General News of Wednesday, 27 September 2006

Source: ADM/ JoyOnline

Child sex tourism on the rise

Ghana is becoming a serious emerging market with high potentials on the continent but so are concerns about sex tourism. A recent study of 86 children in the Osu and LA areas, all suburbs of Accra, indicates that child sex tourism is on the rise in the country.

The Ghana NGO Coalition on the Rights of a Child (GNCRC), which conducted the study, also reveals that the trade is particularly common around beaches, hotels and bars in Accra as well as areas surrounding the Elmina and Cape Coast castles. National Coordinator of GNCRC, Mrs Susan Sabaah told a local Radio Station that the issue is more widespread than Ghanaians believe.

The study is the first but Mrs. Sabaah notes that indicators on the ground point to a rise in boy-child sex tourism in the country.

A few years ago a middle-aged European was deported from Ghana after sexually molesting a male child. The pedophile resurfaced a year later in the country to sodomise other unsuspecting boys.

To combat the menace of child sex tourism, Mrs Sabaah said that Ghanaians need to be more aware of the indicators. These signals include children who spend a lot of their time with adult strangers, children who are seen entering or exiting hotels with adults, or excessive gift giving between a child and an adult stranger.

Mrs. Sabaah also recommended by-laws on loitering, greater police and community vigilance, and increased awareness on the part of the tourism industry.

Tourism is Ghana’s third highest foreign exchange earner and the country ranks 10th in terms of tourist arrivals in Africa.