China Daily

Courts to protect juveniles online

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese courts were ordered on Friday to continue to fight against criminals who make use of the internet to harm juveniles, in order to provide children with a better online environmen­t.

“Offenders using the internet to damage juveniles — such as those who rape children or force them to take drugs after talking with them in cyberspace — have been more frequent in our case hearings,” said Jiang Qibo, head of the research office with the Supreme People’s Court.

He made the remarks during a news conference on legal protection for juveniles on Children’s Day, urging courts around the country to highlight the problem and conduct more legal research into the issue.

Offenders using the internet to damage juveniles ... have been more frequent.”

Jiang Qibo, head of the research office with the Supreme People’s Court

He said that misusing the internet to damage children makes up a large proportion of juvenile-related criminal cases, but he did not give an exact number.

In the last five years, lots of violent, pornograph­ic, vulgar and false informatio­n has hit cyberspace, especially in online games, short videos, social media and live streaming, “which has greatly harmed our children as well as attracted more attention from judicial authoritie­s”, he said.

Between 2013 and 2017, courts at each level heard 8,207 criminal cases involving pornograph­ic products, and penalized 8,680 related offenders, according to the top court.

“Children trust strangers easier and can be influenced by online informatio­n, as they are curious about everything,” Jiang said. “But they have difficulti­es distinguis­hing truth from false messages and are unaware how to protect themselves.”

From April to June last year, for example, a man surnamed Wang contacted three girls via instant messaging tool QQ and lured them to have naked chats in the name of finding child stars, a statement from the top court said.

When standing trial, Wang, then 20, explained he was addicted to online games filled with advertisem­ents containing naked photos.

He was sentenced to one year and 10 months in prison for the crime of acting indecently against children.

Also on Friday, the top court released a report stating that the number of juvenile criminals has been declining in the past few years, thanked to increasing protection and education from all walks of life.

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