Pedophiles easily find cover in parts of Asia
Lax law enforcement, child sex trade make it a prime location
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BANGKOK, Thailand - One pedophile had plastic surgery and jumped bail to elude authorities. Another paid thousands of dollars to the families of his victims after they agreed to ask that charges be dropped.
Across Asia, pedophiles have long taken advantage of weak and corrupt law enforcement systems, endemic poverty and networks of like-minded criminals.
The announcement that authorities had arrested American John Mark Karr in Thailand as a suspect in the 1996 murder of 6-year-old JonBenet Ramsey was viewed as a rare victory in the region.
Karr was arrested Wednesday, a day after he began teaching second grade in Bangkok, District Attorney Mary Lacy told reporters in Colorado. Karr told investigators he drugged and sexually assaulted the child beauty queen before accidentally killing her, according to a senior Thai police officer, who was briefed about the interview.
U.S. Ambassador John Miller, who heads the State Department’s people trafficking office, said part of the challenge of catching pedophiles is that many come across “as upstanding citizens” who are doctors, teachers and soldiers.
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Hundreds of thousands of girls and boys are believed to work in the sex trade in Cambodia, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippines and other countries.
Sex from street children
Some of their customers — mostly older men — commit their crimes with relative impunity, walking hand-in-hand with underage girls in Bangkok or with boys in a resort hotel on the Indonesian island of Bali. The riverfront in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh also is a favorite spot, where pedophiles buy sex from street children.
“In my country, I never meet super-extra available boys,” Italian Alain Filippe Berutti said after he was convicted in 2002 of having sex with Cambodian youngsters.
Others operate more covertly, finding work as teachers, music tutors or even volunteers at orphanages where they win children’s loyalty with candy and toys.
“If they are in a country where there is a lot of poverty and appear to be developing relations with kids and doing things like organizing programs and teaching kids, people want to assume they have benevolent motives,” said Janis Wolak of the University of New Hampshire’s Crimes Against Children Research Center. “I don’t think it’s mysterious that these people don’t get found out.”
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