While No One is Watching
Welcome to the world of those fighting international paedophile rings
"I think he might be as young as three or four", the Swedish investigator says, a grim look on her face as she and her colleague analyse a new batch of child abuse photos. They quietly study the images, looking for clues. "What does that say? That's a British brand isn't it? Yes, that's a typical UK plug. Let's send these to the Brits." Quickly an international operation is in place to identify, locate and detain the suspects. "Let's do it!" It's a small victory, but for the Swedish National Bureau of Investigation it is still a drop in the ocean. "A cousin came and suggested he take me to Italy for work. Mom said I should go..." remembers a young Romanian girl. But when she arrived, "he brought all kinds of men... they hit me if I didn't do what they said". When a Romanian man came to her rescue, she thought she was saved. Instead the abuse grew worse. "At the Romanian's place I got beaten by the women, everyone... I was even dragged behind a car". She soon fell pregnant. When she was put outside a shop to beg the shop owners became suspicious. They offered her a lifeline, paying for her escape back to Romania. "But my family kept telling me I had disgraced them", she says sadly. "I never thought these things existed in our society", says a member of APLE, a Cambodian anti-child sex trade organisation. They are tracking a white foreigner suspected of abusing children from a local children's home. "People around here think he has a kind heart. He teaches them English." It is an endemic problem in Cambodia, where thousands of street children occupy the same hectic towns as thousands of tourists. "He gave me $100 for three photos. I wasn't scared at all. I've never seen $100 before!" says one street child defiantly. But he's had a lucky escape. "The perpetrator makes appointments to see them at night. The child comes to the guest house and he rapes them." "You can't prevent prostitution - it's happening in every country", says Cathy. "But we can prevent children from being there." Cathy runs an organisation in South Sudan rescuing children from the local brothels, offering them a safe house. But it is a more complex battle than simply standing in the way of the male customers. "Girls in Juba realise there is a lot of money in sex. They traffic each other." As Sudan's brothels fill up with desperate young girls and their babies, Cathy is fighting against an increasingly entrenched social trend. FULL SYNOPSIS