Papa Carl Posted July 16, 2014 Posted July 16, 2014 The scale of this is frightening! I also wanted to make a point that this is not only a problem in the Philippines. British police have arrested 660 suspected paedophiles including doctors, teachers and care workers in a six-month operation targeting people watching indecent images online, the National Crime Agency said Wednesday. The country-wide investigation identified 431 children who were in the "care, custody or control" of the suspects, including 127 who were deemed to be at immediate risk of harm. They have now been made safe, the NCA said, without giving further details. All the suspects were arrested for downloading or distributing child abuse images, but charges brought so far include serious sexual assault. Britain has been rocked by a series of paedophile scandals in the past two years, since revelations that late BBC television host Jimmy Savile was a serial sex offender. The government recently launched a major inquiry into institutional abuse of children following allegations of a sex abuse ring involving senior politicians in the 1980s. The NCA stressed that none of those arrested in the operation is a serving or former lawmaker or member of the government. Some 45 police forces across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland took part in the "unprecedented" operation, which involved searches of 833 properties and more than 9,000 computers, phones and hard drives. "This is the first time the UK has had the capability to coordinate a single targeted operation of this nature," said NCA deputy director general Phil Gormley. He added: "I am pretty appalled about what it says about human nature." - 'Strong message' - Some of those arrested in the NCA operation had unsupervised access to children in the course of their work, including scout leaders and former police officers. Only 39 of those detained had previously come to the attention of police. "Our aim was to protect children who were victims of, or might be at risk of, sexual exploitation," added Gormley. "A child is victimised not only when they are abused and an image is taken. They are re-victimised every time that image is viewed by someone." The NCA, a non-ministerial government law enforcement agency, said it would not reveal the methods used to snare the suspects, explaining that such tactics could be used again in the future. "During this operation, we've targeted offenders accessing child abuse images,"said Simon Bailey, the National Policing Lead for Child Protection and Abuse Investigations. Child protection campaigners hailed the operation, but warned that police would need more help from the communications industry in the future. "Direct action like this sends a strong message to those who subject children to harrowing sexual assaults that they can and will be traced and prosecuted," said Claire Lilley, head of online safety for the NSPCC children's charity. "But law enforcement agencies alone cannot deal with the vast problem of illegal images which continue to flood the market." She called on the industry to find "inventive ways of blocking the flow of such horrendous pictures". Search engines Google and Microsoft's Bing last year agreed measures to block up to 100,000 search terms following calls from Prime Minister David Cameron to make it more difficult to access illegal images. http://news.ph.msn.com/top-stories/british-police-arrest-660-suspected-paedophiles-2 Papa Carl 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
earthdome Posted July 17, 2014 Posted July 17, 2014 Read that article very carefully. No where in the article did they mention that anyone arrested had actually abused a child or any of those children in 'control or custody' had been abused. This boils down to arrests for viewing 'child pornography' on the internet. Most governments define child pornography as nude photos or sexual acts in photographs or videos of those under 18 years of age. I wonder what the real story is. How many of those arrested actually had pornography of prepubescent children. I doubt if anyone they arrested has been charged with actual abuse of a child. FYI, in the USA, there have been convictions for child pornography of teenage boys who sext'd with their girlfriends. There have also been convictions where the 'child pornography' was of young looking women where the defendant could not prove they were of age. Those who abuse children are the worst sort of person and deserve a special hell. Remember that government agencies and NGO's around the world, not just in the Philippines, want to promote themselves and exaggerate the magnitude of problems so they can get more money and power. This article drips with exaggeration and self promotion. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dave Hounddriver Posted July 17, 2014 Posted July 17, 2014 Interesting It is indeed shocking that there are so many paedophiles arrested, and yes, it is just as revealing that they do not publish the age of the victims. I suspect sensationalism in the article because, if the victims were indeed children instead of emerging adults, the article would get a lot more mileage from publishing their ages. It has been mentioned before that different cultures define adults at different ages but most agree on how old a prepubescent child is, and that is what is required for me, (were I on the jury), to convict on paedophilia. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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