Costa Rica.
Nothing Is Closer To Paradise.
Eric W. Robinson - Adventure Inn Hotel
| Introduction | Costa
Rica Vacation | Caribbean
Coast
| Pacific Coast |
| History |
Everything Grows | The
Ticos
|
Ex Patriots | Oldest
Profession | | Staying Safe | Ecotourism
Vs Poverty | Government
Responsibility |
| Fixable Problems | Closer
to Paradise |
THE OLDEST PROFESSION
Prostitution over eighteen years is legal in Costa Rica, pimping is not.
Costa Rican sex tourism generates a lot of income, directly and indirectly,
though the government tries to downplay it. Ticos generally look down on
prostitutes, whereas tourists, away from home and friends, don't care. With
a lack of genuine opportunities to make enough money to support their families,
some Ticas enter the profession. The lion's share of Costa Rica prostitution
is centered in San Jose, though it is also in the larger coastal towns and
elsewhere. Sometimes a husband knowingly allows his wife to perform such
services, while he minds the children at home. The money can be instantly
gratifying, but irregular, and the lifestyle quickly takes its toll on the
prostitute's most saleable asset, her youth.
San Jose's core area bars and nightclubs are teeming with attractive young
prostitutes from all over Central and South America and the Caribbean, in
particular, Nicaragua, Columbia and the Dominican Republic. The foreign women
are almost invariably escaping the grip of extreme poverty elsewhere, leaving
children with family, and in hopes of returning one day with enough money
to start a new life. Very few ever reach their dream. Many are deported by
immigration authorities, destitute and penniless, physically and mentally
abused, most addicted to cocaine and crack. Though many prostitutes are required
to be blood tested and carry up to date health cards, an equal number escape
testing, possibly for fear of discovering the truth and ending their career.
Besides, testing is inconclusive. The transmission of AIDS has quietly reached
epidemic proportions as some twenty thousand people in Costa Rica have now
been infected with the virus that causes AIDS. Seventy percent are gay.
A minority of hotels in our area shun guests returning with prostitutes.
Others, like ours, charge $10 or $15 to the guest, take a copy of the prostitute's
identification (for the guest's protection), ask that they be discrete, and
the guest must take full responsibility for his visitor. It is not my wish
to morally condemn the world's oldest profession, but if it does exist, the
government should strictly control it in licensed establishments with heavy
security surveillance and frequent H.I.V. testing of the prostitutes and
perhaps even of their clients. Prostitutes need to carry valid up to date
health cards, and be made aware of the risks they are taking, and in particular
the need to practice safe sex. Prostitutes and pimps falling outside of these
controls need to be harshly penalized. The Catholic Church is against sex
education in schools and has been chastised for impeding progress in this
regard.
Male homosexuality is unusually prolific and very open, possibly in defiance
to the machismo attitude. After dark, several hundred transvestites, dressed
in stunningly beautiful attire, short dresses, clear acrylic high heels,
and long wigs, stand on street corners in the first concentric ring outside
of Gringo Gulch. Few carry health cards. Some are whisked away in expensive
cars but just as often they use their masculine strength to subdue and rob
tourists.
Costa Rica was slammed a few years back by the major network documentary "20/20" regarding
the prevalence of child prostitution. These figures seem high but according
to the newspaper, Al Dia, there are two thousand working children in San
Jose hired by tourists and Costa Ricans, many of them addicted to drugs,
with no families to turn to. The psychological damage is irreparable, and
will haunt them for life. Most child prostitutes acquire their clients through
pimps, who need to be severely dealt with. The shelter Fundacion Oratorio
Don Bosco de Sor Maria Romero is one of the few places in San Jose that these
children can turn to for help. It is funded by UNICEF and private donations.
>> Staying Safe
in San Jose
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