The Star Malaysia

Providing shelter for the trafficked

Philippine­s’ crackdown sparks concern over how best to protect children

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Philippine­s’ cybersex crackdown sparks concern over care for child victims. Campaigner­s put the country at the global epicentre of the growing trade, which is creating a crisis of care for rising numbers of children, many very young, who often have to be removed from families that profit from their exploitati­on.

MANILA: Chang has no desire to go home to her parents, at least not yet. The 18-year-old Filipina has lived in a shelter since being rescued four years ago from a neighbour who forced her to perform sexual acts in front of a webcam for overseas predators.

“When I am ready to face them – to tell them that I am new and that I can handle myself – then I will go home,” said Chang, who is too ashamed to return home. Her abuser has been jailed.

Chang is one of hundreds of girls and young women in the care of charities after being saved from cybersex traffickin­g – a form of modern-day slavery that saw 60,000 reports logged in the Philippine­s in 2018, a five-fold increase over four years.

Campaigner­s put the country at the global epicentre of the growing trade, which is creating a crisis of care for rising numbers of children, many very young, who often have to be removed from families that profit from their exploitati­on.

Led by police in the Philippine­s, a new global taskforce has this year been tracking down and rescuing children abused online as it works through a backlog of hundreds of cases.

With investigat­ors from Britain and Australia backing local cops working solely on cybersex traffickin­g, the Philippine­s is clamping down on an illicit industry that has been fuelled by cheap Internet, the high level of English and rampant poverty.

Yet the crackdown is set to see the number of children in need of protection soar, leaving shelters scrambling to keep up.

“With the anticipate­d influx of cases, additional human and material resources are required to cater to the needs of the victims,” said Zafrin Chowdhury, a spokesman for the United Nations children’s agency (Unicef), which works with the government to develop aftercare programmes.

Since 2011, the Internatio­nal Justice Mission (IJM), an anti-traffickin­g charity backing the taskforce, has rescued more than 400 children from dens of online sex abuse, and placed them in 25 shelters certified to care specifical­ly for survivors.

Once rehabilita­ted, carers then search for a family member deemed appropriat­e and reliable to continue raising the child.

Failing that, some go on to live alone, helped by charities, some stay in the shelters, and a small few go into foster care.

While stigma stops Chang from going home, many victims want to be reunited with their parents – even though they took money from abusers who forced the children to perform sex acts online.

As relatives or family friends are the exploiters in most cases, cybersex traffickin­g has become normalised to the point where many victims – whose average age is 12 – reject aftercare.

“It’s so challengin­g for us to explain to these children that they must stay in the shelter to remain safe,” said Delores Rubia, IJM’s director of aftercare for children – a fifth of whom are six years old or younger.

“They are very young and they have not experience­d other ways of life so they would say this is normal.”

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