Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Selling-Fish-in-Tarawa-27MZIFLC286S.htmlConceptually similarFishmonger at Fishmarket on Tarawa IslandGP0STOM5NCompleted★★★★Selling Fish in TarawaGP01ELVCompleted★★★★Woman in TarawaGP01BL5Completed★★★★Woman in TarawaGP011M3Completed★★★★Woman Buys Tuna on Tarawa IslandGP0STOM5LCompleted★★★★Women in Fishmarket on Tarawa IslandGP0STOM5QCompleted★★★★Fishmonger Weighs a Tuna in Fishmarket on Tarawa IslandGP0STOM54Completed★★★★Fishmarket on Tarawa IslandGP0STOM5KCompleted★★★★Local Business Woman on Jetty on Tarawa IslandGP0STOM53Completed★★★★View AllGP016FGSelling Fish in TarawaA woman sells fish from a cooler box on the main Tarawa road.Locations:Kiribati-Pacific Islands-TarawaDate:14 Aug, 2006Credit:© Greenpeace / Natalie BehringMaximum size:5100px X 3393pxKeywords:Day-Eye contact-Fish markets-KWCI (GPI)-Local population-Oceans (campaign title)-One person-Outdoors-Villages-WomenShoot:Pacific Fisheries and Prostitution in KiribatiMore than 25 per cent of Oceania's population is believed to be living in poverty in Fiji, Kiribati, Micronesia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Timor-Leste, Tuvalu and Vanuatu. Kiribati is an area which is showing signs of the emergence of urban poverty and it is therefore, becoming increasing vulnerable to exploitation of the ocean and sexual exploitation as the world comes to fish in the surrounding waters. Pacific nations are at a disadvantage since they cannot effectively patrol their vast maritime areas and the fish are migratory, not stationary. Many island states do not have the manpower, resources or economies of scale to maximize returns on fishing and this leaves them vulnerable to exploitation by big commercial fishing fleets. The poverty created, in turn fuels the sex trade which is subsidized by the foreign fishermen working in the area. A massive and ever increasing youth population, crowded housing conditions, lack of employment and educational opportunities has forced many children to drop out of school early. This leaves them without skills, opportunities or income, but with plenty of time. The conditions have left many children and young people vulnerable to commercial sexual exploitation, either for cash, transport, food or other material goods. A recent report about Kiribati's prostitution problem reported that Kiribati teenagers between the ages of 15 and 19 said that fishermen solicited them in the bars. They normally received cash, cigarettes, bottles of alcohol or clothes for sexual services. There exists no criminal provision for overseas child sex tourism and prostitution in the country's laws.