Showing posts with label Child Abuse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Child Abuse. Show all posts

Friday, December 11, 2020

Mastercard, Visa halt processing payments on Pornhub

Mastercard Inc and Visa Inc on Thursday stopped processing payments on Pornhub after a New York Times article said many videos posted on the adult website depicted sexual assault of children.

Mastercard said it was permanently ending the use of its cards on the sex videos site after its investigation confirmed the presence of illegal content on the platform. Visa said it was suspending payments till an investigation was completed.

"We are instructing the financial institutions who serve MindGeek (Pornhub parent) to suspend processing of payments through the Visa network," Visa said in a statement.

Pornhub did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The New York Times article had also described some videos on the site as recordings of assaults on unconscious women and girls.

Pornhub has denied the allegations but said it had banned video downloads and was allowing only certain partner accounts to upload content.

-reuters-

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Australia probes PayPal over child abuse payments


SYDNEY - Australia's financial regulator on Tuesday ordered an investigation into global money transfer platform PayPal over concerns it is being misused by sex offenders to buy child abuse material from Asia.

The Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Center (AUSTRAC) will appoint an external auditor to examine what it calls "ongoing concerns" over PayPal's alleged breaches of the country's anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing laws.

Announcing the appointment in a statement Tuesday, AUSTRAC said it was working with its partners to "combat serious crimes such as child sex exploitation" using funds transfer information reported by the financial services sector.

"Online child abuse material can be ordered from Australia to areas such as the Philippines in quite often small amounts that are repeated often, and PayPal unfortunately is one of the areas that they can use to do that," AUSTRAC CEO Nicole Rose told the ABC.

"That's why we want to get the auditor in to really what sort of risks there have been and continue to be with PayPal systems or their reporting regime."

A PayPal Australia spokesperson said that following an internal review the company had "self-disclosed an issue" in its reporting system to AUSTRAC.

"We are working in full cooperation with AUSTRAC to remediate this reporting system issue and to undertake the audit as outlined by AUSTRAC in the time specified," they said in a statement. 

An audit report must be compiled within 120 days and will be used to determine whether the regulator takes any further action against the digital payments platform.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Cambodia feared lagging behind predators in cybersex trafficking crackdown


PHNOM PENH - US and Australian crime fighters are preparing Cambodia for a spike in online child sex abuse cases but local officials fear that predators are a step ahead of police due to narrow laws.

The spread of cheap, high-speed internet and the rise in mobile phone ownership is fueling cybersex trafficking across Southeast Asia - a form of modern-day slavery where children are abused and raped over livestreams for paying clients worldwide.

Agents from the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Australian Federal Police (AFP) have in recent months started training Cambodian police to investigate the crime amid concerns that it is becoming more prevalent in the country.

Yet undercover investigations in sexual abuse cases are not permitted under Cambodian law, hindering the authorities' ability to tackle the trend, said Khuon Sokpiseth, deputy director of the interior ministry's cybercrime department.

"We need this capacity to infiltrate networks and we need new cybercrime laws for the department to properly carry out its mission," Sokpiseth told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

A more comprehensive cybercrime law has been in the pipeline for at least two years, he said, without giving further details.

The interior ministry and the justice ministry both declined to discuss the proposed legislation.

The Philippines is considered to be the epicenter of cybersex trafficking - with its high level of English, rampant poverty and cheap Internet access - yet campaigners say the crime is spreading across the region from Vietnam to Cambodia.

At least three-quarters of Cambodians had internet access as of the start of this year, up from 45% of the population in 2017, according to We Are Social, a social media marketing firm.

"Countering the online sexual exploitation of children is a priority ... for Cambodia," said a spokesman for the AFP, which ran a workshop with local law enforcement agencies in July.

"Of particular concern is the rise in instances and rates of child exploitation overseas with Australians involved."

The United States, Britain and Australia are the main consumers of child sex abuse streamed over webcam, he added.

The FBI confirmed it had been involved in a recent workshop on the issue with Cambodian police, but did not comment further.

"FOREVER RUNNING BEHIND"

In the Philippines, the AFP is part of a joint taskforce launched earlier this year to tackle online child sex abuse alongside Britain's National Crime Agency, local police and the International Justice Mission, an anti-trafficking charity.

The head of the taskforce, police general William Macavinta, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that more than 90% of successful investigations relied on undercover investigations.

In Cambodia, charity Action Pour Le Enfants (APLE), which works with local police and the FBI, is also calling for a new cybercrime law to be adopted to prevent the crime from growing.

The government last month said the number of trafficking victims rescued in Cambodia had more than doubled in the first half of the year, compared to 2018, with 101 children freed.

Yet the head of APLE, Samleang Seila, said child trafficking had moved off the streets and into "underground environments" in recent years, and that there were now thousands of reports of illicit imagery of children being shared online each month.

Investigators in Cambodia must be allowed to go undercover "to infiltrate networks and dig out criminals", Seila added.

"If we are only relying on victim complaints and reports from the community, I think we will forever be running behind."

More than 260,000 of Cambodia's 16 million people are estimated to be trapped in slavery, according to the Global Slavery Index by the Australia-based Walk Free Foundation. 

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Thursday, August 29, 2019

Bangladeshis reveal 'rampant' rapes in Islamic schools


DHAKA - Former Bangladeshi students are turning to social media to detail allegations of "rampant" sex abuse at the hands of teachers and older pupils in Islamic schools, breaking their silence on a taboo topic in the conservative country.

Child abuse in madrasas has long gone unreported in Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority nation where hardline Islamist groups draw their support from the tens of thousands of schools across the nation of 169 million people.

But in the wake of a brutal murder of a teenage girl who was burnt to death in April after accusing her headteacher of sexual assault, such incidents have been subject to national scrutiny and debate for the first time.

In July alone, at least five madrasa teachers have been arrested on rape charges against boys and girls under their care.

Several senior students were also held by police over the rape and beheading of an 11-year-old orphan, while a Dhaka cleric and seminary teacher was charged with sexually assaulting a dozen boys aged between 12 and 19.

The accusations reveal how students from poorer and rural backgrounds, whose parents send them to madrasas as they are more affordable than secular schools, are disproportionately affected by the abuse.

Rights activists said the assaults -- which range from violent rapes to forcible kissing -- are so pervasive that the cases reported in the media are just the tip of the iceberg.

"For years these crimes eluded spotlight due to sensitivity of the subject," Abdus Shahid, the head of child rights' group Bangladesh Shishu Odhikar Forum, told AFP.

"Devout Muslims send children to madrasas, but they don't speak up about these crimes as they feel it would harm these key religious institutions."

'WIDESPREAD AND RAMPANT'

Hojaifa al Mamduh, who studied in three madrasas in the capital Dhaka, published a series of posts on Facebook in July detailing the abuses endured by students including himself.

The assaults were "so widespread in the madrasas, every student who has studied there knows about it", Al Mamduh, now a journalism student at a Dhaka University, told AFP.

"Many madrasa teachers I know consider sex with children a lesser crime than consensual extramarital sex with women. Since they live in the same dormitories, the perpetrators can easily hide their crimes and put pressure on their poor students to keep mum."

The 23-year-old's posts generated heated debate in the country, and he was personally threatened.

He was accused of being "an agent of Jews and Christians" and smearing the "sacred image" of a madrasa by one social media user.

Another reminded him of the fate of Avijit Roy, a top Bangladeshi atheist blogger and writer who was hacked to death by Islamist extremists in 2015.

But his posts encouraged others to share their own experiences of alleged sex crimes.

Mostakimbillah Masum, who published his story on a feminist website, said he was "first raped by an elder student in my madrasa when I was just seven".

The 25-year-old told AFP that another one of his rapists was "a teacher who made me unconscious and raped me. It traumatised me permanently".

"Dozens of madrasa students I know were either raped or witnessed rapes and sexual assaults of their fellow students," he added. "It is so rampant almost every madrasa has a fair share of such stories."

CULTURE OF IMPUNITY 

Madrasa teachers have strongly denied the allegations, calling them "negative propaganda".

Mahfuzul Haq, a principal of a madrasa in Mohammadpur where Al Mamduh studied, told AFP "one or two isolated incidents can happen" as there were 20,000 madrasas in the South Asian nation.

"Those who don't like to study in madrasas are spreading these stories," he added.

A spokesman for hardline Islamist group Hefazat-e-Islami, which represents a coalition of thousands of madrasas, said his organisation told a recent conference of 1,200 principals to take "tough stand against any sex crimes".

However, there has been growing acknowledgment of the alleged offences.

Pro-Islamic website Fateh24.com, viewed as a voice for the madrasas, pointed out in a report that children were at risk in smaller seminaries run by just one or two teachers and that had no oversight from governing bodies.

Editor Iftekhar Jamil, a former madrasa student and teacher, added that the cases were "not isolated" incidents and called for closed-circuit cameras to be installed in students' sleeping quarters.

"Instead of looking for conspiracies, these madrasas must take up responsibility and adopt an action plan to tackle these crimes," he told AFP.

sa/grk/aph/rbu

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

Cardinal George Pell loses appeal on child sex abuse charges


MELBOURNE - Convicted pedophile cardinal George Pell had his appeal against child sex abuse charges rejected by an Australian court on Wednesday.

Once the Vatican's third-ranking official, 78-year-old Pell was sentenced this year to 6 years in jail for sexually assaulting two 13-year-old choirboys at a Melbourne cathedral in the 1990s.

"He will continue to serve his sentence of six years imprisonment," said Chief Justice Anne Ferguson, dismissing a series of appeals from Pell's lawyers.

Pell is the most senior Catholic convicted of child sex abuse, making his case and Wednesday's ruling a touchstone moment for believers and victims groups around the world.

A large crowd of victims, advocates, lawyers and media gathered outside the court ahead of the hotly awaited verdict, with a long queue to enter the building forming along the street.

After more than two months of deliberations, a three-judge appeals panel handed down its decision.

The clergyman's lawyers raised 13 objections to his conviction, casting doubt on everything from the physical possibility of Pell removing his robes to the credibility of the main witness.

They argued the verdict was "unreasonable".

The case was unusual in that it relied heavily on the closed-door testimony of the sole surviving victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons.

The verdict could have wide-ranging implications for sexual assault cases that rely on the account of a single victim.

On Monday, the father of the second victim -- who died of a drug overdose in 2014 -- expressed hopes that "justice would prevail" and that the ordeal would soon be over.

"He just wants closure so he can try to get on with his life and stop thinking about it every single day," lawyer Lisa Flynn told AFP.

ANOTHER APPEAL POSSIBLE

Two so-called "fallback" arguments for Pell related to alleged procedural errors during his trial.

His lawyers argued they should have been allowed to show an animated reconstruction of people's movements in the cathedral on the days of the assaults.

They also took issue with the fact that Pell was not arraigned in the presence of the jury. The process was completed via video link so the large pool of potential jurors was able to watch.

Pell had already faced two juries, after his first trial in 2018 ended in a hung jury.

But Pell is still be able to challenge the decision in Australia's High Court, the country's final court of appeal.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Saturday, June 29, 2019

Trump administration declares emergency in violence-plagued rural Alaska


ANCHORAGE - U.S. Attorney General William Barr on Friday declared a public-safety emergency in rural Alaska and pledged $10.5 million in federal funds to combat some of the nation's worst rates of sexual assault, child abuse and other violent crimes.

Barr's announcement followed a visit to Alaska last month, where the country's top law enforcement official was told about extraordinary high rates of rape and domestic violence and a lack of police officers.

About a third of Alaska Native villages lack local law-enforcement services, according to a statement by the U.S. Department of Justice announcing the federal money.

"I witnessed firsthand the complex, unique, and dire law enforcement challenges the State of Alaska and its remote Alaska Native communities are facing,” Barr said in the statement.

Rural Alaska communities, with largely Native populations and mostly without outside road access, have long been plagued by violent crime. For various legal and financial reasons, local and state responses to rural crime have been limited.

Village public safety officers, residents of the small Native communities scattered over remote parts of Alaska, are managed by the Alaska State Troopers.

Alaska tribes do not have the legal authority to establish police forces, a product of the sweeping 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act that restricted tribal powers, Native leaders told Barr in May. Establishing tribal police would require another act of Congress, the Native leaders said.

State-funded rural law enforcement has been hindered by Alaska's long-running fiscal problems. The state is dependent on oil revenues that are dwindling and has cut back services over the years.

On Friday, just after Barr declared the public-safety emergency, Gov. Mike Dunleavy announced deep cuts he was making by veto to the fiscal 2020 budget passed by the state legislature. Among them was a $3 million cut Dunleavy made to the village public safety officer program.

Of the emergency funding announced by Barr, $6 million is to support the state's village public safety officer program and to help pay for mobile detention facilities.

Another $4.5 million will be paid by the end of July for 20 officer positions, equipment and training for Native grantees, the Justice Department said.

Barr also announced plans for some longer-term responses, including some funding for child protection.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Friday, March 15, 2019

Louis Vuitton drop Michael Jackson clothes from new collection


PARIS - Louis Vuitton said Thursday they were pulling Michael Jackson-themed clothes from a new collection in the wake of the "Leaving Neverland" documentary which revived claims that the singer sexually abused children.

The brand's men's autumn winter collection, designed by the label's American designer Virgil Abloh, was designed as a homage to Jackson's "prodigious talent".

It was shown at Paris fashion week in January on a spectacular set inspired by his "Billie Jean" video.

Abloh -- one of fashion's brightest new stars -- penned a long tribute to Jackson in his notes for the show and posted a poem he wrote about him to his 3.4 million Instagram followers.

He called the singer a "universally relatable marvel. Every person on Earth could mirror themselves in him".

But the world's richest brand said Thursday that it would not now make any piece from the collection "that directly features Michael Jackson elements".

"I am aware that in light of this documentary the show has caused emotional reactions," Abloh told the Women's Wear Daily (WWD), the fashion industry's house journal. 

"I strictly condemn any form of child abuse, violence or infringement against any human rights," he added. 

'Troubling and disturbing'

The collection, only Abloh's second for Vuitton, featured a black T-shirt printed with Jackson's trademark shoes and white socks as well as takes on the legendary 3-zip red jacket worn by the late singer in the video for his megahit "Beat It".

The invitation to the show was a sparkly Michael Jackson white glove, several variations of which also made the catwalk.

The collection also included a string of looks inspired by "The Wiz", the 1978 all-black musical version of "The Wizard of Oz" in which Jackson starred.

The flag of the singer's home state, Indiana, was also emblazoned on one of Abloh's coats.

The clothes were not meant to go on sale until later this year.

The label said that "Leaving Neverland", which features 2 men who claimed Jackson sexually abused them for years, had caused the French fashion house "the greatest pain".

"We find the allegations in the documentary deeply troubling and disturbing," it added in a statement issued to WWD but which it refused to release to AFP.

"Leaving Neverland" has broken streaming records in Britain and prompted radio stations from Australia to Canada to drop Jackson's music from their playlists.

The creators of "The Simpsons" also shelved one of the animated series' classic episodes because it features Michael Jackson's voice.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Thursday, March 7, 2019

Radio stations drop Michael Jackson's music over abuse claims


SYDNEY -- Radio stations in Australia, Canada and New Zealand are refusing to play Michael Jackson's music in the wake of fresh allegations against him of child sex abuse.

Sydney's Nova Entertainment on Thursday became the latest radio group to announce they are taking the late "King of Pop" off the air in response to public opinion.

The move comes after the broadcast of a US documentary "Leaving Neverland" that featured two men who claimed Jackson sexually abused them for years.

"In light of what is happening at the moment, SmoothFM is not currently playing any Michael Jackson songs," local media quoted Nova's programme director Paul Jackson as saying.

The documentary has not yet been broadcast in Australia. A second major Australian radio network, ARN, said it was "closely monitoring audience sentiment in relation to individual artists."

In New Zealand, the star's songs are now almost totally absent from the airwaves, after being pulled by the country's two biggest radio networks, MediaWorks and NZME.

The two companies between them dominate commercial radio.

"We aren't deciding whether Michael Jackson is guilty of pedophilia, we're just making sure our radio stations are going to play the music people want to hear," MediaWorks director of content, Leon Wratt, told Magic FM.

He said the decision was "a reflection of our audiences and their preferences."

NZME group director of entertainment, Dean Buchanan, confirmed Jackson's material was off the air, though he shied away from talk of a ban.

Meanwhile, public broadcaster Radio NZ said Jackson's songs did not feature on its playlists anyway.

The HBO documentary, which aired in the United States on Sunday, has rekindled long-running questions about Jackson's relationship with children.

Two men, James Safechuck and Australian-born Wade Robson, say Jackson sexually abused them when they were aged 10 and seven.

There had been persistent rumours throughout Jackson's life, but no allegations were ever substantiated.

The four-hour two-part documentary -- which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival this year -- has made sure those allegations continue a decade after he died of an overdose.

Jackson's estate has denied wrongdoing and filed a $100-million lawsuit against HBO. The 53-page complaint, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, claims HBO was violating a "non-disparagement" agreement by airing "Leaving Neverland."

"Ten years after his passing, there are still those out to profit from his enormous worldwide success and take advantage of his eccentricities," the suit claimed.

Off air in Canada

The decisions not to play Jackson's music will no doubt further tarnish his brand and could result in a loss of radio royalties.

But it is far from clear that listeners on digital platforms are abandoning the singer in the same way, and "The Essential Michael Jackson" is still the 65th most downloaded album in Australia.

Earlier, a chain of dozens of Canadian radio stations said they would not play Jackson megahits such as "Billie Jean" and "Bad" for the time being.

"We are attentive to the comments of our listeners, and the documentary released on Sunday evening created reactions," Christine Dicaire of Cogeco -- which operates radio stations in Quebec and Ontario -- said in a statement to AFP.

"We prefer to observe the situation by removing the songs from our stations, for the time being."

In Britain, where "Leaving Neverland" was set for release Wednesday and Thursday, reports said the BBC had also shelved his music.

While a spokeswoman for the network told AFP it does not ban artists, the organization said in a statement: "We consider each piece of music on its merits and decisions on what we play on different networks are always made with relevant audiences and context in mind."

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Saturday, February 9, 2019

PM Abe vows to tackle growing child abuse in Japan


Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Saturday vowed to crack down on the increasing number of child abuse cases in Japan after the death of a 10-year-old girl, allegedly killed by her abusive father, shocked the country.

Mia Kurihara was found dead in the bathroom of her home in Chiba near Tokyo last month after authorities failed to respond to her repeated pleas for help.

Her parents have been arrested on suspicion of assaulting their daughter after her father reportedly abused her regularly and refused to allow her to go to school. 

The tragedy came more than a year after she asked her teacher to help stop her father from "beating and kicking" her. 

She was temporarily protected by child welfare officials but returned to relatives about two months later. She was then brought back to her parents in March last year.

Police have found a video on her father's mobile phone showing him hitting her, local media said, adding that she cried in the footage saying: "Dad, I'm sorry."

The high-profile case has drawn huge media attention, prompting the government to take action amid growing public awareness over child abuse.

Abe told members of his ruling Liberal Democratic Party that his government had ordered child welfare centers across the nation to confirm within a month the safety of all children suspected to have been abused.

Abe also said the government would raise the number of child welfare workers by some 1,000 for the next fiscal year starting in April from the current 3,200.

"It was a painful case which is all too regrettable," Abe said. 

"Protecting children's lives is our adults' responsibility," he added.

Police reported the suspected abuse of a record-high 80,104 minors to child welfare authorities in Japan in 2018, Kyodo News said.

The figure rose by 22.4 percent from a year earlier, it said.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Wednesday, August 8, 2018

German couple jailed after selling son for sex on the internet


A German court on Tuesday handed down lengthy jail sentences to a couple for repeatedly sexually abusing their now 10-year old son.

The mother of the boy, identified only as Berrin T. under German law, was jailed for 12-and-a-half years while her partner, indentified as Christian L., received a 12-year sentence followed by preventive detention in a case that shocked the country and raised serious questions about child protection services in Germany.

The court found that the couple had sexually assaulted and raped the boy for years, and sold him on the so-called dark net to pedophiles between May 2015 and August 2017.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Thursday, June 21, 2018

U.S. migrant crisis: How does separating children from parents affect them?


U.S. President Donald Trump's "zero tolerance" immigration policy has led to thousands of migrant children being separated from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border, stoking global outrage.

Images of youths behind metal fences and reports of children crying for their parents have raised concern about the psychological ramifications of the practice.

Separating children from their parents can cause lasting trauma, anxiety and depression, and even health problems later in life, said Judith Cohen, a professor of psychiatry at Drexel University College of Medicine in Philadelphia and an internationally recognized expert on childhood trauma.

The following are highlights of an interview with Cohen about the current crisis:

What damage can these separations cause, and who is most at risk?
"First, it is important to put in context that a lot of these children have already experienced traumas. They are fleeing traumatic, life-threatening situations in their home countries -- gang violence, domestic violence, sexual violence. These are not children with normal, healthy brains and bodies to start with. 

"If you start with a traumatized child and then you add the trauma of being separated in a sudden, frightening manner from their parent, you are removing a source of protection and support.

"It is sudden. It is chaotic, frightening and scary. They have a minute to plan for it. Other children are crying and sobbing around them.

"What we are doing with these kids who have experienced trauma is taking them away from their parents at the very time when they need them the most. And we are really putting these kids at risk for developing trauma responses.

"The younger the child, the more... it feels like a life threat.

"Young children have immature brains and they depend very much on the support of a caregiver to help regulate what they can't regulate with their own brains and bodies.

"Kids under 10-12 are considered younger children, and for them this impact is more pronounced."

Is this child abuse?
"It is intentional infliction of harm. Whether that meets the definition of 'child abuse' depends on the jurisdiction."

What are the long-term risks?
"We know there are changes to the child's brain structure and the younger the child is, the more profound and potentially lasting these changes are. It can be lifelong.

"We have found that adults who endured early childhood traumas had mental health problems and more strikingly physical problems that lasted throughout their lifetime. Every organ system in their body was affected because trauma affects your immunologic system, your ability to fight off diseases."

What have we learned from foster care that applies to this practice?
"I've seen thousands of children in the course of my 40 years in practice who were placed in foster care, and they were placed in foster care because they were abused or neglected or both. Despite that, many of these children said the worst thing that happened to me was not the physical abuse or the sexual abuse I experienced, it was not the week when I was drinking toilet water, it was because my mother was out using drugs, or it was the moment I was taken away from my mother. 

"So that puts it in perspective, that despite the horrific abuse and neglect these kids experienced, their worst thing that happened was being taken away from those parents. And that speaks to the parent-child bond.

"For these (migrant) children, they are with a parent who is risking their life to get their children to safety because they want to keep their child alive."

What kind of care do these children need now?
"First of all, provide them right away with information in their own language about what is going on. Because children who don't understand will fill in the gaps with their own explanations. They may blame themselves, they may blame the adults they see, they may blame other children, they may hold their parents responsible when it is not their fault. 

"They need to have information about what is happening. They need to be reassured that their parents are okay. It is really critical that they be allowed to have ongoing contact with their parents."

And in the future?
"The good news is with different trauma-focused treatments -– which, by the way, include the parent -– children can recover.

"And the younger the child, the more critical it is to include the parent in these treatments. With these effective treatments, the changes in their brain and bodies as well as their psychological system can be reversed and they can recover.

"When they get back with their parents, everyone is going to think the problem is solved. But the impact is going to remain. The problem is not going to go away. They are going to need treatment over the months and years to come."

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Lawyer denies forcing daughter to undergo female genital mutilation


LONDON - A London solicitor accused of forcing his eldest daughter to undergo female genital mutilation (FGM) denied on Monday that he had arranged for anyone to cut her, saying he loved his children and would never hurt them.

The girl, now 16, told police that when she was younger her father had arranged for someone to cut her with a razorblade in the hallway of the family home as "a form of punishment".

She was cut again in similar circumstances some time after the wound had healed, the Central Criminal Court heard.

When prosecutor Mark Heywood suggested to the defendant that he had watched as someone cut his daughter, he replied: "God forbid!... Why would I organise to cut my daughter?"

FGM has been illegal in Britain since 1985, but there has not been a successful prosecution.

The 50-year-old lawyer, who is originally from West Africa and was described in court as a devout Catholic, said FGM did not happen in his community and he had never witnessed it.

"I didn't cut my daughter. I would never hurt my daughter," said the defendant, who cannot be named for legal reasons.

A medical expert who examined the girl last year found marks on her genitalia, but could not say how old they were.

In highly emotional testimony, the defendant said the allegations were fabrications arising from the acrimonious breakdown of his marriage.

"I need to know who cut my daughter! It's not me!" he told the jury.

"I don't know who cut my daughter. I didn't organise it. I was not part of it."

The defendant denies two charges of FGM, two alternative charges of wounding with intent, and three counts of child cruelty between 2009 and 2016, relating to his treatment of his daughter and two of her siblings.

The defendant described allegations by his daughter that he hit her with a cane and threatened her with an iron as the "height of fabrication".

He said his wife had repeatedly threatened to destroy him during their marriage and had turned his children against him.

His voice breaking, he said the allegations were meant to "put me away for a long time".

"I want the court to help me! I did not abuse my children!" he said gesticulating. "I would give my life for my children! I love them!"

The children's former nanny told the court the defendant adored his children, and said she had never seen any ill-treatment.

The case is continuing.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Child abuse linked to later depression for teens


Tough experiences before age six, like family instability or abuse, are tied to changes in brain structure and to a higher risk of anxiety or depression, according to a study of mother-son pairs in England.

“Early adversity increases later symptoms of depression or anxiety, which, in turn, can associate with variation in cortical structure,” said senior author Edward D. Barker of the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience at King’s College London.

“Most children will experience a degree of adversity, but this is not necessarily harmful,” Barker told Reuters Health by email. “Our research suggests that children who experience many forms of adversity are at risk.”

His team followed almost 500 pairs of mothers and sons, starting during pregnancy, from 1991 or 1992.

When the children were eight, 21, 33, 47, 61 and 73 months old, roughly from infancy to age six, their mothers answered questions about 37 types of “adversity” in the home, including interpersonal loss, family instability, and abuse toward the child or mother.

When the boys were seven, 10 and 13 years old, their mothers reported on their symptoms of anxiety or depression.

Between age 18 and 21, the young men had magnetic resonance imaging of their brains.

According to the MRI scans, having experienced more types of adversity before age six was tied to lower gray matter volume in an area of the brain called the anterior cingulate cortex, which is involved in emotion, decision-making and empathy, and higher volume in the precuneus, which is involved with episodic memory.

“The relationship is likely similar for girls, but this needs to be confirmed,” Barker said.

Early adversity was also tied to lower volume in the right superior frontal gyrus of the brain, as were later symptoms of anxiety and depression, the researchers reported in JAMA Pediatrics.

The right superior frontal gyrus may be related to self-awareness.

Researchers are still learning what processes the precuneus is involved with and how that might be related to problems after early life stress, said Jamie L. Hanson of the Carolina Consortium on Human Development at Duke University who was not part of the new study.

“It can be difficult to know if an effect is a direct result of an experience (like early life stress) or caused by the other effects of an experience (indirect; early life stress is related to depression, and depression can affect the brain),” Hanson told Reuters Health by email. “This study found that differences in the superior frontal gyrus were related to these “indirect” effects.”

Child maltreatment, extreme poverty, or having a parent with major mental health issues happens to almost a million kids in the U.S. each year, Hanson said.

“Research suggests that the experiences early in life really matter, especially before the age of five,” Hanson said. “This isn’t to say that if a child experiences stress during this period, that they will definitely have physical or mental health issues. Stress during infancy and early childhood, however, does increase the risk for many different problems.”

“Young children are dependent on their caregivers, whereas teenagers have a greater range of experience and autonomy,” Barker said.

Dr. Martin H. Teicher, associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School in Boston, told Reuters Health that early life adversity plays an important role in risk for substance abuse, personality disorders, anxiety disorders and even psychotic disorders.

“We do not yet know if there are actions that can be taken later in childhood or during adolescence that would preempt the consequences of early exposure,” Teicher, who was not part of the study, wrote by email.

Social programs where registered nurses visit low-income first-time mothers have had strong positive effects, Hanson said. “These programs start during pregnancy and typically continue for two years following a child’s birth, and really help maternal and child health outcomes.”

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Dwight Howard investigated in Georgia for child abuse


ATLANTA - Authorities in Georgia are investigating child abuse allegations against National Basketball Association star Dwight Howard, a center for the Houston Rockets who is among the league's marquee performers, police said on Tuesday.

The allegation against the basketball star comes amid heightened attention to domestic violence incidents involving professional athletes including NFL star Adrian Peterson, who was suspended on Tuesday for "abusive discipline" on his 4-year-old son.

Police declined to elaborate on the details of the Howard investigation, which followed a prior probe of the same accusation in Florida. Entertainment news website TMZ said Howard is accused of beating his 6-year-old son with a belt buckle.

"The Cobb County Police Department's Crimes Against Children Unit reopened their investigation into the allegations against Mr. Howard," said Dana Pierce, a spokesman for the suburban Atlanta police department.

Howard's attorney, David Oscar Markus, said in a statement that Florida authorities previously investigated the allegations and found them to be not substantiated. The Florida case was closed in September, Markus said.

The child's mother, with whom Howard is involved in an ongoing Florida civil case involving child custody, "is now shopping her baseless allegations to authorities in Georgia," Markus said.

In court documents from the Florida civil case, the NBA star said he disciplined his son "in an appropriate manner when necessary," but "never caused marks, bruises, welts or injuries requiring medical treatment."

Jane Carey, attorney for the child's mother, declined to comment.

The 28-year-old 6-foot, 11-inch (2.11-meter) Howard, a 10-year NBA veteran, played for the Orlando Magic from 2004 to 2012. He has led the league in rebounding during five seasons and is an eight-time All-Star.

Before entering the NBA, Howard played high school basketball in suburban Atlanta.

(Editing by Jonathan Kaminsky, Cynthia Johnston and Sandra Maler)

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Monday, October 21, 2013

DSWD to step into Freddie's love affair


MANILA - The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) may intervene in the May-December affair of 60-year-old singer Freddie Aguilar with a 16-year-old girl.

Aguilar drew criticism from the public after he admitted his relationship with a minor.

Reports said that the singer-composer of the worldwide hit song “Anak” may be sued for child abuse or seduction by being in a relationship with a minor.

Under the Revised Penal Code, seduction of a girl who is under 18 years of age is considered a crime against chastity.

Child abuse, on the other hand, is considered a public offense and that agencies like the DSWD can file a case for victims under Republic Act 7610, or the Special Protection of Children against Abuse, Exploitation and Discrimination Act.

Dulfie Shalim of the DSWD Protective Services Bureau said social workers are set to visit the teenager’s parents in Mindoro to determine if they approved of the relationship of Aguilar with their daughter.

“The girl is considered a minor under the law. That means she is vulnerable to abuse, and not yet capable to discern,” Shalim said.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com