Philippines remains a global hotspot in child sexual exploitation cases

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Mike J
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The article speaks for itself. :sad:

https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/12/09/22/child-sexual-exploitation-in-ph-remains-top-concern

MANILA — Despite government efforts, the Philippines remains a global hotspot in child sexual exploitation cases with no less than the Justice secretary himself admitting Thursday the country occupies the top spot in the world.

“We’re number 1 in the world. Dapat mawala na ito. Yun ang effort talaga ng gobyerno ni Pangulong Marcos. Itigil na itong status ng Pilipinas na nangunguna tayo sa child sexual exploitation,” Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin “Boying” Remulla told reporters shortly after a meeting with UN special rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children Mama Fatima Singhateh.

Singhateh wrapped up her 11-day official visit to the country with a courtesy call on Remulla at the Department of Justice office in Padre Faura, Manila before holding a press conference in Makati to discuss her preliminary findings.

The UN special rapporteur acknowledged the efforts exerted by the Philippine government to address child sexual exploitation, including, the passage of a law, Republic Act 11930, against online sexual abuse or exploitation of children (OSAEC) and child sexual abuse or exploitation materials (CSAEM).

“The Philippines has made noteworthy efforts to improve the policy, legal and institutional framework in view of protecting children against the many forms of sexual abuse and exploitation and sale of children,” she said.

But she stressed the need for more actions to be done.

“The Philippines remains a source and destination country for child trafficking, sale, sexual abuse, forced marriage, among others, and forced labor. There’s a lack of all limited information on the scale of incidences of child trafficking and how victims are exploited,” she said.

“There is a need for a centralized, accurate data for incidences of the different manifestations, the number of cases reported, the convicted cases on sexual abuse and exploitation of children. It is essential to systematically collect reliable, centralized, and disaggregated data by age, gender, ethnicity, disability including the number of prosecutions and convictions related to child sexual abuse cases,” she explained.

Data from the United States' National Center for Missing and Exploited Children’s CyberTipline, released by the DOJ Thursday, showed a steep increase in reports of alleged child sexual exploitation cases — from more than 420,000 in 2019 to 1.3 million in 2020, and to up to almost 3.1 million in 2021.

For the same period, the number of children rescued went up from 142 to 190.

But there is no monitoring mechanism under RA 11930, according to the DOJ report, which makes it difficult to say if the passage of the law made a dent in the rising number of OSAEC cases.

“Data is very important in order to make targeted interventions and also see the trend of a particular subject matter," Singhateh said.

The same DOJ report touted 213 convictions in OSAEC cases since 2017.

But Singhateh, in her media briefing, highlighted the problems child sexual abuse victims encounter in seeking to complain about their plight — the lack of training from the barangay or village level and the police, to prosecutors and even judges hearing these cases.

“There are no trained officials on child protection at the barangay level to receive and process initial reports on sexual abuse and exploitation. I am concerned that local governance and politics negatively impacts the child protection structure at the local level due to the regular changes of personnel and officials who may have received trainings on child protection but the turnover rates do not retain their expertise,” she said.

“There appears to be a lack of specially trained prosecutors on child protection. This results in prosecutors handling and treating child abuse cases as any other regular criminal case. The prosecution of any child special abuse cases must be through child protection lenses. I, therefore, recommend the establishment of a child protection unit within the prosecution department or an appointment of child protection focal points dedicated to handling child abuse cases,” she added.

Singhateh also recommended the creation of child-specific courts, separate from family courts.

She explained that children’s cases need a certain level of expertise and need to be resolved quickly to minimize the trauma on child victims.

In contrast, family courts hear other types of cases such as separation of spouses, which she said, “slows down the justice system.”

These are just some of Singhateh’s preliminary findings, which also touched on other aspects of her mandate, such as on the issues of child marriage, illegal adoption, teenage pregnancies, economic disparities and exclusion of indigenous ethnic minority children, and discrimination against LGBTQ children.

The full report will be submitted to the UN Human Rights Council in March 2024.

WHAT THE PHILIPPINES IS DOING

Recognizing the gravity of the situation, Remulla said the Philippine government has taken steps to address the problem.

“We gave her an official letter that would tell them what we’re doing in this country to combat the problem of child sexual exploitation, and that actually we’ve declared war on this. It’s the first thing that we did at the inception of the Marcos regime ay kami ni Secretary Abalos ay talagang nag-aannounce na kami talaga na ang intent namin ay itigil ito,” he said.

Among the solutions Remulla is eyeing is the crafting of implementing rules and regulations for the SIM Card Registration Act.

“I’m asking Congress, the Senate and the House, to speed up the working out of the IRR para dito sa SIM card registration para immediately maging executory na and ma-identify na natin lahat ng perpetrators. Kasi habang ganiyan ang mga nangyayari, hanggang ngayon, prepaid pa rin ang ginagamit tsaka 5G, 4G, mga data plans ng telco ang ginagamit nila sa karamihan ng mga kaso ng child online sexual exploitation. At siyempre, sa pagbubugaw din ng mga bata, yan din ang ginagamit,” he said.

The justice chief said data-sharing arrangements with other countries to prevent the entry of known child sexual predators will also be a big help, as well as urging telecommunication companies to filter sensitive content.

“We should find a way to control the dark web so that none of these would still happen. That’s why the challenge is not only for us here but all the countries should filter out all of these content so they won’t be available to anybody,” he said.

Child protection advocates welcome Singhateh’s suggestions and the solutions Remulla identified.

But they also pose a more fundamental question — what happens when child victims themselves are hesitant to complain because their parents or relatives are the ones involved?

“Lumabas sa mga studies na okay lang kung parent ka or caregiver ka na hayaan mo ang anak mo na mag-perform in front of the camera dahil 'no touch, no harm',” said Nenita Dalde, advocacy and partnership manager of the Philippine Legislators Committee on Population and Development, which is the convenor of the Child Rights Network.

“Ngayon, 'pag nagsusumbong na sila, ang dating sa mga pinagsusumbungan nila, party sila doon sa nangyari, kasi lumabas ka doon sa picture, lumabas ka doon sa video. Di sila pinaniniwalaan,” she added.


A mother suspected The Filipino mothers selling their children for online sexual abuse
Another problem, according to Ace Diloy, child protection specialist of Stairway Foundation, is that studies show children victims to be traumatized during rescue operations once they are separated from their parents who were responsible for exploiting them.

Still, advocates consider the UN special rapporteur’s visit to the Philippines a significant development as it highlighted the issues they have long been advocating for.

“Napaka-importante lalo sa amin na mga nasa child protection field, kasi the fact na bisitahin tayo ng UN special rapporteur on this specific issue sends signals not only to the Philippine civil society networks but also to the Philippine government,” Diloy said.

“This is a wake-up call. We had good efforts already in terms of trying to address the issue of OSAEC. Pero ito yung kinakailangan. Hopefully, ito yung additional push,” he added.

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Freebie
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Sadly there was a barangay in Taguig ( Manila ) , called Signal village.

And for a long time it was well known ( to pulis and DWSD )  that parents in this brgy would pimp out their kids on cam for whomever and whatever. Easier said than done to catch them though without foreign assistance , sourcing feeds plus overseas "buyers " of such materials.

A few documentaries was able to stop this, and basically shamed the parents who then went on cam and said " were hungry we have no job, this was our way of making money to eat " Sad people who should have been castrated.

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Jollygoodfellow
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Where there's poverty this will be more prevalent than other places. Just the other day a mother was arrested for selling pictures and videos of her inserting fingers into  her own 4 year old daughter to a foreigner.

I could be wrong but I think the mindset of many Filipinos is that it does no harm to children and just a way to buy rice.

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Kingpin
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3 hours ago, Jollygoodfellow said:

 Just the other day a mother was arrested for selling pictures and videos of her inserting fingers into  her own 4 year old daughter to a foreigner.

And the only reason she got caught, is because the foreigner got caught first, outside the Philippines. Which brings up the real point:

3 hours ago, Jollygoodfellow said:

I could be wrong but I think the mindset of many Filipinos is that it does no harm to children and just a way to buy rice.

A mindset that extends to how these 'lesser' crimes are punished, meaning not severely.  It's basically accepted in the Philippines that what they determine as severe crimes like murder, rape, and 'drug pushers' often get executed by pulis, like taking out rabid street dogs. Lesser crimes, well they may get arrested, they may not. They may go to jail for awhile, they may not. They may get released, they may have a court date in a few years, none of it is very strict, which is why these 'lesser crimes' persist.

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Jollygoodfellow
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On 12/9/2022 at 5:36 PM, Kingpin said:

And the only reason she got caught, is because the foreigner got caught first, outside the Philippines. Which brings up the real point:

Do the Philippines have a way to monitor whatsapp as thats what she was using if l recal the story. 

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Mike J
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9 hours ago, Jollygoodfellow said:

Do the Philippines have a way to monitor whatsapp as thats what she was using if l recal the story. 

From FAQs on Whatsapp

<snip>We do not retain data for law enforcement purposes unless we receive a valid preservation request before a user has deleted that content from our service. In the ordinary course of providing our service, WhatsApp does not store messages once they are delivered or transaction logs of such delivered messages.<end snip>

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Gator
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Factor in the Covid lockdown and income sources drying up; namely tourism. Friends who used, and still use, dating sites told me they’ve seen a drastic uptick of “cam girls” on them, so to me it’s no surprise that the sale of child porn increased as well. And now that many of the ppl selling that garbage realize there’s a demand, and  can easily earn from it, I doubt there be any significant decrease. 

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Snowy79
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2 hours ago, Mike J said:

From FAQs on Whatsapp

<snip>We do not retain data for law enforcement purposes unless we receive a valid preservation request before a user has deleted that content from our service. In the ordinary course of providing our service, WhatsApp does not store messages once they are delivered or transaction logs of such delivered messages.<end snip>

I'd be very surprised if any messenger service received permisson to operate without a back door into it by Government security organisations, whether they admit it is another thing. 

I remember a few years back Apple was being dragged through the courts for allegedly refusing to unlock a phone of a potential terrorist saying it was impossible, meanwhile I was following a woman that specialised in recovering data from Apple phones who was highlighting how easy it was just by transferring certain chips on the phone. Obviously a ploy by the Government to convince potential bad boys that they are safe if using an Apple phone. 

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Gator
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24 minutes ago, Snowy79 said:

I'd be very surprised if any messenger service received permisson to operate without a back door into it by Government security organisations, whether they admit it is another thing. 

Although WhatsApp boasts end to end encryption, let’s not forgot they are owned by wastebook. And that platform already uses AI to scan content for illegal activity such as sending kiddie porn. 

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