Lol!! Wewe na vituko vyako! Kwani kwa akili yako unaona mambo kama haya bado yanafanyika karne hizi? Ama ni huku Dar? Kenya watu ni wasomi, sio kama huko kwenu man!! Check levels of literacy in Africa! Hiyo habari unayoweka pale sijui ikatoka wapi mwandishi asiyejulikana na yeyote naye wewe unamwamini! Hivi mimi ni blogger nikiandika kitu tu ya Tanzania ndio utakuwa ukweli? Hizi ni report za Organizations zinazotumiwa kutafuta pesa na mashirika kama haya na hutia chuku tele kwa mambo. Mashirika kama haya yalifukuzwa Kenya kuanzia mwaka wa 2013.
Lakushangaza hii report yako inahusu taarifa za 2004 had 2006! Kwani wewe unaishi kinyumenyume?
Kenya tunaijua vizuri huwezi kumdanganya mtu hapa.
The child sex trade is booming in this Kenyan port city
GlobalPost
December 08, 2016 · 6:00 AM EST
By
Tonny Onyulo
Inside a tiny house outside the city of Mombasa on the Indian Ocean coast of Kenya, 11-year-old Sabina sits on a bed, one of her breasts exposed, a 2-year-old on her back.
With an effortless click, the girl shoots a jet of saliva through the gap between her two front teeth. It lands on the floor. Then she begins to talk as she shifts the toddler from her back to her bosom.
“The father of this child is a German tourist,” she said. “He impregnated me and left the country after his vacation. I was forced to drop out of school and take care of the child.”
Sabina is one among many children in this coastal region who have become mothers at too young an age. She and other girls, as well as underage boys, have left school to cater to men and women who pay them for sex.
And the market is booming: Child sex tourism has remained rampant in Mombasa, a port city, despite a spate of terror attacks in the past three years that have scared away package vacationers, crippling a vital tourism sector that contributes about 10 percent to Kenya’s gross domestic product.
European travelers especially have continued to fuel the trade. Many come to the city in search of girls aged between 12 and 18. The industry has made Kenya one of the world's hubs for child sex tourism, researchers say.
“We always believe that white men have money, so when they come here we hope that they will get us out of poverty,” said Sabina. “They give us a lot of money and sleep with us. We use the money to pay rent for our parents and buy food.”
Trace Kenya, a local nonprofit group that works with the United Nations to battle child trafficking, estimates there could be as many as 100,000 child sex workers in Mombasa. The trade extends up and down the coast to the seaside resort towns of Malindi and Diani, according to the NGO.
The child sex trade is booming in this Kenyan port city