Villas on spot over child sex tourism
Story by MAZERA NDURYA
Publication Date: 6/29/2007
The Nation
All foreigners will be required to state their residential addresses before being allowed entry into Kenya.
This, the Government says, will help in monitoring their activities and ensure that all relevant licences and business permits are paid.
Unlicensed villas and private houses, spread in most parts of the Coast Province, were being used by cartels to lure and exploit girls sexually, Justice and Constitutional Affairs minister Martha Karua said yesterday.
“The Government will now be working with countries of origin of tourists to assist in monitoring their own tourist industry and to prosecute agents who market destinations for sex tourism,” she said.
She was addressing hoteliers at the Sarova Whitesands Hotel in Mombasa during the Kenya Association of Hotel Keepers and Caterers annual symposium.
She was presenting a paper on eradication of child sex tourism in Kenya.
On the increase
Ms Karua said that despite the enactment of various laws including the Penal Code, the Children’s Act and Sexual Offences Act, cases of children being exploited sexually were on the increase.
“I call upon our police officers and the members of the public not to protect people who are exploiting the children,” she said.
Hoteliers had asked the Government to crack the whip on unlicensed villas and private houses, saying they were being used for illegal activities.
They said the war on child sex tourism would not be won if law enforcers slackened in monitoring the activities of the private houses.
Tourism and Wildlife minister Morris Dzoro said the ministry was in the final stages of finalising the drafting of the Tourism Bill which, he said, would further protect the industry from negative impacts.
“We will soon have a validation workshop for the Bill where stakeholders will be allowed to go through it and ensure that all the views were captured because it is important that such issues like sexual exploitation of children and environmental degradation were adequately covered,” he said.
Still unhappy
The chairperson of the association, Ms Lucy Karume, said they were still unhappy with the poor state of infrastructure and the low funding the Government gave to the development of the tourism industry.