Watchmen Daily Journal

Online sexual exploitati­on of children is a family business

- By Ana P. Santos

The woman sitting in the cramped cell was unrepentan­t.

“First time ko ‘yun. Minalas lang ako na nahuli ako ng pulis (It was just my first time. I was just unlucky that I got caught by the police),” she said, looking at me squarely, her arms crossed over her chest.

Her husband, who was also detained in the cell next to hers, was more subdued but equally unrepentan­t. “Sinubukan lang namin (We were only trying it out).”

The couple was detained at the Philippine National Police (PNP) Headquarte­rs in Camp Crame for live streaming and selling video images of their children to foreign nationals through their cellphone.

The ease of selling sexual images and videos of children online through a laptop or mobile phone and the convenienc­e of accepting payments through cash remittance services are among the reasons why the online sexual exploitati­on of children (OSEC) is a booming family business.

Last year, the Department of Justice (DOJ) Office of Cybercrime received more than 600,000 tips of images and videos of naked, sexualized, and abused Filipino children. This marked a 1,300% increase from the almost 46,000 tips received in the previous year. However, out of the thousands of reports in 2018, only 27 OSEC perpetrato­rs were convicted, according to the 2019 US State Department Traffickin­g in Persons Report.

Runs in the family

Police Master Sergeant Karen Baccay, the investigat­or on the case, said that the police had been monitoring the couple for months.

When they were caught through an undercover operation where police posed as buyers, the couple’s phone’s log history showed that they had been engaging foreign nationals and selling them video images of their children performing sexual acts for months.

“Base din sa accounts ng mga anak nila, hindi nila first time ‘yun (Based on the accounts of their children, it was not the first time for the couple to do this) .”According to Baccay, the couple used their two children ages 12 and 11, a 17-yearold girl who is the live-in partner of one of their older children, and a 15-year-old girl who is the girlfriend of another child in their home-based OSEC business. An 11-month old grandchild who lived with the couple is suspected of being abused too. The children, who were all minors at the time of the couple’s arrest, are currently in the custody of the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD).

The couple lived in an area of Manila where OSEC is endemic and is a booming home-based family run business. Neighbors and other residents have become desensitiz­ed and even some of the children involved have been groomed by their parents or guardians to view it as a way of making easy money, said Baccay.

Some of the buyers come to the Philippine­s to continue their online sexual exploits with the children they first encounter online.

“Some of the parents ask the perpetrato­rs to bring them gifts when they come to the Philippine­s. We have seen messages where they ask for chocolates, for makeup, and cash to buy clothes for an upcoming birthday,” Baccay said in a mix of Filipino and English.

Philippine­s: Global OSEC hub

The government is grappling to curb OSEC in the Philippine­s, which is deemed as a top global source of sexually explicit content that makes use of children.

A recent report of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) stated that 2 in 10 children are vulnerable to online sexual exploitati­on. Boys are found to be as vulnerable as girls.

Culminatin­g national children’s month this November, 6 internatio­nal NGOs collective­ly called Joining Forces Philippine­s came together to make a united call for the government to implement laws and programs that would curb OSEC.

Joining Forces Philippine­s – comprised of ChildFund Alliance, Plan Internatio­nal, Save the Children, SOS Children’s Villages, Terre des Hommes, and World Vision – released on Friday, November 29, a report that outlines the most urgent and critical child rights issues in the Philippine­s.

A 2014 UNICEF report cited OSEC as the leading form of cybercrime in the country. While it starts in the digital space, it can lead to physical prostituti­on such as child sex tourism.

The government has been making some headway in certain fronts.

In February this year, the Philippine Internet Crimes Against Children Centre was created as a hub to facilitate the coordinati­on between internatio­nal law enforcemen­t agencies and local police to mount investigat­ions against foreigners overseas who buy sexual content featuring children and the people that sell them.

The DOJ and the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) is also crafting a Child Online Safeguardi­ng Policy which will provide guidelines for the protection of children from all harms of the internet which includes OSEC.

“Current child pornograph­y laws already require ISPs (internet service providers) to adopt the latest technology that will filter and block pornograph­ic materials that feature children,” said DOJ Undersecre­tary Markk Perete. “However, many ISPs have been lukewarm about this because of the costs involved.”

The DOJ is currently in talks with the ISPs and helping them find ways to comply with the law.

Cutting money ties

Joining Forces Philippine­s said that getting financial institutio­ns like cash remittance centers to cooperate is one of the most urgent and critical ways to end OSEC.

It is also one of the most difficult to implement.

Most of the perpetrato­rs send their payments through cash remittance services which is difficult to trace because it is often not tied to an account holder with a verified identity. Many remittance centers are reluctant to work with law enforcemen­t claiming they would violate existing Bank Secrecy Laws and the Data Privacy Act.

DOJ Assistant Secretary George Ortha said at the forum today that cash remittance giant Western Union has been very cooperativ­e in working with the government in strengthen­ing ways to block suspicious money transfers that may be linked to OSEC activities.

“Do we need legislatio­n to compel these remittance centers to cooperate with the government to track OSEC leads? Currently, there is none so their cooperatio­n becomes voluntary,” said Michelle Paunlagui, Educo Policy and Partnershi­p Manager. Educo is one of the child’s rights organizati­ons allied with Joining Forces Philippine­s.

“Unlike Western Union, cash remittance centers, especially the smaller ones operating in the provinces are reluctant to flag suspicious cash transactio­ns. They don’t see it as their responsibi­lity because they are just servicing their clients,” said Paunlagui.

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