatan? (especially since the below news article states that western visitors are primarily to blame)
Also, does anyone know if childhood prostitution is...or is not...considered a "violent crime" under Honduran law?
On a similar note, does anyone know if childhood prostitution is...or is not...currently being prosecuted by the four public attorneys assigned to Roatan? (as described by an earlier Email).
Perhaps something as "simple" as a few strategically-placed signs that clearly warn passengers in English of the criminal penalties they will face for engaging in childhood prostitution...might serve as a practical deterrent to help protect the many poor, vulnerable children who live on Roatan?
Given the high rate of AIDS, Hepatitis C, etc. in Honduras, I would think that all forms of prostitution...but especially this detestable practice of childhood prostitution...would also be considered a serious public health issue (in addition to exploiting an innocent child).
Thoughts, comments, and/or "next step" recommendations?
-----Original Message----- From: SABAS WHITTAKER [mailto:sabaswhittaker.....net] Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2005 7:10 PM To: Roatan Groups; Ana Alfaro; Margo Perkins; Wendy Griffin; Mario Secoff Subject: [roatan] Honduras Unwanted Tourism
Honduras: Unwanted tourists The Economist
Honduras gets tough on child prostitution
For better and for worse, Honduras's Atlantic coast has long enjoyed a reputation as being at the raffish end of the Caribbean experience. After all, it is cheap and cheerful, a diver's paradise, and home to the famous black Garífuna culture. And for those same reasons, as well as for its hundreds of miles of often uninhabited coastline, it also attracts more than its fair share of smugglers, drug-traffickers and sundry other outlaws. Not for nothing did Paul Theroux set his novel of madness in the jungle, "The Mosquito Coast", here.
But now the Honduran authorities want to get tough with at least one of the coast's more seedy afflictions, the trafficking and sexual exploitation of central American children. According to Honduras's deputy head of police, this is a "grave and delicate problem", particularly around the tourist centres of Tela, La Ceiba and Roatan, frequented by Americans and Europeans. In the past, Honduras's mainly Catholic, conservative society has been reluctant to discuss the problem openly. But the abuse has grown so blatant that such wilful disregard is no longer possible.
Exactly how big the problem is, no one is quite sure, only that over the past couple of decades it has been getting worse and that western visitors are much to blame. In Tela, for instance, Jiovany Murillo, head of the local Tourist and Community Police, guesses that as many as 40% of the 120,000 annual visitors to the town could be sex tourists. Some may do nothing more than take supposedly innocent "holiday snaps" of children and women on the beach, and then post them on the internet, he says. But others do much worse. Honduras's Atlantic coast is a region of often extreme poverty, and this makes many children, often victims of sexual abuse in their own homes, easy prey for local child-trafficking gangs.
To break this cycle, and to puncture the climate of embarrassed silence, charities such as Save the Children and Casa Alianza, along with local government agencies have started running programmes to raise public awareness. But what is most needed, both they and the law enforcement agencies argue, is much tougher legislation of the kind used by Costa Rica since the mid-1990s. In Honduras, it is difficult to bring criminal charges against those suspected of child trafficking and exploitation, as distinct from physical abuse. Even when charges stick, the penalties are often light, ranging from small fines to just a few years in prison.
But this may soon change. Under proposed changes to the penal code now being considered by the Supreme Court, prosecutions would become easier and sanctions much tougher. Many are sceptical as to whether this will act as much of a deterrent to poor Hondurans, who see the sex-trade as an easy way to make money. But it could make those visiting westerners think again.
Source: The Economist
http://www.roatanet.com
-----Original Message----- From: seethereef [mailto:seethereef.....hn] Sent: Wednesday, March 23, 2005 10:32 AM To: roatan.....com Subject: [roatan] Embassy Representatives to Visit Roatan
For your information.
Representatives from the Canadian, British and (possibly)American Embassies are planning on visiting Roatan in the next month or so, to talk with authorities about issues here. Not sure if they are coming together or separately. Just wanted to let you know.
http://www.roatanet.com
http://www.roatanet.com To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/roatan/
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