The Mercury

Maycall onweb companies overwomen abuse

- Umberto Bacchi

BRITISH Prime Minister Theresa May will urge web companies to do more to protect women and girls from online abuse and human trafficker­s, at a meeting of the Group of Seven (G7) rich nations in Canada, her office said on Friday.

May will ask G7 leaders gathered in Charlevoix, Quebec, to press internet firms to ensure that women can go online without fear of rape threats, harassment, cyber stalking and blackmail.

“What is illegal offline is illegal online,” the Prime Minister said ahead of the meeting.

“Technology plays a crucial part in advancing gender equality and empowering women and girls, but these benefits are being undermined by vile forms of online violence, abuse and harassment.”

One in five women in Britain has suffered from online abuse or harassment, with 55 percent of those affected saying the experience led to anxiety, stress or panic attacks, according to research by the rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal.

Inadequate

More than 40 percent of women said social media giants Facebook and Twitter were inadequate in their response to the abuse, the study showed.

Internet firms should use the tools they employ to take down Islamist propaganda to also tackle content showing or promoting violence against women and girls, such as rape threats and violent pornograph­y, May said.

New technologi­es and data analytics should also be deployed to identify and remove advertisem­ents or websites linked to human traffickin­g, according to her statement.

Sexual exploitati­on accounts for about half of all cases of modern slavery in Britain, with gangs advertisin­g many victims on adult service websites, according to the government.

From Britain and the US to India and the Philippine­s, an increasing number of people are being trafficked online, often via social media and classified advertisin­g websites such as Backpage.com, anti-slavery campaigner­s say.

Traffickin­g generates illegal profits of $150 billion (R1.95 trillion) a year globally, with about 40 million people trapped as slaves – mostly women and girls – in forced labour and forced marriages, according to anti-slavery groups.

Britain is considered a leader in global efforts to combat the crime.

It passed the Modern Slavery Act in 2015 to crack down on trafficker­s, push businesses to check supply chains for forced labour, and protect people at risk of being enslaved. – Reuters

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