Daily Mail

Porn ‘as harmful as cigarettes’

MPs demand it’s treated as major public health crisis

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

‘Harassment is rife’

PORNOGRAPH­Y causes so much harm it should be treated like cigarettes and reckless driving, MPs demanded last night. Members of the Commons women and equalities committee said tackling porn should receive as much public funding as other major health issues.

The MPs insisted ‘public places must be made safe for all women and girls’ as they called for a ban on viewing adult material on mobile phones on buses.

The group made a raft of recommenda­tions on how to curb the harmful impacts of pornograph­y. And the committee also criticised social media firms such as Twitter and Facebook, noting: ‘Online spaces are public places where sexual harassment of women and girls is rife.’ The MPs called on the Government to force global internet giants to take action.

The demands were made in a damning report which found many women and girls were left ‘terrified’ by sexual harassment fears. It found girls as young as ten were being sexually harassed, with many targeted because they were wearing school uniforms.

And more than two in five young women have been sent obscene photos. The MPs suggested a nationwide public health campaign to warn of the dangers of pornograph­y.

In one infamous case, Nathan Matthews, who murdered his 16-year- old step- sister Becky Watts, was found to be obsessed with violent pornograph­y.

Matthews was believed to have watched a violent pornograph­ic film before he throttled Miss Watts in her bedroom and then dismembere­d her body.

Police found a 17-minute pornograph­ic film, which showed a victim being beaten up on her bed, among 236 images and 21 movies discovered on his laptop. He was found guilty in 2015 of murdering Miss Watts in a sexually-motivated kidnap from her home in Bristol.

He was given a life sentence with a minimum term of 33 years in prison. His girlfriend Shauna Hoare was cleared of murder, but found guilty of manslaught­er and sentenced to 17 years in prison. The report criticised the Government for not having plans to address adult men’s use of mainstream pornograph­y.

It noted that research suggests men who view pornograph­y are ‘more likely to hold sexist

From the Mail, November 11, 2015 attitudes and be sexually aggressive towards women’.

It went on: ‘The Government should take an evidence-based approach to addressing the harms of pornograph­y, similar to the huge investment there has been over many years in tackling road safety, or preventing public health problems caused by lawful behaviour such as smoking.’

The MPs welcomed the Government’s plans to bring in age verificati­on for online pornograph­ic sites. But they argued social media firms should do more to tackle sexual harassment – or be forced to do so. The report added: ‘The definition of commercial pornograph­y services for the Government’s policy on age verificati­on of pornograph­y websites should be amended to include social media, to ensure that this policy is as effective and comprehens­ive as possible.’

Tory MP Maria Miller, the committee’s chairman, said: ‘Sexual harassment in public places is a regular experience for many women and girls in the street, in bars and clubs, on buses and trains, at university and online.

‘Women feel the onus is put on them to avoid “risky” situations. It is not acceptable that women have to change their behaviour to avoid sexual harassment. It has a wider effect on society, contributi­ng to a culture in which sexual violence can be normalised or excused.’

The report warned: ‘The Government... risks giving the impression it thinks sexual harassment is either too trivial to address, or that the problem is immune to policy interventi­on.’

 ??  ?? Victim: 1 -year-old Becky Watts was throttled
Victim: 1 -year-old Becky Watts was throttled
 ??  ?? Obsessed: Nathan Matthews
Obsessed: Nathan Matthews
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