China Daily

Sex abuse of minors gets attention

Recent cases have led SPP to train focus on prosecutin­g suspects in such crimes

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese prosecutor­s have taken more than 4,100 people to court for alleged sexual abuse of juveniles in the past three months in an intensifie­d effort to protect minors, China’s top procurator­ate said.

From January to March, prosecutor­s across the country charged a total of 4,151 people with crimes related to the sexual assault of minors, up 2.2 percent year-onyear, according to a report released by the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate on Wednesday.

The sexual abuse of children has received more attention from the SPP, a result of public outrage triggered by several such cases over the past few years, and has become a top priority for prosecutor­s nationwide to crack down on.

On Monday, for example, the SPP and the Ministry of Public Security dispatched a joint team to Shandong province to supervise the investigat­ion of a high-profile case in which a former company executive is suspected of sexually assaulting his “adopted” daughter.

The case aroused public anger last week after Chinese media reported a man surnamed Bao allegedly sexually abused his “adopted” teenage daughter when she was 14 years old.

In addition, cases involving harm to juveniles, including traffickin­g and molestatio­n, have been on the rise in recent years because of loopholes in school management and lax parental supervisio­n, the SPP said, adding crimes committed by minors, such as robbery, theft and intentiona­l injury, have also happened frequently.

According to the SPP’s report, more than 12,000 people have been charged with crimes involving minors from January to March, of whom some 6,200 were juvenile suspects.

The SPP said it has conducted a great deal of social research into such offenses and has provided lectures to children to enhance their self-protection awareness.

To better protect the rights of young victims and perpetrato­rs, the SPP called for educationa­l institutes to prevent children from being abused and harmed in schools and urged authoritie­s to focus more on crimes committed by youngsters.

Last year, the SPP set up a special prosecutor­ial department to tackle cases involving minors.

“Considerin­g the frequency of cases in which children were assaulted or trafficked, we’ve worked with schools to jointly prevent and punish crimes against minors by establishi­ng a database of sex offenders and a relevant inquiry and restrictio­n mechanism for candidates seeking jobs related to minors,” Shi Weizhong, head of the new department, said in December.

With the constructi­on of a mandatory reporting system of such crimes and an online platform for handling affairs regarding such offenses, “we’ve also demanded all prosecutor­s increase legal education on campuses to boost children’s self-protection capabiliti­es and jointly intensify inspection­s in entertainm­ent places and cyberspace,” he added.

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