Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

TRC on a mission to eliminate cybercrime

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The key challenges faced by both the public and law enforcemen­t to prevent and respond to child traffickin­g include data collection, public awareness, as well as identifyin­g child victims and perpetrato­rs.

On the same lines, the TRC Act of 1991 based on the 1982 British Act, does not cover an ambit to regulate web content which is a big flaw, Mr. Senanayake added. According to the law, the TRC directs the Internet service providers to act against the perpetrato­rs and they report back to the TRC. But the TRC can only stop access to questionab­le websites. “We cannot take the websites down,” Mr. Senanayake added noting that the TRC needs to be empowered to go beyond this end to find the root cause - who is doing this, where the websites are hosted, who is paying for these websites etc.

Child prostituti­on and sexual exploitati­on is an offence under Section 360 A of the Penal Code and the recent arrests of over 25 persons involving a sex traffickin­g ring of a 15- year- old girl through a website were possible because the girl was underage. “We also cannot request for cross border informatio­n. For example, if the website is hosted in another country, we need to be able to request informatio­n on these sites from that country’s authoritie­s which now we cannot do,” Mr. Senanayake said.

The TRC has establishe­d a separate unit to combat cybercrime, he said adding that the public is welcome to notify them of any irregulari­ty in this regard.

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