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Base Problems
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A 43-year-old anesthesiologist from Gainesville, Georgia was arrested earlier this month by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and charged with traveling to Russia for the purpose of engaging in illegal sexual conduct with a minor.
Gregory Kapordelis is the latest U.S. citizen to be charged with violations of the child sex tourism provisions of the PROTECT Act, signed into law by President Bush in April 2003. The first piece of legislation of its kind, it demands that U.S. citizens who visit foreign countries to have sex with minors be prosecuted under U.S. laws regardless of the laws at the scene of the real or alleged event.
(Kapordelis's attorney, P. Bruce Kirwan, based in Atlanta, said that he did not think the "allegations had any validity," according to local press accounts. He added that "if the Russians knew what they say happened, why did they not stop him there?")
The president's actions have drawn praise from some religious groups pushing to eradicate child pornography and sexual exploitation worldwide. Many grassroots anti-trafficking organizations that have spent decades working toward a similar goal, however, have concerns that the plight of women forced into prostitution will still slip under the global radar.
"The pressure applied on the president by evangelical groups to focus on trafficking and prostitution for women and children has generated some good results," says Taina Bien-Aime, executive director of Equality Now, a New York-based nongovernmental agency that works to promote women's rights in several different countries. "But we see the commercialized global sex trade as much larger, ranging from trafficking and slavery to lap-dances and mail-order brides. The problem won't be solved until it's dealt with at both ends of the spectrum."
Now that ending sexual exploitation of children has been made a priority, says Bien-Aime, the global sex industry as a whole -- including the widespread problem of trafficking of women and children -- has gotten a lot more press coverage and public awareness of the scope of the problem has grown by leaps and bounds. It's a great time, she thinks, to focus on the economic conditions that force women and children into the sex industry. But those issues have yet to be addressed. There's also growing concern in many activist circles about an apparent disparity in how some of the new anti-exploitation laws are being applied.
Push for Stronger Anti-Trafficking Stance
Most of the five arrests made under the PROTECT Act have been of single individuals heading overseas for the purpose of having sex with minors.
Kapordelis, for example, was arrested after local Russian police in St. Petersburg coordinated with an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Moscow, which relayed its information to U.S. officers on the ground in Georgia.
It showcases the enormous effort being expended by law-enforcement agencies around the world to track child pornographers and pedophiles from country to country. It also represents unusual cooperation among agencies not known for collaborating. Police officials throughout Europe, the Americas, and Asia are working together to build international databases on known sex offenders and to stamp out child pornography rings that have flourished on unregulated Web sites.
While lauding those achievements, LaShawn R. Jefferson, executive director of the Women's Rights Division of Human Rights Watch, would like to see a similar effort devoted to ending sex trafficking worldwide, including in the United States.
Figures about people trafficked are inexact. The U.S. government estimates that between 800,000 and 900,000 people -- mostly women and children -- are trafficked each year across international borders, with between 18,000 and 20,000 brought into the United States. Many activist and nongovernmental organizations say the actual figures are much higher.
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