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Pirambu. It is from slums like this, from this misery like this, that hundreds of children
and teenagers leave each day, in search of tourists. At home there is no food on the
table. On the beaches of Fortaleza there are plenty of men eager for easy and cheap bodies.
Left to themselves, or encouraged by their parents into prostitution, many children try
to survive with what the night of Fortaleza has to offer; sex and drugs.
- hey boy, come here - What are you doing here at this hour?
- I'm looking for cardboard to sleep over there.
- Are you with anyone? - I'm alone.
- How old are you? - I'm 12 years old
- Come here, we want to talk to you. - Do you know Tatiana? You don't?
- Do you know the girl? - Yes
- Do you know the girl Isabelle? - Yes, the blonde.
- Is she here? - No?
- The judge wants to catch her - Why?
- Because she is here. - Isabelle wanted to go to the Curamins shelter.
But she didn't because she was with another boy, who convinced her not to go. Because
of that she ended up sleeping on the streets.
NGO 'Curumins' are trying to rescue some of these children. But during the humid nights
in Northeast Brazil, sleeping on the floor is the lesser of two evils for the 400 street
children of Fortaleza. Homeless, without food or parental love, they quickly become experts
in petty theft, drugs and prostitution. 00:03:16:24
- Do you know any girl or boy that goes out with the tourists?
- I know Isabelle. - She goes out with them?
- And they pay her? How much? - 50 reais
- But she is very young, isn't she? Do you know how old she is?
- She's 14. - She uses her mother's identity at
the motel.
On the streets and in newspaper ads, all the Brazilian women sold to tourists are 18 years
old. No more, no less. To avoid the police, who are now more attentive to child ***
exploitation, documents are falsified and they avoid the main streets.
- How old are you? - 18
- 18. Are you sure? - Are you doing business?
- Yes - How much?
- 10 - 10? All included?
- Yes - Have you made any today? Not yet?
- They only want to give me small change, like 2 reais.
- Who? A taxi driver? - Yes, a taxi driver.
- You aren't 18. - Yes, I am 18.
- Show me your ID. - I don't have it with me.
- Do you smoke ash? - No.
- Are you sure? - Yes, absolutely sure.
ZéZé, a member of the NGO CUFA, or the Central Union of Slums, is making a documentary on
the consumption of crack; a mixture of ***, sodium bicarbonate and ammonium. He doesn't
believe Diana.
- Why did I ask? Because she has a burnt finger. We can identify crack users by their burnt
fingers. - How do they burn their fingers?
- You saw them smoking at the beach? - They put it on a can and just smoke it.
The crack then breaks. That is why its called 'crack.' When the pieces fall on the floor
they pick them up with their fingers. - Its hot...
- Yes. They pick it up and put it back on the can to smoke it. That is how they burn
their fingers.
Diana cannot stand the heat in the shantytown of tents. She's tired of being broke. She
sells herself on the streets of Fortaleza. These pavements were once Juliana's home.
At home she was abused by her father, so swapped the slum for a piece of ground in the capital
of Ceara.
-I left home at age 10. My father abused me. - what did your mother do when she found out?
- She didn't believe me. - I suffered a lot.
- What made you suffer most? - Being on the streets, not being able to
take a bath. What I suffered with most was being abandoned by my family.
Without any protection, Juliana became an easy target. Guilt brings in crack. Crack
brings in guilt. It is a lucrative combination.
- I did jobs just to buy drugs. - How many jobs did you do in a day? Do you
remember? - Around 3. I was encouraged by a friend of
mine. - That friend also lived on the streets?
- No she took me to her place to have a bath and lend me clothes. Sometimes she gave me
food. She took me to Ceara, went out with a man, and told me I didn't need to do anything.
But he asked me to participate, and I did. He gave us money. Then she took me to a drug
point and asked for my money to buy ash. She said it was mine and hers, that when she got
more it would be for both of us. - She took your money?
- I gave it to her and she bought it. She gave me one and asked if I wanted it. I told
her I didn't know how, she explained it to me and I did it.
It is estimated that every year, 200 thousand men travel to poor countries in search of
sex. Fortaleza is very much on their route. Italians, Spaniards and Portuguese are the
most frequent customers.
- The Portuguese are very discreet. They usually stay at the hotel, arrange it over the phone,
and ask for a room. They rarely approach girls on the streets.
- They also search for minors? - Yes
The men take away the pleasure, the girls the money -- 3 to 20 euros max. They also
take away the guilt.
- I slept with a guy, and after we did it I felt disgusted with my body. I felt like....like
I wanted to rip myself apart.
Like most children, Christine entered into this *** exploitation without realizing
what was happening to her. The abuse began with her father when she was only 7 years
old. Her mother turned her back. A clear message to paedophiles: there is an open door here.
- She turned her back on me. She just turned away. I hate her. If were to choose between
my mother and my father, I would choose my father. Their money was for drink. I had to
fend for myself. We never got money to buy clothes. It was for my sister for her to eat
something. I met a guy... - How old?
- I was 12. He was over 60. He was my friend, he gave me money. I didn't need to do anything
with him. But after a while I was with him at a motel. If I didn't see him often, then
he'd take me to a motel, beat me, and wouldn't give me anything. Any men could touch me and
I couldn't say no. - Why not?
- Because of the beating.
This is the story of thousands of poor children in Brazil. Some come to the office of psychologist
Rejiane Alves, who has treated a girl of 9 with syphilis.
"Most of the time *** exploitation starts with ***. The most common feeling is guilt."
"It was cold, and I felt disgusted. The majority were drunk, and smelt of rum. It was disgusting."
"In a prejudiced and chauvinistic society sleeping with girls of 12 or 14,is not understood
as exploitation. It is a delicate matter. People say, 'she does it because she wants
to.' She is a woman, we can't tell a woman what to do."
18 year old Juliana, and Christine live in the city hall shelter, 'Espaco Aquarela.'
It is a confidential place. It is to here that the court directs teenagers at risk for
denouncing their exploiters. The youngest resident is 13. She has been selling her body
from the age of 11. 17 year old Christine has discovered here the childhood games she
never had.
- Do you want to have children? - No, never.
- Are you afraid that what happened to you will happen to them?
- I just don't want to...
Visible on the streets, child *** exploitation begins indoors, away from public view. Cristine,
Juliana and so many other Brazilian teenagers could be the protagonists of this scene dramatized
by volunteers at the Teenage Reference Centre.
"All the time, our girls, our children, are being pulled into that industry. According
to the latest data of the Brazilian Geographical Research, 62% of the population are living
below the poverty line. 62% is a lot."
Tourists with euros beckon. The Brazilians are at their mercy. The women want to escape
poverty. The men believe that anything can be bought. With shelters and training centres
in the slums of Pirambu, the Sisters of Redemption quickly realized that the lack of opportunities
turns the tourists into disloyal competition.
"We can not say 'leave that life', because it is a job. They go after the foreigners,
misled by them, and they get pregnant. The foreigners make promises, which they believe.
For two, three months they send money, and then? There are 12 year olds who are already
working in the square."
The industry is designed so that no law prevents exploiters from profiting from the misery
of Brazil.
"Foreigners and also some Brazilians rent houses on the beach, and taxi drivers take
the girls there. They stay there two weeks of their holiday time. Here they are persecuted.
But there they can do it."
Sociologist and photographer, Robson Oliviera, has studied *** exploitation for many years
and knows that in this industry, profit is the law.
"Drug dealers realise that the *** is the best vendor, because she sells inside
the room. She sells it to her clients. Her partner makes her use the drugs and she gets
addicted. For the dealer it is excellent, because he creates a dependency on the drug
and it also creates a system of trafficking. It makes it impossible for her to denounce
him because she also becomes a dealer. The 40 million dollar profit that these Brazilian
women mean to the traffic, to the organised crime, is only sex. It is estimated that this
value has increased 4 to 5 times."
Many of the sex tourists don't come looking for children, but they are in regular supply
-- despite the sanctions.
"In Brazil, the *** exploitation of minors is a crime. Even if the child has consented,
if caught with a child younger than 14, the man will be sentenced to 6 to 10 years in
prison for abuse. If the child is over 14, but under 18, he'll be sentenced to 1 to 4
years for corruption of minors."
There are beach vendors and taxi drivers that exploit. There are tourists that take advantage.
There is a culture that makes it easy. But if asked who is at fault, Robson says guilt
should be shared more evenly.
"They are subjected to misery and we are responsible for that. Yet using their body is partly their
own decision, and partly imposed by our society."
The *** exploitation of children occurs in 20% of Brazilian counties. Fortaleza, with
more complaints registered, is first on the list: 80% of flights arriving in Caera bring
lone men. The police have no doubts as to the motivation of these tourists.
"Some tourists spend 20 to 30 days here in Fortaleza. They take around 10 girls to their
room, sometimes 2 a night. Portuguese, Italians, Germans, Dutch...."
Although rare, cases of imprisonment for *** exploitation have increased in Brazil. But
the industry knows how to take advantage of any gap in the legislation. Besides drugs
and prostitution, sex tourism also acts as a gateway for human trafficking.
"Most of the Brazilian women are trafficked to Spain, but also to Italy and Portugal.
Trafficking in drugs and weapons is the most profitable, but the prediction is that in
a few years human trafficking will exceed both. Why? Because the penalties for drugs
and arms dealers much more severe. The human traffic sentences are much lighter."
Rosangela had no idea she was about to enter the world of trafficking when, at the age
of 17, she accepted a job cleaning the house of a Swiss man, 30 years her senior.
"He managed to take all my documents, my ID, passport etc, and took me with him."
The promise of a better life seduced this Pataxó Indian. She traded a wedding ring
for a tattoo.
"He drew an ugly beast on her back and said that was a wedding. This was the wedding."
The fact that the Swiss was already married to another Brazilian woman did not make her
change her mind.
"He married her just to get her a European visa. He didn't marry her for love, and he
wasn't living with her. She paid him and they got married.
Living in fear of the police and of being repatriated or abandoned, Rosangela accepted
all the rules, including one banning her from leaving the house.
- Did you feel like a slave? - A slave?
- You couldn't go out, you had to do what he wanted to do.
- No, I went out with him. - But you didn't go out alone?
- No, I didn't go out alone. Not alone.
Living illegally in Switzerland made her vulnerable, someone ready to use and discard - but Rosangela
did not want to go back to the poverty of her village.
"He beat me with the children watching. He set me on fire."
- He set you on fire? How? "He set my clothes on fire -- struck a match
and touched me with it. My 6 year old girl saw it. She remembers it still."
In Porto Seguro, the Swiss man had told Rosangela that he worked in transport. Only later, in
Europe, did she realize that the transport were women.
"He took women from one country to another to sell themselves. Men paid those women,
and they also paid him for bringing them there, for transporting the women from one country
to another. He bought a car, a house, a kiosk, furniture...he bought everything with that
money."
In a village with 92% unemployment, it wasn't difficult to convince Rosangela's mother to
let her daughter go to Switzerland.
"He said he had a good job for her in a family home. When she arrives at the airport he is
there with two other men -- for her to choose from. My daugher, naïve as she was, left
her purse somewhere. She lost her ticket and her passport."
- She lost it or it was stolen? - Stolen probably.
The youngest daughter of Maria Adalgisa, refused to exchange her job as a domestic employee
for a life of prostitution. She escaped the trap of human trafficking. Just.
"He came on to her, She didn't accept it, so he hit her. He kicked her so hard that
she was purple, especially her legs. But she managed to escape out of Switzerland."
Rosangela had two daughters by the Swiss man. They were abandoned by him three years ago,
but the family lives in fear of a possible return, this time to take the children away.
"The first picture of the baby he took, she was naked. He just wanted to take pictures
of the baby's bottom. He was constantly taking a photo of the child's ***."
- You believe he wants to take the children away?
- Yes - What for?
- Not for a good thing. He could sell them, make money with them.
When the Portuguese first set foot in Brazil in 1500, they found in these islands a safe
harbour. And amongst the people, the Pataxo Indians, they found hospitality. Nowadays,
the Indians of Coroa Vermelha are waging a daily battle for survival.
"We live in a very precarious social state. The village's economy is based on the commerce
of handicraft. Many families starve. There isn't any profit. Nowadays, more than 85%
of handicraft is made by non-Indians."
The motto of this chief has been to fight back. Over the past three years, he has created
a internal security system, opened a social service and arranged training courses. Sonia
is the pride of the village's technicians.
" I looked at myself in the mirror and thought; is this really me? Everyone offered me money
to stay. But I arrived here and made the decision of my life. I've changed."
Sonya started adult life at 12. Now, at 16, she is married and serves drinks in a beach
bar. But she still sheds tears for the past.
Those who came looking for me were always aged around 50 or 60. They like young girls,
like us. - How old?
- From 10 onwards.
Although decreasing, the poverty of Coroa Vermelha is fertile ground for *** exploitation.
In most cases, it is child labour that gives the access to the predatory tourist.
"If they go to the streets to sell handicraft, they go back home without a penny. Many families
depend on their children; they make their children work, because tourists show more
sympathy for children. - How old are they when they begin to sell
handicrafts? - There are children here who are 3,4,5 years
old, selling on the beach." Then you meet the tourists.
Title; Fatiana, 23; has sold herself since she was 9.
"I sold handicrafts." - How did you manage to enter a hotel when
you were a minor? - The tourists know us. He talks to the waiter
to distract him, and we can enter without being seen.
- Do the waiters and the tourists help you to get clients?
- Yes, the waiter helps.
"They take advantage of their innocence to have a better access. They tell her to sit
down. Often they haven't eaten all day."
- What do you tell your mother when you bring home more money?
- I tell her I was working at the beach, selling handicraft.
" It is the hunger. If we are lost on a desert, when we reach the limit, either you eat me,
or I eat you. And at that moment, will she feed her children, or will she ask where it
comes from?"
Fatiana had to help feed her 10 siblings. She lost her virginity at 9. Now, at 23, she
has three children; all from tourists. Besides selling herself, Fatiana also became an intermediary
in the child sex business.
- You get them younger girls, when they ask for them?
- Yes. - What do you do to know if they are no longer
virgins? - I slip a rope on their neck. If it goes
through she is a ***. If it is stuck at the crown, she isn't. I don't work with virgins.
Fatiana is just one of many small scale agents earning money through child sex. This reporter
posed as a sex tourist, looking for a minor. All he had to do was take a taxi.
- Will you help me, if I want a girl for dating? You can? How? In Porto Seguro? A minor?
- Yeah. The police are on top of minors now, but no worries. Last week I took a young one.
- A young one? How old? - Yes, it was by chance. She was 16.
- Did you like her? - Yes, it was by chance. I didn't know her.
I liked her. - You drove her?
- But I can't find her anymore. Maybe she left. I liked her. But there are many girls
here. - Ah you had sex with her? Was it good?
- Of course, she was very good. They are really good, being so young. But there is need of
a plan. To know who she likes, who calls....got it? Its not like a last minute thing, that
you pay and get it. You have to wait a few days.
- I have to wait a few days? - Yes you have to wait. I know all the channels.
- How much is it? - Adult women charge 60 -- 80 reais.
- And the younger ones? - There isn't a specific price. It can range
from up to 30. Its cheaper.
The receipt of this trip had the name of the Porto Seguro Taxi Association printed on it.
They have just signed a deal with Sentinela, a Government program, against the *** exploitation
of minors.
"There is a financial factor that favours *** exploitation. Who ever brings in the
child gets something, the hotel reception gets something -- it keeps corrupting people.
- And people make money with child abuse? - Yes, it is a strong network made up of people
with buying power.
It is a collusion that involves all those working in tourism. During the day business
takes place on the beach. At night, on the Passarela do Alcool, the most famous street
in Porto Seguro.
" You are in a square that has the monopoly on drug traffic and prostitution with girls
of 11 and 12, involving Portuguese, Dutch and Italians - all part of the *** abuse
of minors. Where there is the European market, there is prostitution and there are drugs.
The European brings this. We want nothing but this, that any country in the world provides
-- health, social protection and education. Our country lacks these. It is very regrettable."
Carlito's indignation applies to Porto Seguro, to Fortaleza, to Salvador; some of the most
visited cities by sex tourists. Six years ago, Sylvia Boa-Morte and her team posed as
prostitutes in the capital of Bahia. What they saw haunts her to this day.
"The hotels have books with pictures of women, boys and children. That was six years ago.
At this particular 5 star hotel -- -in Salvador?
- Yes, in Salvador. This woman went to the reception with her 8 month old baby. I remember
it was a boy. They gave her the number of a room and she went in there. She left the
baby with the tourist and left. If the time established was one hour, she spent one hour
on the street. If it was 2 hours, she would spend 2 hours on the street. Then she returned,
collected her money, picked up her son, and left."
Sylvia knew that the mothers themselves were recruiting their own children. But she never
imagined the detail and cruelty with which they planned the child prostitution.
" There was a mother with 2 daughters of 16 and 14, and a boy of 9. The father of the
children exploited her. She was a *** in Pelourinho, in Salvador. She made the father
take his own children's virginity, the girls and the boy, to make them ready to ***
themselves."
If it is true that tourists turn child abuse into a desired business, it is also necessary
to acknowledge that Brazilians are the first to take advantage of the misery and innocence
of their own children. In Itinga, a slum in Salvador, the police just closed a home where
several children were forced into prostitution.
" It was a woman with three children. They weren't related. According to an anonymous
tip off, it was a prostitution den."
On the day of this arrest, Itinga was in the news: a couple had been murdered inside their
house. As in Fortaleza, violence is also common in this slum in Salvador.
" Violence is getting worse in Itinga."
There are also no jobs here.
" I've been unemployed for 10 years. There are many people who have been unemployed for
even longer than me. I want a chance!"
There is no time or place to dream.
- Do you have dreams? - No, you can't have any here.
All that is left is to survive. All over the world, two million children are forced to
sell their bodies to be able to eat. Instead of playing, they sell themselves to adults.
They pay a high price for survival.
"How much is the human body worth? How much is the innocence of a child worth? How much
is an individual of 3 or 4 or 5 years old worth socially? Who is going to save the lost
childhood of a teenager, of a human being?"