Thursday, January 16, 2014

RAPPLER | Int'l police probe PH child sex abuse ring


BY AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
POSTED ON 01/16/2014 9:17 AM | UPDATED 01/16/2014 5:59 PM




MANILA, Philippines (UPDATED) – An international probe has cracked a pedophile ring which streamed live sexual abuse of Filipino children over the Internet, leading to dozens of arrests, police in the Philippines, Britain and Australia said Thursday, January 16.

Under Operation Endeavour which spanned a dozen nations, 29 people have been arrested including 11 in the Philippines, while three other ongoing probes have identified 733 suspects, Britain's National Crime Agency said.

Fifteen child victims aged between six and 15 have been rescued, it added.

"This is part of our intensified efforts to end this scourge... of live streaming of child sexual abuse" to order by foreign pedophiles, said Senior Superintendent Gilbert Sosa, head of the Philippine police's anti-cybercrime unit.

"This has become a major problem in the Philippines, where in some cases even the parents are involved," he told Agence France-Presse, declining to give specific details that could compromise ongoing operations.

Sosa said that severe poverty had forced many youngsters into prostitution or into working in so-called cybersex dens, a booming business believed to be focused on the central island of Cebu.

Britain's crime agency said Operation Endeavour began in 2012 with the discovery of obscene videos on a British pedophile's computer.

The British man, Timothy Ford, was sentenced in March last year to eight and a half years in prison while an associate, Thomas Owens, was convicted four months later.

Both men were said to have paid for live abuse of children on the Internet, and had at one point planned to travel to the Philippines to carry out "contact abuse" of minors.

Authorities in 12 countries were involved in the arrest of 29 suspects, the British crime agency said. Of 17 British suspects, five have been convicted and nine investigations are ongoing.

"Extreme poverty, the increasing availability of high speed Internet and the existence of a vast and comparatively wealthy overseas customer base has led to organized crime groups exploiting children for financial gain," it said in a statement.

The agency called abuse in developing countries "a significant and emerging threat".

"This investigation has identified some extremely dangerous child sexual offenders who believed paying for children to be abused to order was something they could get away with," said Andy Baker, deputy director of the agency's child exploitation and online protection command.

"Protecting the victims of abuse is our priority and that means attacking every link in the chain, from dismantling the organized groups who are motivated by profit through to targeting their customers," he added.

The Australian Federal Police said it had executed six search warrants under the international operation that had led to the arrest of three Australians.

"Two of the men were arrested in Western Australia and one Sydney man was arrested by the Royal Thai Police in Bangkok," it said.

"Hundreds of thousands of images and videos depicting online child sexual exploitation, including children as young as five years old, were found during the warrants."

The Australian offenders allegedly financed and ordered child abuse "shows" from the Philippines.

Britain's crime agency said three other investigations into live streaming of child abuse have netted 733 suspects globally, including 139 in Britain and 594 overseas.

Philippine efforts

Police operations in the Philippines have focused in the impoverished village of Ibabao on Cebu island.

In September last year, a Filipino couple in their 30s were arrested in Ibabao for forcing their three young children to engage in sex acts and charging clients up to $100 each to watch using webcams.

Twelve other children were subsequently rescued, also in Ibabao, and put in the care of government social workers, according to official police records.

"Other operations elsewhere in the Philippines are ongoing and we are not at liberty to discuss them at length because we might compromise them," he said.

Meanwhile, the Palace said it continues to work towards tackling human trafficking, through the Inter-Agency Commission Against Trafficking of the government, which includes several government agencies and all law enforcement agencies in the country.

On Thursday, as news of the sex ring broke out in international news sites, Presidential Communications Operations Office Secretary Sonny Coloma insisted that even before the recent reports, "the government has already committed itself to doing everything that needs to be done through inter-agency effort, through legislation, and through other administrative measures to stop this trafficking."

He gave assurances the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) are looking into the matter.

"This is a matter of high priority for our government that is not prompted by recent media reports," he said. "I would like to emphasize that our government is determined to stop human trafficking in all its forms and manifestations through concerted action by all concerned government agencies in cooperation with other countries."

Coloma said the sex abuse ring also highlights the importance of the Cyber Crime Prevention Law, which penalizes cybersex and child pornography. The law has since been halted temporarily by the Supreme Court about a month after it was signed into law, following controversial provisions on libel. – with reports from Natashya Gutierrez/Rappler.com


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