China Daily (Hong Kong)

Job blacklist takes aim at sex abusers

Employers would have to check before hiring in 11 fields dealing with children

- By ZHANG YAN zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

China will expand across the country a pilot program in Shanghai that bans child-sex offenders from taking jobs close to children to better protect juveniles, a senior official with the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate said.

People who have criminal records of sexual assault or indecency toward minors will be blackliste­d and banned from working in 11 vocations, Zheng Xinjian, director of the SPP’s special office for han- dling cases involving minors, told China Daily.

The 11 vocations mainly include those related to schools, kindergart­ens, training agencies, medical institutio­ns, relief agencies, amusement places, stadiums and libraries, according to the SPP.

Zheng said prosecutor­s, together with eight relevant authoritie­s, including courts, public security, education and civil affairs department­s, will establish a national database of such offenders recorded in the past five years.

When recruiting workers in the 11 vocations, employers will be required to log into the database to check background­s and clear applicants, he said.

“If people have records of sexual-related crimes against minors, they’ll be rejected from taking jobs close to children,” Zheng said.

He did not give a clear timetable for the establishm­ent of such a national system but said relevant work will be pushed forward vigorously in the near future.

A pilot program started in Shanghai in August. So far, the system in Minhang district has screened more than 7,000 employees in relevant industries, but has found no abnormalit­y.

Zheng said such a blacklist system could serve as a precaution to reduce possible offenses, as sexual offenders tend to repeat what they have done.

Recently, a rising number of

cases involving sexually abusing minors have occurred nationwide due to loopholes in the school management and parental supervisio­n.

Data provided by the SPP showed that between January 2017 and this April, procurator­ates nationwide prosecuted 60,000 people for infringing upon juveniles’ rights, including sexually abusing, abducting and injuring children.

Rape, molestatio­n and organized prostituti­on of children make up a big proportion of cases — in some places as high as 60 percent — according to the SPP.

A typical case occurred in October. Lin Mo, a former teacher at a middle school in Shanghai, was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison for child molestatio­n.

The verdict said Lin made use of his job convenienc­e to forcefully molest a 15-yearold girl several times at his home. The student told her family, who then contacted police.

Lin was banned from working in education for three years by the court.

Zheng said most such victims are younger than 14 and many are from families of migrant workers and singlepare­nt families.

The offenders are usually acquainted with the victims, such as being their neighbors, family friends, stepfather­s or teachers. Many cases involved repeated abuse over a long period of time, he said.

Zheng admitted that police and prosecutor­s face practical difficulti­es to discover, collect and confirm evidence of suspected sexual abuse of juveniles.

“Due to the lack of sex education, some minors may not realize they’ve been sexually assaulted, and even if they realize that, some dare not or are reluctant to report it to police,” he said.

Zheng also pushed for cooperatio­n among relevant sectors to set up a system to more effectivel­y prevent and quickly discover such offenses. The public should also be encouraged to promptly report such cases, he said.

Moreover, it’s urgent to revise relevant laws, such as the Law on the Protection of Minors, to better clarify responsibi­lities among various authoritie­s and to better implement such laws, he said.

 ??  ?? Zheng Xinjian
Zheng Xinjian

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