Child Exploitation
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Most people have no idea how large the problem truly is.
11-year-old boys sell their younger sisters
After a deputy of the St. Petersburg Legislative Assembly was escorted from his
office in handcuffs and several days later was accused of the attempted rape of a
16-year-old boy, the city newspapers were filled with items about (the alleged)
"lechers in the Mariinsky Palace" [the Mariinsky Palace is home to the legislative
assembly], their authors savoring the details of the unsuccessful rape attempt.
While in the city’s newspaper printing complex editions with unproved
accusations and the names of victims were coming off the presses, 12-year-old
children, as before, were jumping into shiny foreign cars at the Moscow Station,
to emerge half an hour later with bundles of bank notes, and the city’s procuring
agencies continued to supply girls and boys to their proven clientele and, as
before, video cassettes with child pornography were being sold in the city’s
marketplaces. On St. Petersburg’s streets, 11-year-old boys sell their younger
sisters to groups of drunken men for a handful of candy; their peers are engaged
in oral sex for two tubes of Moment glue. Child prostitution is flourishing in St.
Petersburg: no one catches non-deputy lechers. Loitering on the streets in
search of diversion, hundreds of children become the victims of perverts.
According to the estimates of social workers, nearly 500 children, aged primarily
12 to 15, live permanently on the streets, spending the nights in basements and
attics. Another 5,000 minors hang around on the streets during the day, leaving to
spend the night not at home, but with relatives and acquaintances, or at one of
the few emergency shelters. In places where children congregate (train stations,
near downtown hotels, and around kiosks near outlying subway stations) people
approach them with the most varied propositions. Child prostitution is well
organized: those who become pimps are, as a rule, minors themselves. They get
half of each prostitute’s earnings. Prices for the services of minors fluctuate from
5,000 to 50,000 rubles for oral sex; "normal" sexual intercourse costs from 30,000
to 200,000 rubles. [One dollar is worth approximately 6,000 rubles.] The
adolescents spend their earnings on marijuana, alcohol, and pills; their main form
of entertainment are slot machines and video parlors. In the historical center of
the city, children are admitted into porno film showings for free—the children and
the parlor guards enjoy the show together. Underage prostitutes of both sexes
toil not only on the streets, but in any of the city’s 250 procuring agencies as well.
It’s impossible to order them up by telephone: boys and girls are delivered only
to tried and true clients—the article of the criminal code that deals with inducing
minors into prostitution is even more severe than the article which punishes
pimping. At night, the city’s bathhouses and saunas function as sexual
entertainment establishments. The unsuccessful attempt by the deputy to rape
the adolescent boy is being investigated by the Regional Commission for
Combating Organized Crime, which usually is occupied with cases of extortion,
kidnapping, and racketeering. Combating the other manifestations of prostitution
in this city of five million is entrusted to a group of some eight police officers
referred to by the populace and in the newspapers as the "vice squad." "What do
a naked ass and fascism have in common?" ask these highly moral police
officers. The answer: "Nothing!" It turns out that apart from the battle with
prostitution and pornography, they are also entrusted with the struggle against
fascism, the illegal sale of Soviet decorations and medals, and violations of
copyright. The prostitute procurement agencies rake in multimillion ruble profits—
the officers of the vice squad earn less than a million rubles per month. One of
the officers sold his car and bought himself a mobile telephone so that he could
call for backup in dangerous situations. According to police estimates, the illegal
turnover from the sale of sexual services in the northern capital amounts to 12 to
18 billion rubles per year. The agencies pay out two-thirds of their income in
protection money to criminal "covers." For its part, the state, complaining about
holes in the budget, doesn’t receive even a kopeck from the sale of unlicensed
videocassettes and is in no rush to finance the work of the vice squad officers.
Since there is no money for a cleaning lady, they are obliged to clean the toilets
themselves after each night’s detainment of prostitutes. Social organizations in
St. Petersburg are trying to make life easier for children who live on the street.
Together with Western charitable organizations, they have opened up places in
the city where children can go for help. The latest of these centers was opened in
early November 1996 by the organization Perspektivy, in cooperation with the
Berlin organization Perspektiven and Hamburg’s Diakonisches Werk. Social
workers themselves are pessimistic about the chances for preventing child
prostitution. "The ones who are already involved in prostitution aren’t going to
give it up. The only thing we can do is to distribute clothing and offer food to the
children so that they don’t have to sell themselves in order to earn a living," says
one social worker.