Child protection police working with Interpol and Europol have arrested hundreds
of paedophiles in many countries: the UK, other EU countries, Australia, Canada
and the USA, for ordering, paying, and viewing Philippine children forced to
strip naked and do sexual acts live in front of video cameras connected to
computers. These horrific and heinous crimes are generally ignored by the
Philippine police, telecommunication companies and the government agencies that
are mandated to protect the children. The children are victims of human
trafficking for sexual exploitation and the telecommunications corporations, who
are the Internet Service Providers (ISP) that allow it must be held
responsible.
The recent revelations by Interpol and police raids on cyber
sex dens in Cebu, Manila and Quezon city by the National Bureau of
Investigation.(NBI) showed that these crimes are widespread and common practice
in the Philippines. In Cordova, Cebu, the village of Ibabao has internet
connections and several cyber-sex dens. Parents even sold their children to the
cyber sex operators. Such is the level of economic and moral poverty
there.
In Manila and Quezon city, fake "call centers" were raided by the
NBI and fifteen workers were arrested and charged with sending out child
pornography over the internet through the Internet Service Providers (ISPs).
Every child porn image is evidence of a crime against children. Every time it is
sent out and viewed by the paedophiles, that child's dignity and rights are
violated. A recent report made by Pornhub says that more Filipinos are accessing
pornography on mobile phones and tablets than ever before, all enabled by the
ISPs. (view www.preda.org)
Thousands of young children, some from
kindergarten, have been and are being sexually and psychologically abused as a
result of the illegal and immoral corporate irresponsibility of the
ISPs.
These companies are making vast profits from the child porn
peddlers and must be held morally and legally responsible for allowing and
enabling these live child sex acts to be viewed live over the internet. The
abuse is only possible through connections provided by their corporations. The
Philippine Internet Service Provider (ISPs) leaders are: Philippine Long
Distance Telephone company (PLDT), Globe, Smart, Sun cellular, and Banyantel.
The members of Philippine Internet Services Organization (PISO) are accountable
too and must answer to the Filipino people for allowing the crimes against
children and the non-implementation of the law. The Council for the Welfare of
Children ought to act and speak out and demand the law be obeyed.
The
telecommunications companies and PISO seem to have an arrangement not to
implement the clear provisions of the law. They have apparently "captured" the
regulators and can act with impunity.
Republic Act 9775, under Section 9
says: “The duties of Internet Service Providers (ISP) to monitor the content
passing through their servers, notify the police of illegal content and provide
the authorities the particulars of users who gained or attempted to gain access
to an internet address which contains any form of child pornography. All ISPs
shall install available technology, program or software to ensure access to or
transmittal of any form of child pornography will be blocked or filtered”.
(complete law at www.preda.org) Software companies that offer solutions such as
Netclean Inc. have been rebuffed.
The National Telecommunications
Commission (NTC) is supposed to oversee the implementation of the law. The law
says that the ISP failing to implement and comply with the law should pay a fine
and have its license to operate revoked for non-compliance. But the law is
clearly ignored, flouted and disobeyed. If so it is a grave injustice to the
Filipino people and children worldwide.
If PISO and the
telecommunications companies are implementing the anti-child pornography law,
Republic Act 9775, and install the filters and blocking software, there would be
little or no cyber-sex or child pornography. But it is widely easily available
now, that is where young Filipinos are introduced to sexuality, they are groomed
and lured into abusive and damaging situations. Some are video recorded involved
in sex acts and are later blackmailed over the internet that can drive them to
suicide.
However, the obvious solution to the problem of child
pornography is the implementation of the law. The ISPs have put themselves above
it and government law enforcers and regulators go along with them. Such is the
ISPs' power and influence that government and even the media are afraid, docile
and subservient to them. Few writers, reporters, if any, expose the
non-compliance of the ISPs and telecommunication companies.
Corruption
driven by greed to make money even at the peddling of child pornography over the
internet kills conscience and moral values. The corporate bosses of the ISPs who
enable the transmission of child pornography are perhaps as guilty as the
paedophiles who order it on line. We must act now and challenge them to comply
and end impunity.
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