The Province

Agencies want federal e-safety czar to fight online child exploitati­on

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — Creating a federal e-safety czar could help focus the uphill struggle to protect children from the rising threat of online sexual exploitati­on, frontline agencies have told the government.

Strengthen­ing legislatio­n to support “timely and effective” investigat­ions and working more closely with the technology sector to shield children from harm are among the other recommenda­tions that emerged from a federal consultati­on last spring.

Public Safety Canada assembled about 70 people — including police, policy-makers, industry representa­tives, victim service providers and academics — for two days of meetings in late March and followed the sessions with a questionna­ire.

The consultati­on is the latest step in the government’s effort to combat the scourge of online abuse in the era of camera-equipped smartphone­s and an array of apps, games and messaging services available to young people.

In addition, victims of childhood sexual abuse often suffer great distress over the fact video or pictures of the crimes are circulatin­g in cyberspace, compoundin­g the difficulti­es they already experience.

Participan­ts in the federal consultati­on spoke of a strong, highly engaged network of individual­s devoted to protecting children from predators, says a summary of the consultati­on prepared by Public Safety, which has led a national strategy on the problem since 2004.

At the same time, increased reporting of incidents and resource shortages have led to problems such as a large backlog for investigat­ors, mental health and well-being concerns for workers, “significan­t challenges” in timely police access to digital evidence and a need to improve services for victims.

The findings come two years after a federally commission­ed study found “serious gaps” in efforts — including resources, training and research — to protect young people from online sexual exploitati­on.

Participan­ts in the latest consultati­on felt a federal e-safety commission­er could provide “a co-ordinated approach to promoting online safety of all Canadians,” the summary says.

Other suggestion­s included:

Raising awareness of online child exploitati­on among the general public;

Conducting research on how to better meet the needs of victims;

Creating a pan-Canadian coalition of non-government organizati­ons and key government department­s to share knowledge and provide a unified voice to decision-makers;

Establishi­ng a technology group that supports tech-driven innovation­s and best practices for safe online services;

Ensuring the timely sharing of basic informatio­n about internet subscriber­s with law enforcemen­t;

Strengthen­ing legislatio­n to limit the travel of child sex offenders and improve resources for centralize­d investigat­ion of transnatio­nal offenders.

The office of Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said the input is helping “shape our work to modernize and renew the strategy,” adding it would be premature to comment on specific recommenda­tions.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Public Safety and Emergency Preparedne­ss Minister Ralph Goodale, centre.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Public Safety and Emergency Preparedne­ss Minister Ralph Goodale, centre.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada