![]() |
| © UNICEF Thailand/2006/Few |
| Thousands of children cross the border between Thailand and Cambodia every day to look for work. All too often, they find exploitation and abuse. |
By Robert Few
ARANYAPRATHET, Thailand, 7 August 2006 – Aranyaprathet market, which the Thais call Rong Glua, is a sprawling village of shops and light industry employing some 10,000 people on the Thai side of the Thailand-Cambodia border.
But upon arriving at the market, you could be forgiven for thinking you had somehow slipped across the dividing line into Cambodia. Everyone working here is Cambodian, and the market is home to a kind of poverty that has not been seen in most of Thailand for a decade or more.
Most of the wares for sale in Rong Glua are on open display, arrayed along miles of dust- and rubbish-strewn alleys where the barefoot children of the workers play with broken toys, plastic bags and things scavenged from garbage bins.
But there are other goods on offer, goods that are hidden away. Crouching in the darker corners, or locked up in nearby houses, children are also for sale – part of the underground market and its grim trade in child sex.
Exploited in the sex trade
We are walking through a crowded alleyway, guided by Kriangsak Bunyen, who works for a UNICEF- and World Vision-supported drop-in centre that provides education and outreach services in Aranyaprathet.
“You see that table there?” he asks. “Agents wait at that table in the afternoon. They meet their clients here and take them to the children.”
These children are mostly Cambodian or Vietnamese. They either have fled extreme poverty in their home countries for the relative prosperity of Thailand or have been trafficked across the border to be exploited.
We walk past one festering alley where ‘short-time’ rooms (nothing more than squares of dirt enclosed by planks of mouldy wood) are available for a couple of dollars, and children for a couple more.
Two young girls watch us out of the corners of their eyes. Without the introduction of an agent, they wouldn’t risk offering their services, but Mr. Kriangsak knows they are available.
Most of the girls and women in this corner of the market are working in the sex trade – including some who sell papaya salad as a cover while they wait for clients. One of them is heavily pregnant, but she still has customers.
![]() |
| © UNICEF Thailand/2006/Few |
| Vulnerable children in Aranyaprathet market on the Thai-Cambodian border can rest and find support, including basic health care and legal services, at this drop-in centre supported by UNICEF and World Vision. |