Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Over 1,000 Danes charged for sharing sex video

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COPENHAGEN: More than 1,000 people, mostly teenagers, face preliminar­y charges of distributi­ng child pornograph­y after sharing videos and photos of two 15-year-olds having sex, the Danish National Police said on Monday.

More people could be charged for spreading the images, the police said. The material could constitute distributi­on of child pornograph­y even though 15 is the age of consent in Denmark.

Police spokesman Flemming Kjaerside said “young people know it can have huge consequenc­es” to share such material, although he acknowledg­ed they may not know it is a crime.

So far 1,004 people across Denmark are facing preliminar­y charges – a step short of formal charges. If found guilty, they could face fines, jail or be banned from working with children for a decade.

Two videos – one 50 seconds long, the other nine seconds – and photos were shared through Facebook’s Messenger chat platform last fall and police said anyone who forwarded the video violated the law against distributi­ng child pornograph­y.

The case prompted outrage when it was first reported last year because the video apparently showed the girl being abused with foreign objects. The girl later said she consented to sex but not to the abuse or the recording.

Prosecutor­s will now decide whether to proceed with charges and take the cases to trial. Investigat­ors are looking into whether the video was distribute­d on platforms other than Facebook.

“It may sound very dramatic that we’re charging with child pornograph­y,” said Kjaerside. “Many had no intention to distribute child pornograph­y but objectivel­y speaking, that’s what they’ve done.”

Those found guilty in the Danish case are unlikely to go to prison but the conviction­s will remain on their records for 10 years, barring them from becoming police officers and from taking certain jobs working with children.

The case came to light after Facebook alerted the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in the US, which in turn contacted American and internatio­nal authoritie­s. Trump's time in office has been dogged by allegation­s of collusion with Russia to influence the 2016 presidenti­al election. Trump denies the accusation­s, but at least three former aides are under the scanner for their links to Moscow In June, Trump pulled the US out of the Paris climate accord, a move which experts consider a blow to fighting climate change. In the subsequent months, Nicaragua and Syria both signed the treaty, making the US the only country in the world opposing it After a white supremacis­t rally in Charlottes­ville, Virginia resulted in clashes and the death of a protestor, Trump refused to appropriat­e blame.

He said: "I think there is blame on both sides... You also had people that were very fine people on both sides" Trump signed an executive order that restricted the entry of nationals from Libya, Sudan, Syria, Iran, Iraq, Yemen and Somalia into the US. That move has been legally challenged on a number of occasions, and today, the restrictio­ns apply to citizens of Libya, Syria, Iran, Yemen, Somalia, Chad, North Korea and Venezuela

Relations between North Korea and the US have deteriorat­ed considerab­ly over the past year, with Pyongyang's missile tests and Washington's sanctions enraging the leaders of both countries. Trump has called Kim "little rocket man" and promised him with "fire and fury like the world has never seen”.

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