In addition to those countries mentioned in the previous section, reporters and internal observers witnessed a rapid increase in prostitution in
Cambodia,
Mozambique,
Haiti,
Bosnia, and
Kosovo after UN peacekeeping forces moved in. Instances of abuse during the
United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) mission caused widespread outrage after many of the abused women and girls ended up contracting
HIV/AIDS and other
sexually-transmitted infections (STIs) that were uncommon among the local population at the time. In an attempt to quell the outbreak of HIV/AIDS and other STIs, the UN shipped over 800,000 condoms to the country over the course of the mission. Meanwhile, the number of prostitutes in Cambodia rose by at least 300% from an estimated 6000 to more than 25,000 in just two years. The legacy of UNTAC is still experienced within Cambodian society by many of the children born to abuse victims who feel like outsiders in their own country due to their frequently darker skin tone and obvious mixed-race parentage. During UNTAC (1992-93), the UN did not keep thorough records of abuse allegations against peacekeepers, so the numbers involved from these earlier missions have necessarily been reconstructed through academic work and are less precise than in, for example, Haiti during the 2000s. In Haiti, between 2004 and 2007, at least 134 Sri Lankan peacekeepers operated a child sex ring involving at least 9 confirmed children. According to incident reports, they wanted both girls and boys as young as 12 for sex. "I did not even have breasts", one anonymous girl claimed in her statement. She relayed to UN investigators that from the ages of 12 to 15, she been raped by over 40 peacekeepers, including a man known as "Commandant", who paid her 75 cents. She stated that she spent that time sleeping in UN trucks on the UN base itself. According to the Associated Press article that made the events public, they lured children with offers of candy and cash. After an internal UN report incriminated the peacekeepers, some remained in the country while 114 were sent back to Sri Lanka, but none served any jail time, as it would've been the responsibility of their local judicial system to bring forth and prosecute any charges. Despite the responsibility falling upon the peacekeepers' native countries to try those involved in sex abuse and exploitation, few of the accusees in these mass-scale cases have ever been charged, in part due to the large number of peacekeepers from countries lacking either advanced judiciaries or robust sexual abuse legislation. A Kosovo victims support group reported that of the prostitutes in their local area, a third were under 14 and 80% were under 18. Amnesty International said that some victims of forced prostitution were routinely raped "as a means of control and coercion" and kept in terrible conditions as slaves by their "owners", sometimes in darkened rooms from which they were unable to leave. In Bosnia, there was a highly publicised case concerning the direct involvement of UN peacekeeping personnel in the procurement of
sex slaves for a local brothel. Some NATO troops and private contractors of the firm
DynCorp have been linked to prostitution and forced prostitution in Bosnia and Kosovo, though the extent of the involvement of particularly NATO in comparison to the private firms and UN itself has been debated. In 1996, it was determined that
fully half of peacekeeping missions are correlated with a "rapid rise in child prostitution" in their respective countries. ==1996 UN study==