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Sex
industry throbs with tourism growth
Special Report
MANILA STANDARD TODAY
February 2006
With
the recent resurgence of Philippine tourism, Claris,
19, has been getting big tips lately. Working as a sex
worker in a poor country, which tries to rediscover
tourism as a growth driver of the economy, Claris uses
her pretty face and charm to entertain foreign tourists
searching for a wonderful experience in the island paradise.
She works in a place where paid sex is P2,500 an hour.
Her excuse for choosing such a job, which sounds more
credible than others, is that at 16, she got pregnant
and had no schooling to back her other desired occupations.
Claris says that unlike her, others introduce themselves
as students to appear more attractive, if not vulnerable.
Although this is not to say that there are not students
among sex workers.
When a friend invited Claris to work at a KTV three
years ago, she conceded and eventually learned the trades
of being a guest relations officer (GRO) and a sex worker
at the same time. In most KTVs in the Philippines, the
difference between the two is barely noticeable.
The Davao-based KTV where Claris works is a magnet to
foreign tourists - Caucasians and Asians. Twice, Claris
got marriage proposals from her Japanese customers.
Twice, she refused them, afraid that she would be separated
from her family that she financially supports. Although
aghast at her occupation at first, her parents eventually
learned to accept her. Earning as much as P2,500 in
a single sex encounter with a customer, Claris has easily
become the family breadwinner in a city where the daily
minimum wage is below P300.
Most likely, Claris is not her real name. Most sex workers
in the Philippines use aliases to protect their real
identifies, so that they can live normal lives at daylight
as a mother, wife, sister or a friend. They change names
as often as they switch from one customer to another.
Common aliases include Nicole, Apple, Anne, Mariz, Aubrey,
Cindy, Maricar, Sabrina, and Janice, to name a few.
All of these girls claim to be 18 years or older. Those
who look younger won't admit their real age, as if being
older gives them license to engage in prostitution.
An employee of a Quezon City-based bar, however, admits
that some of their girls are 17 years old and younger.
"Between us boys, of course they are young because
customers prefer them to be young. But we do not disclose
their real age for reasons you already know," he
says in a private conversation.
Customers, he says, prefer teenagers or 19 years old
and younger. "Up to 21 years, they may still get
some customers. But when they reach 22, I do not know,"
he adds.
At an intersection along Quezon Avenue, Apple, a petite
girl who cannot get employed in one of the bars because
of her tender age is often seen waving at cars. Although
she looks younger than 16, the fair-skinned Apple claims
to be 19 and asks for a service fee of P1,000 for a
one-hour interaction. There are hundreds like her along
Quezon Ave.
Although illegal in the Philippines, prostitution thrives
in the country, recently boosted by dollars brought
in by foreign tourists, who are most likely to be male,
aged 38 years or older, and in the country for pleasure.
The Philippines actually has enough laws against prostitution.
Among these laws is Republic Act No. 9208, otherwise
known as the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of 2003,
which seeks to save women and children from falling
into prostitution, pornography, sexual exploitation,
forced labor, slavery, involuntary servitude or debt
bondage. Unfortunately, the law does not save them from
poverty and lack of livelihood opportunities, which
force thousands of women to prostitution. The fact that
some Filipinos get very rich and others get very poor
breeds exploitation and abuse of poor women.
In 2005, some 2.6 million foreign tourists infused about
$2.4 billion into the country, the highest in history.
This year, the Department of Tourism (DOT) expects between
$2.8 and $2.9 billion from the influx of about 3 million
visitors. Another 3.4 million visitors are expected
in 2007, 3.88 million by 2008, 4.42 million by 2009
and 5 million by 2010.
DOT Secretary Joseph Ace Durano, who is actively promoting
the Philippines in Korea, China and Japan, denies any
link between tourism and prostitution. "Prostitution
is a social problem, not just a tourism problem,"
he says.
While the DOT claims that it tries to woo family vacationers,
their own data suggest otherwise. Based on the 2004
profile of foreign visitors, 62.4 percent or more than
three out of five were male. About 79 percent of tourists
from Japan, in particular, were male.
Claris admits that Japanese tourists are the biggest
spenders, "unlike Koreans" without elaborating.
Claris works in one of the most expensive KTVs in Davao
City, which has recently hosted the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations Tourism Forum (ASEAN). Davao, one of the
anchor tourism destinations in the Philippines, is famous
for its nightlife. A foreign operator of a prostitution
website says that "Davao has them (prostitutes).
It wouldn't be the Philippines if they didn't."
Tourist districts in the Philippines are not tourist
districts without nightlife. Malate, Roxas Boulevard,
Makati Ave., Baguio, Angeles, Olongapo, Cebu, Sabang
Beach in Puerto Galera, Boracay, Cagayan de Oro and
Davao - areas that are near tourist spots - are just
among the tourist districts that glow in the dark.
Sometimes, the nightlife becomes the main attraction
itself. Such is the case along Quezon Avenue in Quezon
City, where Japanese, Koreans, Americans and Europeans
have found their way to pleasure despite the location's
great distance from any major tourist spot.
In Davao City, restaurants, cafes, watering holes, bars,
KTVs and prostitution joints such as clubs, massage
parlors and casas (brothels) have sprouted along Cabaguio
Ave., Quirino Ave., Recto Ave., Bonifacio St., and San
Pedro St. Although entertainment complex such as the
Venue, Matina Town Square, Victoria Plaza, and Rizal
Promenade have been originally designed for yuppies
and teenagers, they have also become the favorite hangouts
of tourists in search of call girls, many of whom are
alleged college students, although such claims cannot
be easily proven.
On January 14 to 21, 2006, more than 3,000 foreign participants
went to Davao for the ATF Forum, the largest tourism
event in the region that has tackled different issues
related to tourism including sex tourism. So successful
was the event that the city had to turn away more than
100 Korean participants who could not be accommodated
in the city's fully occupied hotels, one Mindanao-based
economist says. During the forum, participants have
committed to address the problem of sex tourism and
child exploitation in Asia.
One driver, however, claims that some male foreign participants
in the forum strolled at night and found their way to
the city's nightspots. This is confirmed by Claris and
other bar girls such as Anne and Maricar. Many ATF participants
were treated to a night of fun at one KTV, one source
says. Almost all nightspots, particularly those near
hotels such as Marco Polo and Apo View, had foreign
guests. Even pick up girls and call girls had foreign
customers in January, a friend of these girls claims.
Tour operators also confirm this, although they claim
that this was not a part of the participants' itinerary.
"We do not encourage tourists to go to these spots,
although we have no choice but to bring them to the
legitimate bars, when they ask for it," a tour
operator says.
Another tour guide says that instead of picking up girls
in the streets, who are protected and pimped by some
erring policemen, he would rather advise the foreign
guests to visit the legitimate KTVs and bars. Inside
KTVs and bars, however, occur not only singing and dancing,
but sex for full hours as well. For a fee of P1,500
to P2,000, customers can stay at so-called VIP rooms
or cubicles where they can have sex with a GRO or a
bar girl for additional P2,000 to P2,500. This is true
in almost all major cities such as Quezon City, Manila,
Makati, Pasay, Baguio, Cebu and Davao.
In Davao City, call girls could hardly gain entrance
to hotels, because of strict rules imposed by hotel
management. Special visits to guest rooms, however,
are arranged through room boys or bellboys who have
contact to these girls, waiting for calls outside at
a nearby alley. The number of call girls and pickup
girls swells every time the city hosts festivals or
large events, which means that girls from other cities
go there to meet tourists, according to one tour operator.
Janice, a GRO attests to this, saying she herself is
moving from one city to another. She has moved from
Cagayan de Oro City, to Cebu City and then to Davao
City and plans to go to Guam. The same is true in Quezon
City, where girls transfer from one bar to another to
get the attention of customers. Regular customers always
want somebody new, much more a virgin, although it is
nearly impossible, one club employee says.
In Metro Manila, groups of fine-looking girls gain entry
to hotels by wearing classy outfits. They usually stroll
near the lobby or elevator area of deluxe hotels. Special
signals serve as interaction between the girls and potential
customers, particularly at hotels with casinos. The
DOT and the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (Pagcor)
have recently joined hands in promoting casino tourism
in the country.
Pagcor chair Ephraim Genuino says that the planned $4
billion casino and entertainment complex in Manila and
Clark will employ 200,000 Filipinos. Obviously, Genuino
is only trying to get Congress to extend Pagcor's charter,
which will expire in 2008, by another 25 years.
Sex industry throbs with tourism boom
Special Report
Part 2
An owner of travel agency concedes that the sex industry
is beyond the control of the Department of Tourism (DOT).
However, he admits that when the tourists are looking
for sex, travel agencies have no choice but to tell
them where it can be found. And it can be found in many
places.
Along Quezon Ave., it can be found fastest at massage
parlors, where customers choose from a display room
full of girls the one he wants to have sex with, in
the guise of getting massage services for P2,000 to
P2,500.
One of the oldest massage parlors had to bring down
its charges and offer promo rates to lure back customers
who have found a wider selection of girls from newly
opened massage parlors. One that has been getting a
lot of attention lately is an exclusive massage parlor,
where politicians, businessmen, actors, foreigners and
moneyed individuals have been sighted.
Casas (brothels), which are not considered legitimate
establishments, offer sex services at lower rates. Then,
there are also clubs, bars and KTVs where customers
and GROs or bar girls can spend an hour or so at the
VIP room for P1,500 to P2,000 and have sex for additional
P2,000 to P2,500. Outside the VIP room, a lady's drink
would cost the customer P500 to P600 every 30 minutes.
One of these clubs in Quezon City is getting a lot of
Japanese and Korean customers, because it is known for
employing really young girls.
Another form of prostitution is the so-called escort
service, where the call girl accompanies the tourist
to the places he wants to visit, including the hotel
room where he stays. This has also evolved into a sex
tour. In Makati City, some expatriates recruit girls
to join them in a party where sex is for everyone in
the room. Escort service is highly popular in Puerto
Galera, Palawan and Boracay.
But the most notorious of them all is child prostitution,
which involves either Internet pornography or actual
sex. A staff at the DOT admits that child exploitation
persists in Angeles City, Puerto Galera and Pagsanjan,
Laguna. According to the End Child Prostitution in Asian
Tourism (ECPAT), children have been targets of prey
not only by pedophiles but also by those who are afraid
of contracting HIV/AIDS from older women and therefore
prefer children as sex partners.
It is estimated that there are more than 100,000 sex
workers in the Philippines, including thousands of young
children prostituted by syndicates. According to the
International Center for Missing and Exploited Children,
Southeast Asia is one of the world's top destinations
for people seeking sex with children. The Philippines,
in particular, was criticized for its weak enforcement
against child pornography.
A search for the word Filipina or Filipino woman at
global search engine google.com would most likely result
in links to pornography sites. One site promotes mail
order bride; another, video clips of sex for a fee;
and another, sex tour in the Philippines. "Meet
some sweet Filipina girls from small Philippine towns,"
one website says in its header.
Amid the spread of prostitution in the Philippines,
women's group GABRIELA blames the tourism program of
the government as a contributory factor to the growing
problem of prostitution.
"The tourism program of the government which aims
to project the Philippines as a major tourist destination
has increased the number of prostituted women. As more
and more areas of the country are targeted for tourism,
more and more women are driven to prostitution in desperation
to ensure their family's survival," GABRIELA says.
The Philippines used to export a lot of sex workers
to Japan, but with the more strict immigration and working
policies in the world's second largest economy and the
growth in international tourism in the Philippines,
many girls actually decided to work in local bars and
KTVs while waiting for their working visas.
As expected, the DOT is quick to deny any link between
prostitution and tourism. But not all of them are singing
the same tune. One DOT official, who has been stripped
of his previous functions , has criticized the present
focus on Korea and China without sustaining the promotion
efforts in the sophisticated markets of Germany and
the United Kingdom. Senator Richard Gordon, a former
tourism secretary, admits that quality tourists still
come from Western and Northern Europe.
While arrivals from China have been growing at double-digit
over the past few months, critics say this has worsened
the problem of illegal immigration of Chinese traders
into the country where they are accused of smuggling
cheap Chinese goods to the detriment of local industries.
Local travel operators, on the other hand, accuse Korean
businessmen of usurping their businesses particularly
in the area of tour operation. Worse, they say, Korean
businessmen have bought a number of bars, KTVs and motels
in different parts of the country, by using Filipino
dummies.
Eduardo Jarque Jr., assistant secretary for tourism
planning and promotion at DOT, says prostitution is
not exclusive to the Philippines. "Other countries
have the same problem. We just can't control it,"
he says pragmatically.
However, he admits that foreigners are attracted to
the caring attitude of the Filipinos. "Foreigners
find us friendly," he says. "With such a short
time of stay in the country, foreigners' quality of
enjoyment here is very high."
For his part, DOT Secretary Joseph Ace Durano insists
that they do not sell RP as a sex tourism destination.
"We welcome everyone as long as they are legitimate
tourists, but we do not condone prostitution,"
he says. Prostitution, according to him, is not just
a tourism issue, but a social issue that needs to be
addressed by everyone, not only by the DOT. "We
even discourage it. Families are the type of tourists
we are bringing into the country," he says.
Durano even argues that the increase in tourist arrivals
has been helping mitigate the problem of prostitution.
"I bet you that with the increase in tourist arrivals,
there are now less prostitutes," he says.
The tourism chief notes that the increase in foreign
tourists who spend an average of $90 a day in the country
has helped employ a lot of Filipinos in the services
sector. Data showed that employment in hotels and restaurants
alone grew by 50,000 to 866,000 in January 2006 from
only 836,000 a year ago. At the same time, Durano says
"KTV" per se is not bad. "It is a place
where tourists can unwind," he says.
Senator Richard Gordon believes that tourism should
be the no. 1 industry in the Philippines. Gordon, who
filed Senate Bill No. 2138 or the Tourism Bill that
seeks to attract 10 million foreign visitors in the
country annually, easily gets emotional when prostitution
is discussed vis-à-vis tourism.
"Imagine what 10 million foreign tourists could
do to the Philippine economy, when the average international
tourist spends $878 during his stay here in the Philippines.
That would be almost US$9 billion injected into the
arm of the economy, or almost P500 billion or practically
half the national budget," Gordon says.
Any fear that tourism will worsen prostitution in the
country should not prevent the government from achieving
its goal. "Why are we so afraid?" he asks.
"We are not going to make any decision based on
fear."
Gordon says the Philippines should take risks, if it
really intends to catch up with its neighbors like Thailand
and Malaysia, which attract more than 10 million visitors
each year. Data from the World Tourism Organization
show that in 2004, Malaysia had 15.703 million tourist
arrivals; Thailand, 11.651 million; and Indonesia, 5.321
million.
Prostitution is part and parcel of life, Gordon says.
It needs to be planned and regulated, but should not
hinder the growth of tourism, he adds. "Prostitution
can be found anywhere in the world, not only in the
Philippines," Gordon says. "When I was mayor
of Olongapo, we opposed prostitution, but those were
real people with jobs."
Gordon says nothing should stop the Philippines from
luring at least 10 million foreign visitors annually.
He says the country needs to compete with the likes
of Thailand by increasing its budget for tourism and
dangling incentives to investors in tourism infrastructures,
hotels and resorts.
Two economists from the University of Asia and the Pacific
(UA&P), however, caution the DOT against following
the model of Thailand. Prof. Winston Padojinog and Prof.
Maria Cherry Lyn Rodolfo say the country should move
away from sex tourism and toward quality tourism in
order to get quality tourists.
Instead of attracting male-dominated tourist groups,
the two economists say the country will do better by
drawing in family vacationers to the country's tourist
destinations, which are really among the best in the
world. Data show that the average age of foreign tourists
in the Philippines was 38 as of 2004, which means it
is not getting a lot of its desired tourists - families
on vacation.
This is despite the fact that the Philippines has enough
attractions other than its women to cater to families.
Among the 10 Southeast Asian countries, the Philippines
actually has the most number of world heritage sites.
The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural
Organization has declared the Baroque churches of the
Philippines and the historic town of Vigan as world
cultural heritage sites and the Tubbataha Reef Marine
Park, the Rice Terraces of the Cordilleras and the Puerto
Princesa Subterranean River National Park as world natural
heritage sites.
Industry players cite the need for the government to
sell these tourist spots and the entire archipelago
as a wholesome family destination, where foreign tourists
can enjoy the best of nature with their families. They
say this can truly offer a wonderful travel experience,
and not just satisfy a few carnal desires.
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