BANGKOK, Thailand — It's a photo that has become a staple in the tabloids of Southeast Asia: the foreigner taken in by police after being caught in bed with a local boy or girl.
For many of the region's countries which derive huge sums of money from the tourism trade, it's a vivid illustration of its seamiest side — child sexual exploitation.
The spotlight was on Thailand Wednesday after a man suspected in the slaying of 6-year-old beauty queen JonBenet Ramsey was arrested here in a surprise breakthrough in a decade-old U.S. case that some feared would never be solved.
U.S. officials identified the suspect as John Mark Karr, a 42-year-old American, and said he was already being held in Bangkok on unrelated sex charges.
In countries such as Thailand, child sexual exploitation builds on a long-standing and vast prostitution industry, and thrives where law enforcement is weak or corrupt. That sex with young teens is not a strong taboo in some Asian cultures makes fighting the problem even more difficult.
Poverty-stricken Cambodia in recent years has become new frontier for pedophiles for this very reason. The arrests of aging British rock star Gary Glitter — real name Paul Francis Gadd — first in Cambodia and then in neighboring Vietnam put a rare international spotlight on the matter, though new cases come to court virtually every month.
In June, Glitter's child molestation conviction and three-year prison sentence were upheld by an appeals court in Vietnam. He had been found guilty of committing obscene acts with girls ages 10 and 11 at his rented seaside villa in southern Vietnam.
"This case sends a strong message to child sex offenders around the world that society will not tolerate any form of sexual violence and exploitation of children," said Carmen Madrinan, executive director of the Bangkok-based child protection group ECPAT International.
Vietnam does not have the reputation of Cambodia as a haven for sex tourism, but recent surveys by the government and the U.N. Children's Fund indicate that child prostitution, including child sex tourism, is on the rise, Le Hong Loan, head of UNICEF Vietnam's child protection section, said earlier this year.
In Cambodia, there are about 33,000 child sex workers, according to UNICEF, the U.N. children's agency. The U.S. State Department has listed Cambodia as among the world's worst nations at adequately addressing human trafficking problems, including the trade of child sex workers.
A strong example of the measures being taken against child sexual exploitation came just two months ago, when a Los Angeles man deported from Thailand pleaded not guilty in a U.S. court to traveling to the Southeast Asian nation to engage in illicit sexual activity.
Steven Erik Prowler was deported from Thailand in May after completing one-year prison sentence for molesting 15-year-old and 16-year-old boys.
According to a U.S. criminal complaint, he told authorities he often paid Thai children the equivalent of $5 for two hours of sexual contact.
The charges were brought under the U.S. Child Protect Act, adopted in 2003 to facilitate tracking sexual predators across international borders.
About 20 Americans alleged to have engaged in illicit sexual conduct in foreign places have been prosecuted under the law since 2003, according to U.S. authorities.