Sun.Star Cebu

‘Pimp’ caught traffickin­g young boys for sex: IJM

-

Authoritie­s arrested a 33-year-old suspected online trafficker during an entrapment operation on Saturday, Feb. 16, after he offered two underage boys for commercial sexual exploitati­on.

Members of the Women and Children Protection Center – Visayas Field Unit (WCPC-VFU) of the Philippine National Police caught the suspect, identified as Joey Michael Donozo, in the act of offering the minors, ages nine and 14, for sexual abuse by a foreigner.

The operation took place at a fast food joint in Barangay Lahug, Cebu City at around 5 p.m. Police and social workers rescued the two minors.

Donozo also previously transmitte­d online some sexually explicit images involving one of the boys in exchange for money from online predators.

Following the entrapment operation, authoritie­s searched the neighborho­od for four more boys who were previously offered for in-person and online sexual exploitati­on.

All four boys—aged 12, 13, 13, and 14—were found and rescued.

The arrest and rescue operation was a result of a case referral from the Australian Federal Police to the PNP.

According to the referral, the suspect had been arranging for foreigners to meet underage boys in person for sexually explicit acts.

He had also filmed underage boys in sexually explicit acts and had himself sexually abused the victims.

“Young vulnerable Filipino boys were sexually exploited online and in person just so a pimp could earn easy money selling the body and dignity of precious children. Praise God for the WCPC police unit that continues to courageous­ly rescue children from the clutches of sexual depravity and send the arrested abusers and trafficker­s to jail to await justice for their crimes,” said lawyer John Tanagho, the Internatio­nal Justice Mission (IJM) field office director.

The WCPC-VFU operation was supported by the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t 7, the Inter-Agency Council Against Traffickin­g 7, the Cebu City Police Office’s Special Weapons and Tactics and Women and Children Protection Desk, and the IJM.

“To those who are engaging in online sexual exploitati­on of children, you should stop your illegal activity now because the WCPC Visayas Field Unit will catch and bring you to the court of law,” Senior Supt. Perigo had warned after a previous operation.

The children are now in the care of the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t and are receiving proper trauma-informed interventi­ons.

Hours before the operation in Cebu City, two suspects, a male and female, were also arrested in their Taguig home for offering to sexually exploit children online to customers abroad in exchange for money.

Their names are withheld due to their relationsh­ip with some of the victims.

Five girls who were offered to online clients were rescued. A oneyear-old baby was found at the scene and was also removed.

Online sexual exploitati­on of children (OSEC) is a serious threat to children and is a devastatin­g form of modern-day slavery.

Nearly 50 percent of the victims are 12 years old or younger.

Occurring in communitie­s all over the Philippine­s, OSEC is a crime that violates the Anti-Traffickin­g in Persons Act or Republic Act (RA) 9308 (as amended by RA 10364), which comes with a maximum penalty of life imprisonme­nt and a fine of P2 million to P5 million.

Typical OSEC offenses also violate RA 10175 (Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012) and RA 9775 (Anti-Child Pornograph­y Act of 2009). Both have penalties equivalent to 20 to 40 years imprisonme­nt.

As of January 2019, IJM has supported Philippine law enforcemen­t agencies in the arrest of 183 OSEC perpetrato­rs and in the rescue of 429 victims around the country since 2011.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines