Hope and protection for abused children, 2

BY SHAY CULLEN

THIS WRITER was present in Geneva, too, to campaign for it and to see it voted and passed. There were marches and demonstrations around the world. The people were awaking, voices were speaking out demanding change, protection, and the freedom from a life of child enslavement. They called for the child’s right to be educated.

More national laws were passed to stop such enslavement. Children were to be educated with dignity and protected against exploitation. These laws are being improved and updated as the extent of child abuse is constantly being uncovered as pedophiles find new insidious way to abuse children.

Two new Philippine laws have passed both houses recently and will so hopefully be signed into law. One is increasing the age of consent. When it is passed, any act of abuse against a child 16 and younger will be statutory rape. The second new law is banning so-called child brides. Any arranged relationship between a child and an older man is illegal and the offender will be jailed for many years.  
Recently, child abusers found a new criminal way to abuse children. They were hired by a child rescue non-government organization called Destiny Rescue. The Preda Foundation, a child protection organization represented by its Executive Director Emmanuel Drewery, in support of two sexually abused child victims, one 13 years old, filed formal legal complaints with the Olongapo City prosecutor. The complaint alleged that several children were sexually abused by hired undercover agents of the Quezon City-based Destiny Rescue affiliated to the US charity of the same name. They raise money through donations to support the work of rescuing children from human traffickers.

The agents contact traffickers and poise as sex customers and when the traffickers bring the children to them to have a sex party, the undercover agents with an undercover police man gives them marked money. When the human traffickers accept the money, they are immediately arrested and the children are rescued.  

When several rescued children were brought to the Preda Foundation by the Olongapo City social worker for care and protection, they revealed that before the rescue the Destiny Rescue agents brought them to hotels and sexually abused them while their traffickers stood outside the bedroom door.

We contacted the country head of Destiny Rescue, Alwin Laysico, and his undercover investigator leader Michael Santiago, to ask them to help identify the agents. They did not cooperate. The parent US-based Destiny Rescue also failed to reply to our requests for help.

Olongapo City NBI Chief Attorney Orlando Navallo is investigating and has assured us that the suspects will be found and identified. The prosecutor has yet to make a resolution on the complaint. The affidavits can be found here. https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1Hsq4t-bRFzl08KWeVWziVFifWjkAReIC?usp=sharing

Mr. Francis Bermido Jr, President of the Preda Foundation, has appealed to Destiny Rescue to cooperate and identify the suspects and bring them to justice. The child victims are determined to get justice.  Anyone can refer a child for care and recovery from trafficking or sexual abuse by contacting Preda at predainfo@preda.org. A team of professional therapists and social workers at the Preda therapeutic homes heals and empowers the child victims and helps them get justice against their abusers. On average, the Preda children win 18 convictions against their abusers and traffickers every year. It is hoped that the suspects in the abuse case will be identified soon and be brought to justice. (preda.org)/PN

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