The Maia Project

Philippines

Officially recorded

0
sex-trafficking victims identified

In a year (2023).

U.S. State Dept., Trafficking in Persons Report 2024
versus

Independently estimated

0
children trafficked to make sexual-abuse material

In a year (2022) — about 1 in 100 children.

2022 · rigorous estimate IJM & Univ. of Nottingham, Scale of Harm, 2023

Indonesia

Officially recorded

0
sex-trafficking cases investigated

In a year (2023) — victim count not published.

U.S. State Dept., Trafficking in Persons Report 2024
versus

Independently estimated

0
children in commercial sexual exploitation

Estimates range 40,000–70,000, and vary widely by source.

Older estimate · dated ECPAT / UNICEF, Global Study on SEC: Indonesia, 2016

Thailand

Officially recorded

0
sex-trafficking victims identified

In a year (2024).

U.S. State Dept., Trafficking in Persons Report 2025
versus

Independently estimated

0
children exploited in prostitution

Estimated 30,000–40,000 — and badly out of date.

2009 estimate · dated ECPAT, Regional Overview: Southeast Asia

Cambodia

Officially recorded

0
trafficking victims identified

In a year (2023) — not broken out by type.

U.S. State Dept., Trafficking in Persons Report 2024
versus

Independently estimated

0
children in the commercial sex trade

An early-2000s estimate; later studies found a sharp fall.

Early 2000s · dated UNICEF / IJM CSEC study, 2013

A note on honesty: only the Philippines has a recent, rigorous estimate — Scale of Harm (2022). The Thailand, Indonesia, and Cambodia figures are the best that exist, but they are a decade or more old, inconsistent between sources, and in Cambodia's case have since fallen sharply. They are shown, and flagged, because no current per-country estimate of sex trafficking exists anywhere. Even so, the pattern holds: what each government records is a fraction of what researchers estimate is there.