The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Webcam slavery: tech turns Filipino families into cybersex child trafficker­s

- By Kieran Guilbert

MANILA: It was the halfnaked girls running from room to room upon her arrival that made Filipina teenager Ruby fear the cyber cafe job she had been offered online might in fact be a sinister scam.

Ruby’s doubts turned to despair when her new employers - a husband and wife - dragged her in front of a computer and webcam and explained that her work would entail stripping and performing sex acts for paying customers across the globe.

“It was like a bomb exploded,” Ruby, now 21, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in an empty church in Tagaytay city in the Philippine­s. “I had seen cybersex dens in TV shows and movies, but I didn’t know that they existed in real life.”

“I had been totally fooled,” Ruby added. “I was forced to do things you could not imagine a 16year-old having to endure.”

Ruby is not a rare case but one of a rising number of everyounge­r victims of cybersex traffickin­g - a form of modernday slavery where children are abused and raped over livestream­s.

The Philippine­s is seen by rights groups as the epicentre of the growing trade, which they say has been fuelled by access to cheap internet and technology, the high level of English, wellestabl­ished money wiring services and rampant poverty.

The Southeast Asian nation receives at least 3,000 reports per month from other countries of possible cases of its children being sexually exploited online - a number which has tripled in the last three years - according to its justice department.

Yet the crime is difficult to police as most victims are exploited by their own relatives in a country with very high levels of sex abuse within families and a culture of silence in communitie­s that stops people speaking out, campaigner­s say.

And Filipino abusers and paying clients, from Australia to Canada to Germany, are outfoxing law enforcemen­t by mixing up payment methods, turning to cryptocurr­encies, and broadcasti­ng over encrypted livestream­s which cannot be traced by police.

The crime is not only growing in the Philippine­s, but across the region, from Cambodia to Vietnam, as the standard of English and access to technology and internet improves, activists said.

“This is a global trend - but very evident in Southeast Asia,” said Damian Kean, a spokesman for End Child Prostituti­on and Traffickin­g (ECPAT) Internatio­nal, a network of charities.

“We are seeing online sexual exploitati­on of children expand across the region.”

Touching to torture

Victims in the Philippine­s are getting younger as poverty drives families to abuse their children in exchange for money from clients around the world, said Lotta Sylwander, country director for the United Nations children’s agency (UNICEF).

Abusers can earn up to US$100 per show in a country where about a fifth of its 100 million people live in poverty - earning less than US$2,000 a year - government figures show. “Exploitati­on begins online ... but often leads into offline physical sex exploitati­on (and) traffickin­g,” Sylwander said.

The biggest obstacle to tackling the crime at its source is a widespread belief within communitie­s that making children appear naked on webcam is a victimless act, rights groups say.

“Some families say: ‘We don’t touch, we just show’,” said Sam Inocencio, national director for the Internatio­nal Justice Mission (IJM), an anti-slavery charity. “But we have seen some awful cases where children have been tortured over webcam.”

Driving through the narrow, winding streets of a crowded slum in Manila, local police investigat­ors pointed to rows of ramshackle homes crowned with gleaming white satellite dishes.

At least 40 per cent of the Filipino population had access to the internet as of 2015, up from a quarter in 2010, and about 5 per cent in 2005, according to World Bank data.

Activists are trying to challenge community-wide complicity in the crime by encouragin­g local council and church leaders, neighbourh­ood watch groups and social workers to report abuses.

Yet contradict­ions between various laws, few conviction­s for cybersex traffickin­g, and the fact the age of sexual consent is 12 have all fuelled long-entrenched impunity, campaigner­s warn.

“People are not aware of the severity of the crime ... they need to know the laws and their punishment­s,” said Genesis Jeff Lamigo, a spokesman for global children’s charity World Vision.

No data exists on the number of child victims of cybersex traffickin­g, but at least 400,000 people in the Philippine­s - or one in 250 - are estimated to be trapped in modern slavery, found the 2016 Global Slavery Index by the Walk Free Foundation.

 ??  ?? The Philippine­s receives at least 3,000 reports per month from other countries of possible cases of its children being sexually exploited online. — Photo by Reuters
The Philippine­s receives at least 3,000 reports per month from other countries of possible cases of its children being sexually exploited online. — Photo by Reuters

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