factories or forced into brothels for European and Japanese tourists. A leading Thai political scientist comments:
In Thailand, we occasionally hear stories about young children sold into bondage by their parents. These young indentured servants work under harsh conditions...and for many, the bondage will be renewed when the parents make out another loan from the employer. [Young girls] would be forced to work in a factory normally not registered with the Minister of Industry... as young as nineâwould be literally imprisoned by the boss for up to 12 hours a day...those who complained or attempted to escape would be harshly punished.
This is apart from the normal misery and brutal exploitation of the millions of poor.
âYear after year, such incidents are revealed in the Thai press,â Vickery observes, âand although the authorities express shock each time, no substantial reform ever results. This is because such atrocities, and we must call them by their true name, are systemic in the Thai type of capitalismââmore generally, in the âeconomic miraclesâ that are the âsuccess stories of capitalism.â It is all more âirony,â given the locus of the plague. Another âironyâ is illustrated by Vickeryâs acid comment on the treatment of Cambodia and Vietnam, tortured and strangled by US-run economic warfare, in comparison to Thailand, a major aid recipient: âWhile Vietnamese farmers are getting greater control over land and its produce, Thai farmers are losing theirs and their children are forced into types of exploitation which have not been discovered in Vietnam since 1975, even by the most hostile observers.â 24
Surveying the Latin American region in a Peruvian Church journal, Uruguayan journalist Samuel Blixen reports that in Guatemala City, the majority of the 5000 street children work as prostitutes. In September 1990, three bodies of children were found with their ears cut off and eyes gouged out, a warning about what would happen to witnesses of abuse of children by the security forces, formal or informal. In Peru, children are sold to the highest bidder to pan for gold; according to a young campesina who escaped, they work 18 hours a day in water up to their knees and are paid with a daily ration sufficient to keep them alive. In Guayaquil, Ecuador, some 100,000 children from 4 to 14 work 10-to 12-hour shifts for low wages, many of them victims of sexual abuse. âIn Panama the Minors Protective Tribunal buildings were bombed during the 1989 US invasion, rendering work nearly impossible. Following the invasion the number of criminal gangs robbing stores in search of food increased,â with about 45 percent of robberies attributed to children using stolen military weapons. UNICEF reports that 69 million children in Latin America survive by menial labor, robbing, running drugs, and prostitution. A study released by the health ministers of the Central American countries in November 1991 estimated that 120,000 children under five die annually in Central America from malnutrition (one million are born annually), and that two-thirds of the survivors suffer from malnutrition.
âUntil recently,â Blixen writes, âthe image of the abandoned Latin American child was of a ragged child sleeping in a doorway. Today the image is of a body, lacerated and dumped in a city slumâthose who survive that far.â 25
A leading Mexican journal reports a study by Victor Carlos GarcÃa Moreno of the Institute for Law Research at the Autonomous National University of Mexico (UNAM), presented at a conference on âInternational Traffic in Childrenâ in Mexico City. He found that about 20,000 children are sent illegally to the United States each year âfor supplying illegal traffic in vital organs, for sexual exploitation, or for experimental tests.â Mexicoâs leading daily, Excelsior , reports that âAnother element of