Online sexual abuse and exploitation

(We yield this space to the statement of the advocacy group Salinlahi Alliance for Children’s Concerns due to its timeliness. – Ed.)

ABUSES, violence and exploitation happen everywhere. Alarmingly, the Filipino children tend to become very much vulnerable to these vicious acts due to the prevailing socio-economic and cultural contexts in the Philippines.

While some indicators show the significant changes that have been made over the past decades in the country, data on child rights protection issues clearly illustrate the failure of the government in fulfilling its commitment to protect and uphold the rights of children as enshrined under the United Nation Convention on the Rights of the Child. Despite the so-called economic growth, children across the country continue to face barriers to the full realization of their rights, affecting their long term-development.

While the world battles against the deadly corona virus pandemic, we are also witnessing an increase in the number of Filipino children who have been victimized by the abominable proliferation of Online Sexual Abuse and Exploitation of Children (OASEC). In fact, the Philippines has become the global epicenter of online sexual exploitation of children. UNICEF noted that one in every five Filipino children is vulnerable to online sexual exploitation while the Department of Justice (DOJ) released a report last May indicating a 264 percent increase in cases of online sexual exploitation of children.

Addressing OSAEC is particularly challenging especially in countries with remarkably high poverty incidence where many children are forced by circumstances to engage in illicit and risky trades in the hopes of earning money. Such economic misfortune of many families has become an advantage for sexual predators to abuse and exploit children. And we fear that more Filipino children might be put in this vulnerable situation as a result of widespread joblessness, increasing poverty and hunger incidence during the unabated coronavirus spread in the country.

We cannot fully underscore the harmful impact of the online sexual abuse and exploitation to children with the abuse being performed or facilitated by their own family members or neighbors whom they rust. Alarmingly, children as young as a few months old have been undergoing such traumatic ordeal. OSAEC leaves children a lifelong scar. It robs them of their childhood and deprives them the access to opportunities that are essentials for their development. Worse, they may be chained to the vicious practice of engaging in sexual activity in exchange for payment.

We need to call on our national government to ensure that mechanisms are in place to address the current situation. The congress should exercise its oversight function to come up with a national situation analysis of the risks and responses to OSAEC as well as to address the gaps in our existing laws. At the same time, flaws in our criminal justice system must be decisively resolved. Support programs must also be strengthened and provided for the children victims.

Combating this crime requires an all-round approach that includes not only law enforcement, but also legislation, programs and policies, coordination of necessary services to children victims and operation with the public, media and even internet service providers. There should also be a particular emphasis on how to make children aware of the risks in using the internet and on how to educate them about their rights as well as their meaningful role in the society. More importantly, the government should address the social roots of OSAEC including poverty and social inequality.

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