Madagascar: Child Sex Explosion Worries UN Panel, Calls for Immediate Action

The rampaging child sex abuse In Madagascar appears to be receiving support from the authorities. United Nations appointed rights experts have confirmed the prevailing child sex explosion in the country.

According to the UN-appointed rights experts, child sex abuse is “widespread and tolerated” in tourist hotspots. They are, therefore, calling on the authorities to take action to protect youngsters from child prostitution and other violations.

This is coming as the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child heard that the majority of children who had sex for money, do so to survive.

To combat the child sex menace i9n the country, the Geneva-based panel is urging Madagascar’s government to strengthen multilateral, regional and bilateral accords, to prevent sex tourism.

Its recommendations followed a scheduled rights review of the Indian Ocean island nation, which in 2004 committed to eradicating all forms of violence against children – including sexual abuse and exploitation.

Vulnerabilities

During exchanges with the Malagasy authorities and civil society in Geneva, the UN panel noted the extreme vulnerability of communities affected by recurring drought and chronic shortages of water and food, particularly in southern areas.

Linked to this, rates of acute malnutrition among children have worsened “exponentially” in Madagascar, said the UN-appointed independent panel, which oversees how Member States implement the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

In its submission to the panel, the civil society group ECPAT International explained that child prostitution “has become trivialized in Madagascar and is conducted openly in bars, nightclubs, massage salons and hotel establishments”.

ECPAT International added that poverty was the main driver of the practice and that some families even pushed their children into vice, the majority being girls, although the prostitution of boys has increased in recent years.

It said that while more than 250,000 tourists visited Madagascar according to the latest data from 2017, the majority of abusers were citizens of the island nation, with the most affected areas being the capital and coastal towns.

Madagascar has been struck by two deadly cyclones in recent weeks, causing widespread loss of life and damage to parts of the country. UN and humanitarian partners have been providing support and aid to those affected, and extreme weather events have led to widespread hunger across the country.

Committee’s mandate

The Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) is a body of18 independent experts that monitor the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child by its State parties.

It also monitors the implementation of two Optional Protocols to the Convention, on the involvement of children in armed conflict and on sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography.

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