The Phnom Penh Post

Gaps persist in laws protecting kids: UN

- Martin de Bourmont and Kong Meta

ADRAFT United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report released at a workshop on Monday praises efforts to crack down on sexual abuse of children but calls for measures to curb child pornograph­y.

According to the report, the Law on Suppressio­n of Human Traffickin­g and Sexual Exploitati­on addresses the sale and prostituti­on of children, and the sale of child pornograph­y, but does not criminalis­e possession.

It describes the government’s current considerat­ion of a draft cybercrime law as imperative in addressing child pornograph­y online, but the report says that the government must create another law prohibitin­g the possession of child pornograph­y in hard-copy form.

At Monday’s workshop, Jus- tice Minister Ang Vong Vathana underscore­d the difficulti­es of confrontin­g child sexual exploitati­on on the internet. “Now the ministry is drafting the cybercrime law, a very difficult task,” he said. “This issue, it is getting more developed and [we] don’t know how much we could [do to] combat [it].”

The report adds that Cambodia should criminalis­e “grooming”, or the process by which predators befriend children. No Cambodian legislatio­n currently targets such behaviour.

The UNODC report also addresses criminal justice procedures, saying that child victims and witnesses should benefit from similar standards outlined in Cambodia’s 2016 Law on Juvenile Justice. That law forbids the broadcast or diffusion of images and informatio­n by authoritie­s that could reveal a minor’s identity, ensures the presence of a support person for the child throughout the criminal justice process, and allows children to give evidence from behind a screen.

Responding to the report’s analyses and recommenda­tions, James McCabe of the Child Protection Unit said Cambodia has “seen a steady increase in arrest and prosecutio­ns over the past four years of persons committing serious crimes against children”.

He attributed this to a criminal code that adequately targets child sex tourists for investigat­ion and prosecutio­n and a judicial system that demonstrat­es openness to new methodolog­ies.

However, McCabe foresaw difficulti­es in the crafting of anti-grooming laws, a practice lacking a clear definition. Countries like Australia might offer some guidance, he said, having enacted laws preventing sex offenders from loitering near schools and other areas associated with children.

 ?? KONG META ?? A speaker presents the legal report on sexual exploitati­on of children on Monday in Phnom Penh.
KONG META A speaker presents the legal report on sexual exploitati­on of children on Monday in Phnom Penh.

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