Cartagena priest criticized for denouncing sex tourism before pope

A priest from the northern Colombian city of Cartagena is under fire after denouncing ongoing sex tourism in the tourism hotspot before Pope Francis.

While the priest sought attention for the exploitation of poor women and children in the famous walled city, others felt it was inappropriate to hang out the dirty laundry in the presence of the Catholic Church leader.

“in Cartagena, the cases of sexual exploitation have not increased, and on the contrary, it has seen a strong campaign against this scourge,” said Elkin Castaño of the Renacer Foundation, which has worked with local authorities to curb the sexual exploitation of minors.

Father Elkin Acevedo from the San Francisco neighborhood told Pope Francis, however, that in spite of efforts some tourism agencies continue to promote sex tourism in the city.


Father Elkin Acevedo

According to the cleric, there exists no reliable data to sustain claims that sex tourism involving minors has dropped.


Father Elkin Acevedo

According to the local Police, its unit for children attends two cases of child sexual abuse per day, but has yet to receive its first report of sexual exploitation or human trafficking of minors this year.

Sister Blanca Nubia Lopez contradicted the authorities, claiming the Thalita Qum program cited by Acevedo is actively protecting 70 minors from sexual exploitation in the tourism hotspot.


Sister Blanca Nubia Lopez

Cartagena’s tourism industry received global attention in 2012, after media reports that United States’ Secret Service agents had hired prostitutes ahead of the visit of former President Barack Obama.

Local authorities have since then vowed to curb the trend, but have yet to show concrete results as poverty continues to drive women into the arms of pimps.

Alvaro Restrepo, a dancer who has lived in Cartagena since the 1990s, reported earlier this year in newspaper El Tiempo that he had seen no improvement in the sexual exploitation of women, mainly from the city’s vast slums, around the Plaza de los Coches.


Alvaro Restrepo

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