The Borneo Post

Canada enacts Internet ban for sex offenders

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MONTREAL: Canada’s Supreme Court on Thursday acted to protect children in the fast- growing world of cyberspace, enabling judges to prohibit those convicted of sexual offences against minors from using the Internet.

“The record demonstrat­es thattheInt­ernetisinc­reasingly being used to sexually offend against young people and that sex offenders who target children are more likely to reoffend,” Justice Andromache Karakatsan­is wrote for the majority in a hundred-page ruling.

The case concerned incest and child pornograph­y. The accused man, sentenced to nine years in prison in 2013 by a court in British Columbia, had abused his daughter between 2008 and 2011.

In addition to upholding his prison sentence, the court prohibited him from accessing the Internet, retroactiv­ely applying a provision to the criminal code added after the offences took place.

The country’s previous Conservati­ve government introduced a provision in its Safe Streets and Communitie­s Act of 2012 prohibitin­g Internet use for sex offenders.

In its seven- to- two ruling, the court banned Internet access to anyone convicted of sexual offenses against minors before 2012 – rejecting the constituti­onal principle guiding courts to impose lesser punishment­s if the criminal code is changed between the time offences are committed and sentencing is carried out.

“The rate of technologi­cal change over the past decade has fundamenta­lly altered the social context in which sexual crimes can occur,” the ruling said, adding that “monitoring an offender’s use of the Internet can limit an offender’s opportunit­ies to offend and prevent this harmful behaviour.” — AFP

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