Identidades in English No 4, December 2014 | Page 43

texts and videos are included to illustrate the topics and observations. Pavarini (2014) points to the testimony of a prostitute concerning the fact that movement was limited during the Confederations’ Cup, due to heavy police presence. The police disallowed prostitution in order to prevent risks to tourists, something that would not be done at any other time outside the period of the World Cup. According to female sex workers, the police ignored them at any other time. Not a single office of the prefecture restricted the sex work, unlike the evangelicals, who acted disrespectfully. Magnólia Said, of the World Cup Popular Committee, in Fortaleza, said that when she visited the Pinto Martins International Airport, she saw informational pamphlets available at the end of a hallway, and none of them was printed in a foreign language. Even so, the customs area is where all the information on how Brazilians should behave when they’re abroad can be found. As far as she could see, there was no campaign to reduce the trafficking of women or the exploitation of minors. Tânia Gurgel, President of the Children’s Municipal Foundation, explains that there is a plan of action for fighting the sexual exploitation of minors; it involves taxi drivers, the homeless and Centro and Beira Mar business owners. In Fortaleza, it was in force throughout the World Cup’s 30-day period, and even included a special center at which denunciations could be made and where tourists and homeless people could talk to with a member of its workforce—120 educator-employees working in shifts. Figure 6 shows a young black girl; one should look at her little hands. The image overtly shows that the government’s measures are palliative, at best, and that there is a lack of social and political will to solve this problem. According to Portal Terra (2013), 75% of the demand for child prostitution in Brazil comes from Brazilian clients in the same state or from a neighboring one. The activity is greater in coastal cities and increases when there are big events. The child sex industry involved up to 500,000 children in 2012, having increased since 2001, according to the National Forum for the Prevention and Eradication of Child Labor. Yet, the Secretary for Human Rights reports that there were 8 million children involved in the World Cup’s major cities, but some cities were not set up to utilize this project’s funds. It is important to note that these cities’ investments and initiatives are still waiting for the government to give them accurate statistics about sexually exploitative activities. With research carried out by Ana María Kehmann and Dilma Felizardo, the CRPSP (Regional Psychological Council of São Paulo)9 shows that Brazil did take some steps to combat the sexual exploitation of girls and adolescents when EMBRATUR carried out a publicity campaign at restaurants, hotels, airports and travel agencies. Brazilian embassies started identifying travel agencies that sold packages for sex tourism. Starting in 1995, they began to remove posters with women in extremely scant bathing suits, evidence that even the Brazilian government was initiating and stimulating sex tourism. But the greatest problem is Brazilian racism, which leads to social exclusion and poverty, and which causes many black girls to succumb to prostitution and child/adolescent sex tourism. (Figure 5). Figure 5. Source: Pavablog, 2014 43