Philippine telecom CEOs could be prosecuted for allowing child abuse, 2

BY SHAY CULLEN

THE OUTRAGEOUS case now in court against a Catholic priest in Cagayan province is still ongoing. He allegedly videotaped his acts of sex abuse of a minor over whom he had moral ascendancy and blackmailed her into continuing to have sex with him until she broke-down and begged others to help her escape his control over her.

He admitted the several sexual assaults but claims in defense that she gave consent which she repeatedly and vehemently denies. The suspect is in jail and the trial has huge international interest and could last until 2026.

According to the Women and Children Protection Unit, research shows that from2021 to 2022, a shocking 72 percent of all child abuse cases were committed by sexual assault, many initiated by grooming over the internet.

As many as 6,000 abuse cases were recorded in 2021, and in 2022 more than 6,600 cases were recorded. Other research shows one in every three girls have suffered abuse at least once and one in every five boys.

The prevalent rate of sexual abuse suffered by girls is 10.7 % to 17.4% and the rate for boys is 3.6% to 17.4%. The traumatic impact of sexual abuse on a child is life-long and it never goes away and can cause life-long trauma and dysfunctional lives.

In the Philippines, there are no government therapeutic treatment and recovery homes for sexually abused children. Proposed legislation encourages the establishment of such treatment centers. The victims are left to suffer and endure the experience all their lives.

The Preda Foundation, however, offers a healing therapeutic program with Emotional Release Therapy that enables the child victim to release all the hurt, pain and anger and be free of it forever. They are empowered and seek justice and bring their abuser to court and win twenty convictions a year.

The arrest and investigation of Pavil Durov, CEO of Telegram, for allowing crimes to be conducted over his platform, is a legal first and is a huge legal shock to all CEOs of the telecoms and social media platforms. Their social media platforms and ISPs enable online crimes against children.

The telecoms’ CEOs have failed to install effective AI-powered blocking software and stop the illegal content passing through their servers and posted on social media platforms.

Laure Beccuau, the Paris prosecutor, said the filing of charges leads to the “potential criminal liability of executives at this messaging platform.” If true for Telegram, then it is also true for other telecom CEOs and executives of social media. The strict enforcement of the rule of law is essential to curb these horrific daily crimes of abuse of vulnerable children.

Republic Act 11930, passed on July 30, 2022, is an act punishing online sexual abuse and exploitation of children, penalizing the production, distribution, possession, and access of child sexual abuse or exploitation materials.

This is what the CEOs of the telecommunication corporations are allegedly violating, allowing access to abuse materials with impunity. Philippine prosecutors need to find the courage and legal know-how to follow the lead of the French prosecutors and go after these enablers of child sexual abuse online. It could be a child in your family that will be the next victim of online sexual abuse. We must act now to curb it./PN

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