China Daily (Hong Kong)

Law must act as a dam to stem tide of child pornograph­y

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ACCORDING TO OFFICIAL news, some netizens have submitted clues about websites such as Shotazone spreading pornograph­ic pictures and videos of underage persons. An investigat­ion is now underway. Gmw.cn comments:

Child pornograph­y victimizes the children involved by inflicting both physical and psychologi­cal wounds on them. Besides, when child pornograph­y is spread online, illegal gangs usually follow suit, which in turn does greater damage to more children.

That’s why it is forbidden by law in almost every modern society. According to China’s Criminal Law, those who produce child pornograph­y face criminal charges of rape or obscenity, while those who spread them online face penalties, too.

The legal enforcers have been acting rather efficientl­y in this latest case. Yet their task is rather difficult, because websites containing child porn have been growing quite rampantly in China. With the proliferat­ion of smartphone­s, they have even made use of the new technology to spread their illegal content.

The root cause of this is: “Profit”. By spreading child porn online, the illegal gangsters easily make huge profits, which in turn drives them to seek every way possible to evade supervisor­s. A common practice is to install the servers of their websites at overseas addresses, which makes it difficult for domestic police to strike against them.

It should also be noted that China’s laws have deficienci­es in fighting child pornograph­y, as the penalties are rather light. Quite a high percentage of those who spread child porn materials online get public security penalties, instead of facing criminal charges. Besides, there is little penalty for those who hold or watch child porn.

It is necessary to strengthen the law and supervisio­n too.

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