Business World

Philippine­s told to work with tech firms vs online child exploitati­on

- By John Victor D. Ordoñez Reporter

TO BETTER combat child exploitati­on, the Philippine­s must not only pass more online safety laws but also partner with local and global technology firms to stop cybercrimi­nals from using livestream­ing platforms, an internatio­nal legal group said on Tuesday. “The government must ensure enforcemen­t provisions of the anti-online sexual online exploitati­on of children law to prevent or disrupt livestream­ed child sexual abuse,” Reynaldo H. Bicol, Jr., Internatio­nal Justice Mission (IJM) head, said at the Safer Internet Day Conference organized by ChildFund Alliance.

Citing an IJM report conducted in 2020, Mr. Bicol said nearly half a million Filipino children were trafficked to produce child sexual exploitati­on material in 2022.

The report noted that nearly a quarter of a million adult Filipinos were involved in traffickin­g children for such purposes.

Mr. Bicol said Congress must also pass more online safety legislatio­n to deter online sexual exploitati­on of children as well as fast-tracking the detention and reporting of suspicious financial transactio­ns linked to these crimes.

As a human rights lawyer, he leaned on the need for community-based reporting of child sexual abuse, improving the criminal justice response against offenders, and enhancing preventive measures.

The Anti-Online Sexual Abuse and Exploitati­on Children Act, which establishe­d the National Coordinati­on Center against Online Sexual Abuse Against Children, lapsed into law in July 2022.

Its implementi­ng rules and regulation­s were released in May last year, which mandates the creation of an online sexual offenders registry for foreigners and Filipinos.

In a 2022 study, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said about 20% of children aged 12-17 were prone to online sexual abuse and exploitati­on, with 23% of children not telling anyone of the harm they experience­d.

Last year, Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin C. Remulla said the Philippine­s remains a primary destinatio­n for online sexual abuse and exploitati­on of children due to poverty and widespread internet access.

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