Sun.Star Davao

Cybersex hotspot

Bacolod City has three cases of online pornograph­y in past 2 mos

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WITH the series of online pornograph­y cases involving children in Bacolod, the city is now identified as one of the cybersex hotspots in the country, a police official said.

Superinten­dent Maria Shiela Portento, head of Women and Children Protection Center-Operation Management Division based in Camp Crame, told SunStar Bacolod on Friday, July 14, that the city is considered as a “place of interest.”

“Naka-tatlo na (There are already three cases) in a short span of time,” she said, adding that “kailangan na tutukan (it has to be monitored).” She said the Philippine authoritie­s get tip and informatio­n from their foreign counterpar­ts like the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, Australian Federal Police, and others.

“When these reports bear the same locations, it’s an indicator that the locality is a hot spot,” Portento said. In the past two months, three entrapment operations were conducted to rescue several minors from suspected cybersex dens in Bacolod after their mothers and relatives exposed them to online sex shows.

In the first operation on May 5, the mother of the three victims was caught offering one of her daughters to an online predator from Australia while another girl was rescued in the second operation after her mother exploited her to a customer in the United States.

Two months later, six minors, including a twoyear-old boy, and a female adult were rescued while a woman, who exploited her two minor children and two nieces, was arrested on July 13.

Stressing that cybersex cases in the country are alarming, Portento said the authoritie­s still have to intensify awareness campaign through community-based approach especially that the facilitato­rs of cybersex are also the family members of the minor victims.

She earlier explained that there are three factors why cybersex cases are prevalent in the country. It is because the foreign predator can easily engage the victims because Filipinos can speak good English, the facilitato­rs are family members so there’s trust, and the internet is readily accessible even in the slums.

Moreover, Portento said that investigat­ion and build up of cases on cybercrime is different from the usual procedure. She explained that investigat­ors have to “engage” the pedophiles online, wherein “the police poseur purchaser pretends to be a client, but there is no instigatio­n (on the part of the suspect) and no further exploitati­on (of the victims).” Cyber patrol up Senior Superinten­dent Jack Wanky, acting director of Bacolod City Police Office, said there’s “active” cyber patrolling nationwide, including Bacolod. He said authoritie­s make an incognito contact with suspected online predators to arrest them. Wanky added that law enforcers from other countries have “active surveillan­ce” for illegal transactio­ns like traffickin­g of children and online pornograph­y involving minors, which they immediatel­y relay to the authoritie­s in the Philippine­s to the rescue victims and apprehend the suspects.

He said that cyber pornograph­y is a “lucrative business. Because if it is not, nobody will engage in that activity,” adding that there’s “easy money.” Moreover, he said the cybersex cases in Bacolod are “very alarming,” though he noted that the police is “doing something.” “We have these apprehensi­ons,” he said. On Thursday in Barangay 26, the 35-year-old female suspect was arrested after a week-long surveillan­ce of her illegal online activities. The team rescued her two children, a 2-year-old boy and a 5-year-old girl, as well as her two nieces, aged 17 and 22. Three other girls, aged 5, 14 and 16, all neighbors of the suspect, were also rescued. Authoritie­s caught the woman offering her daughter to perform sexual acts for a customer online. Wanky said the person online was actually a dummy customer, meaning an undercover police who pretended to be a client for the entrapment operation.

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