WORLD / EUROPE
EU plans to step up fight against child sex abuse
Published: Jun 08, 2020 04:28 PM

Pope Francis prays during the opening of a global child protection summit on the sex abuse crisis within the Catholic Church on Thursday at the Vatican. The pontiff has set aside three and a half days to convince Catholic bishops to tackle pedophilia in a bid to contain a scandal which hit an already beleaguered Church again in 2018, from Chile to Germany and the US (See story on Page 9). Photo: AFP


The European Union (EU) is set to unveil a package of measures to better combat child sex abuse after online demand for illegal content involving minors soared during the novel coronavirus lockdowns, an EU commissioner said in a statement on Sunday.

EU Home Affairs Commissioner Ylva Johansson told Germany's Die Welt daily that she wanted to lead "a more efficient fight" against the scourge of child abuse, including through closer cooperation with social media companies.

"Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the demand for material showing the sexual abuse of children has risen by 30 percent in some member states," she said in comments translated into German.

The new plan, which Johansson said would be presented "soon," would include the creation of a new EU center to help member states "investigate, prevent and combat child sex abuse" and facilitate cross-border information sharing.

Johansson also called for tougher action against perpetrators.

"We need prevention strategies but we can't rely on that alone," Johansson said in a statement. 

"We also need to enforce our laws when they are broken and show that our values prevail, both on the internet and in real life."

The internet is "sadly a decisive factor" for potential perpetrators looking for victims, she added, underscoring that more cooperation with internet companies was needed.

Experts have repeatedly sounded the alarm about vulnerable children forced to stay indoors for much of the past few months as part of efforts to halt the coronavirus, potentially trapping them with their abusers and cutting them off from outside help.

There has also been concern that the millions of children spending more time online due to the COVID-19 pandemic are at greater risk of being groomed on the internet by pedophiles.

The urgency of the problem was highlighted again when German police on Saturday said they had detained 11 people accused of being part of a pedophile ring and filming their actions.

Officers seized hard disks containing up to 500 terabytes of data, including videos and photos, from the cellar of one of the suspects, a 27-year-old man from the western city of Muenster.

Investigators have identified at least three potential victims aged five, 10 and 12.

AFP