Tuesday, June 26, 2007

€nd Child $ex

The title of our blog has two curious inclusions – the Euro € and the Dollar $. They are there for a purpose. They serve to remind you that in our generation children have become commodities which can be purchased, used and sold. It is the first time in history that children have been used in such a widespread and callous fashion.

Children growing up in poor communities of the world can now be sold to criminal groups and trafficked to a foreign country where they are kept in slavery and used as sexual objects for as long as possible. Then they are discarded.

In some countries of the world children have a monetary value which enables them to be purchased, hired and sold in much the same fashion as any other commodity at the supermarket. You have to go far back in history to see children used for slavery in such a callous fashion, and never has it been on the scale we see today.

In many ways tourism and the globalised world have created much of this situation. In Thailand during the 1990’s we found that It was the coming of foreign paedophiles willing to pay big money for child sex who created the opportunity for criminals to begin trafficking children. Still today there are well-organised criminal rings trafficking children within Asia, Central America and Eastern Europe.

Children are subjects not objects. They need to be respected as subjects of affection and not objects used for monetary gain or sexual pleasure.

Ron O'Grady

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Breaking the Paedophile Rings

This week yet another ring of child sex abusers was uncovered. A particularly nasty group of 700 members located in 35 countries has been exposed. Not only did the participants collect large numbers of images of child pornography many of them were also linked together for live broadcasts of an actual abuse.
The British police uncovered the central character in this ring and after that began to uncover many other members of the ring. Through forensic investigation they were also able to identify 30 of the abused children and rescue them from the cruelty of their situation.
Of course we are delighted that the abusers have been caught but t is a very small victory in a very large battle. It is evident that there are many organisations of this kind operating around the world and their methods of ensuring secrecy have become increasingly sophisticated. Many of them evade discovery by using servers or anonymous remailers in Russia or one of the other former Eastern bloc countries.
Law enforcement officers play a cat and mouse game in trying to break these paedophile circles of abuse. No sooner do they find a way to monitor one form of information transfer than another IT method brings new problems of identification. And despite the serious nature of this crime against children it is still not regarded as a priority in some quarters. One of the ring members in Britain involved in the broadcast abuses had around 5000 child pornographic images on his computer and 392 child sex movies. Even if he is found guilty by the court he could still be released from prison in 19 months.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Catholic Priests

A senior Catholic spokesman, Cardinal McCarrick, formerly Archbishop of Washington popped into New Zealand last month and spoke to the newspapers about paedophile priests. It was, he said, a reflection of the 60’s “when anything goes….and the sexual mores went down and down.”.
Asked how widespread the abuse was he made the comment: “When all is said and done, you are still talking about less than one out of 25 priests over a period of 60 years.”
It was a surprising admission. Critics in America have been saying for some time that the rate of priests offending is at least 4% of the total but this is the first time I have heard a senior Catholic churchman admitting that this figure could be accurate.
Think for a moment of the implications. Since 1984 there have been about 60,000 active priests in the United States and on these figures the church has been harbouring around 2,400 paedophile priests over the past 20 years. This is a very high number and proportionally much higher than equivalent figures in the total population.
Why is this so? Critics have argued that forced celibacy is a key reason for priestly offending but the Cardinal denied that claim saying that other churches which have married clergy have the same rates of offending. A claim which he did not substantiate and one which is, in the absence of any evidence, debateable to say the least.
One of the saddest aspects to this situation is that Rome still retains a directive issued by the present Pope when he was Cardinal Ratzinger and head of the Vatican Office for the Doctrine of the Faith (formerly the Office of the Inquisitor General). The directive orders that whenever there is even a hint of child abuse by clergy the local church must set up a tribunal to investigate the case and report to Rome and this entire process is to be covered by church secrecy. According to Reuters, the directive was sent to Bishops confidentially and asked them not to divulge the information contained in the letter to the media.
We can only hope that the frankness of the Cardinal is a signal of a new openness in the church so that attempts to cover up criminal actions by the priests will no longer be permitted.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Virtual Sex

Monday, June 4, 2007

No Room in the Cells

It seems most countries are having a building boom in prisons. About nine million people fill the world’s prisons at any one time with the United States leading the field. These numbers continue to grow everywhere and there are never enough cells.

In Britain it has created such a difficult situation that the Home Secretary recently took the unusual step of writing directly to the country’s judges warning them that the prisons were getting too full and would they kindly try to reduce the number of criminals being sentenced to prison. While the intention was good, the result was disastrous. As a consequence many judges have become more lenient with their sentences and guess which criminals gained the benefit? No prizes for guessing that it was the child sex offenders.

One persistent Welsh sex offender who had been caught with a large number of obscene images of child sex abuse was released with a suspended sentence instead of the expected prison sentence. Leaving the court the abuser told the press that he had been rather lucky. Such decisions reflect the attitude shown by judges in many countries. Faced each day with murder, theft and horrific crimes there appears to be a feeling that a known sex abuser with a large collection of appalling images of violent child sex abuse is actually committing a lesser crime than burglars and thieves.

There are two compelling reasons why this attitude has to stop. The first is that sex offenders are a continuing threat to the most vulnerable members of society. Society must protect its children from abusers in their midst and regrettably prison appears to be the only effective way this can be done.

The second reason is that prison forces the abuser to face some of the consequences of his crime and gives a chance to change some of his patterns of behaviour. While prison rehabilitation courses have often been less successful than desired at least they have enabled some offenders to control their drive to abuse and that has to be a plus.

Prison reform is needed – but not by increased tolerance of child sex abuse.