Aid Workers Are Said to Abuse Girls By Sarah Lyall May 9, 2006 The New York Times Original Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/09/world/africa/09liberia.html?_r=1&oref=slogin LONDON, May 8 — Liberian girls as young as 8 are being sexually exploited by United Nations peacekeepers, aid workers and teachers in return for food, small favors and even rides in trucks, according to a new report from Save the Children U.K. The report said the problem was widespread throughout Liberia, a small country struggling to get back on its feet after a long and bloody civil war. Save the Children based its findings on interviews with more than 300 people in camps for displaced people and in neighborhoods whose residents have returned after being driven away by war. They said men in positions of authority — aid workers and soldiers, government employees and officials in the camps — were abusing girls. All of the respondents clearly stated that the scale of the problem affected over half of the girls in their locations, the report said. The girls reportedly ranged in age from 8 to 18 years, with girls of 12 years and upward described as being regularly involved in 'selling sex,' commonly referred to as 'man business.' In a statement from Liberia, the United Nations said that eight cases of sexual abuse and exploitation involving its workers had been reported since the beginning of the year and that one staff member had been suspended, Reuters reported. It's unacceptable behavior, Jordan Ryan, the United Nations' humanitarian coordinator in Liberia, said in an interview with BBC radio from Monrovia, the Liberian capital. Save the Children said Liberia and the United Nations should set up an office to investigate cases of the sexual exploitation and to work to ensure that the behavior stops, prosecuting the offenders, among other steps. It also said United Nations workers accused of sexual exploitation should go through judicial proceedings, and if found guilty, should not be sent elsewhere as peacekeepers.