COLOMBIA: UNITED NATIONS AND COLOMBIAN GOVERNMENT MAKE SOAP OPERA WARNING WOMEN ABOUT DANGERS OF SEXUAL EXPLOITATION
Record ID:
336849
COLOMBIA: UNITED NATIONS AND COLOMBIAN GOVERNMENT MAKE SOAP OPERA WARNING WOMEN ABOUT DANGERS OF SEXUAL EXPLOITATION
- Title: COLOMBIA: UNITED NATIONS AND COLOMBIAN GOVERNMENT MAKE SOAP OPERA WARNING WOMEN ABOUT DANGERS OF SEXUAL EXPLOITATION
- Date: 4th June 2005
- Summary: BOGOTA, COLOMBIA (RECENT) (REUTERS) VARIOUS OF MODEL WATCHING THE SOAP OPERA SCU (SOUNDBITE) (Spanish) MONICA GRISALES, MODEL, SAYING: "The soap is getting a really good reception from people. People like watching it and I think it's a massive medium to reach a lot of people, above all, some young girls who suddenly, it's like they are not conscious of this problem and I
- Embargoed: 19th June 2005 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: BOGOTA, COLOMBIA
- Country: Colombia
- Topics: Crime
- Reuters ID: LVAZ2D1O9S4ZTE3CQCL7XCD9I9C
- Story Text: The United Nations and Colombia join forces in
warning women about the dangers of sexual exploitation with
popular telenovela.
The United Nations has sought the help of a
kind-hearted prostitute to warn of the dangers of people
trafficking in one of Colombia's most popular soap operas.
The United Nations signed a deal for one of the
country's highest-rating shows -- about a prostitute
reformed by love -- to shoot scenes in its Bogota offices and plug its
message against gangs sending women to
brothels in Japan and Europe.
The UN got in contact with the show's producers as part
of a campaign to prevent young women being conned into
becoming sex slaves abroad.
Colombia, along with other developing nations with
large poor populations, is a major target for human
traffickers, law enforcement officials say. According to
Sandro Calvani, the United Nations Office on Drugs and
Crime's representative in Colombia, human trafficking must
be combated.
"People trading interests us now in concordance with
the political will of the whole world. The UN is the
depository of the United Nations convention against
organised trans-national crime which is why the additional
protocol is pertinent to the purpose of this conference to
prevent, repress and sanction people trade, especially
mothers and children," he said.
In an upcoming episode of RCN TV's "Everyone wants
Marilyn", the star, played by Venezuelan actress Scarlet
Ortiz, asks a U.N. official how she can help women damaged
by the sex trade.
In a parallel plot development, another girl in the
soap is lured to Japan with promises of work as a model but
is forced into prostitute.
For model Monica Grisales, the soap opera is a great
way to reach young girls in danger of being lured into the
sex industry.
"The soap is getting a really good reception from
people. People like watching it and I think it's a massive
medium to reach a lot of people, above all, some young
girls who suddenly, it's like they are not conscious of
this problem and I think this is a good medium to spread
that message," she said.
Even those involved in the show, like Sara Corrales who
plays the character of Catalina, have been touched by the
message.
"This soap is a soap that a lot of people see and if it
manages to transmit the message maybe, well how great, how
great to warn so many people about the suffering. I only do
one character and they don't know what I suffer with
Catalina. I cry reading the notebooks, knowing all the
terrible things that happen to them. So if this happens in
real life, it is necessary to avoid it in whatever way,"
said Corrales.
But the show ends happily, at least for Marilyn.
She is rescued from prostitution by a beau she meets
when she wriggles out of cake dressed in shimmering red
underwear. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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