FAQ’s on Child Pornography
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What is child pornography?
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How serious or widespread is child pornography?
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Who or what is a paedophile?
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How do paedophiles and child molesters use child pornography?
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Is it illegal to merely watch child pornography?
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Why is child pornography illegal if I am simply watching it but take
no part in creating or producing it?
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Is it illegal to download child pornography from the Internet?
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Is it illegal to open an e-mail attachment that contains child
pornography?
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What must I do if I come across child pornography accidentally?
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Is it illegal to subscribe to a pornographic website that contains
child pornography even if I am not downloading any pictures?
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Are writings or verbal descriptions of child pornography also
illegal?
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What about child pornography created without using an actual child,
such as by drawing or by using computer graphics?
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What must I do if I know or suspect that someone is involved with
child pornography?
-
What can I do to help Government stop the creation, distribution and
possession of child pornography?
-
How can I protect my child against becoming a victim of child
pornography?
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How will I know if my child is being abused?
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Are there other “film and publication” offences with respect to
children?
-
Is child pornography also an offence in other countries?
-
What if I watch child pornography in another country, while I am on
holiday, for instance?
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Are there instances or circumstances when the possession of child
pornography would not be an offence in terms of the Films and Publications Act?
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Are Internet service providers allowed to host or allow the
distribution of child pornography on or through their services?
-
What about banks and financial institutions that process credit card
transactions for payment for child pornography or for subscribing to websites
containing child pornography?
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What is harmful about child pornography? FAQs Child Pornography : An
Internet Plague Iyavar Chetty Published by the Film and Publication Board
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1. What is child pornography?
1.1 Child pornography is not as difficult a concept as some have made
it out to be, although there may be differences in the way it is defined in
different countries. However, any differences that may exist relate to, mainly,
two aspects:
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the definition of “child”, and
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the exclusion from the definition of the offence of child pornography any
pictures created without using a real child and verbal descriptions.
1.2 Child pornography is, simply, evidence of the abuse of a child for
the purpose of sexual exploitation and sexual gratification. It not only
describes, in words or pictures, a serious crime against a child but
constitutes, in and of itself, a criminal offence. In other words, the
abuse or exploitation of a child for any sexual purpose is a criminal offence
and any description or picture of such sexual abuse and exploitation is also a
criminal offence. However, child pornography refers to descriptions or pictures
of the sexual abuse and exploitation of a child and not to the actual act of
abuse.
1.3 Most child protection practitioners, including law enforcement
agencies, who have to deal with child pornography agree that the expression
“child pornography” does not adequately describe the nature of this despicable
crime against children. It is a misleading term because child pornography is
not about “pornography” but, simply, the evidence of serious sexual assaults
and abuse of children, including , as shocking as it sounds, the penetrative
sexual assault of children as young as 6 months. Uninformed commentators on the
subject, including members of the judiciary, have failed to grasp an essential
truth about child pornography: that it cannot be produced without a child being
sexually abused and that its creation and distribution leads to the sexual
abuse of more children to satisfy the demand for such pictures. Child
pornography is not pornography with child subjects and is an inappropriate term
to describe the true nature and extent of sexually exploitive images of child
victims. The correct term is “child abuse images”, which is a more accurate
description of this plague in our society, as anyone who has had the misfortune
to actually see such images would agree. There is no “pornography” in “child
pornography” – there is only the sexual assault, torture, the maiming,
brutalisation and even murder of young children.
1.4 In terms of South African law , “child pornography” is any
picture, regardless of how it was created, or any description, of a real or
imaginary person who is under the age of 18 years, or is represented as being
under the age of 18 years-
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engaged or involved in any form of sexual activity
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participating in or assisting another person to participate in any form of
sexual activity, or
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any picture which shows, or any writing which describes, the body or any part
of the body of a real or imaginary person under the age of 18 years in
circumstances that amount to sexual exploitation or in a manner that makes it
capable of being used for the purpose of sexual exploitation.
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2. How serious or widespread is child pornography?
2.1 Child pornography is a highly secretive and clandestine activity. It is
difficult to say, accurately, how widespread it is but we do have some
indications from cases which have been investigated and prosecuted. One such
case is that of the “Wonderland Club”, which was investigated and led to the
arrest and prosecution of hundreds of members of this notorious “club”.
“Operation Cathedral” was the name given to the investigation of the “Wonderland
Club”, an operation that involved over 1 500 police officers breaking down
doors of the homes of suspects in 12 countries on 2 September 1998 – all at
exactly the same time. It was described as the world’s largest child
pornography network, and the police seized 750 000 images and over 1 800
digitised video clips of children being sexually abused and tortured. The
images were so disturbing that all the police officers involved had to undergo
compulsory debriefing with a psychologist because of the harm they might have
suffered through viewing tens of thousands of images of abused children, many
of them of infant toddlers. Police estimate that the number of images is much
higher because they did not manage to identify and arrest all the members of
the “club”. However, an indication of the number of images involved may be
gained from the fact that, in order to join this “club”, you had to submit, to
the “club”, 10 000 original images of child abuse.
2.2 Current estimates of the number of child abuse images available on the
Internet runs into the millions. BT, a UK Internet service provider, recently
reported that it blocks an average of about 35 000 attempts to access child
pornography every day in the UK alone. It is estimated that that there
are over 20 000 Internet websites devoted exclusively to child abuse images,
not including “adult porn” websites that may also contain child pornography.
2.3 The proper question to ask is how many children have been abused to create
the millions of child abuse images that may be found on the Internet? Do
“smaller numbers” make this crime less abhorrent? The point is not that only
one or two or even a hundred children have been abused and have had their lives
destroyed permanently. The point is that a child has been abused, and
others will continue to be abused, for the sexual gratification of the few
perverted and depraved in our society. And for the millions of dollars in
profits that many are making from the trade in this sordid business.
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3. Who or what is a paedophile?
The Concise Oxford Dictionary defines the word “paedophile” as “sexual love
directed towards children.” A paedophile is a person with a sexual attraction
towards young children and come from all social, income, racial, gender, ethnic
and age groups. Most paedophiles, generally, do not act aggressively or
violently towards children but attempt to gain a child’s affection and interest
by being friendly, especially towards children who are otherwise deprived of
affection. According to the Australian National Institute of Mental Health 1998
report, the typical paedophile molests an average of 117 children, most of who
do not report the offence. Paedophilia has been described as a form of
paraphilia, which is a clinical term denoting sexual deviance, and paedophilia
as sexual attraction to pre-pubescent children.
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4. How do paedophiles and child molesters use child
pornography?
4.1 Paedophiles and child abusers use child pornography-
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for sexual stimulation and gratification, which usually leads to masturbation
and, in many cases, the actual sexual abuse of children
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to groom and seduce children by lowering their inhibitions into accepting sex
with adults as “normal, acceptable and pleasurable” acts and that “everybody is
doing it”
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to instruct children on how to perform specific sexual acts
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to trade and exchange collections of child pornography, thus stimulating demand
for more child pornography, and
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to blackmail and threaten children into silence about what is being done to
them.
4.2 Child pornography is also a multi-billion dollar industry. While accurate
figures are difficult to come by, the case of Thomas and Janice Reedy, a Texas
couple convicted on child pornography charges in 2001, offers an idea of the
amount of money involved in the child pornography trade.
Thomas Reedy was a nurse who realised there was more money to be made in
pornography and therefore set up an Internet adult pornographic business,
called Landslide Productions. However, he soon realised that there was more
money to be made from child pornography and within two years, his company had
over `250 000 child pornography customers from across the world, including Pete
Townshend, the legendary “pop” star, now serving a 3-year sentence in Vietnam
for the sexual abuse of underage females. Between 1996 and 1999, Landslide
Productions took in $8.5 million from child pornography, compared to the $1.5
million it took in from adult pornography ! Incidentally, Thomas Reedy was
sentenced to a total of 1 335 years imprisonment – 15 years on each of the 89
counts he was convicted of, while his wife was sentenced to 14 years
imprisonment. It was reported that Thomas Reedy’s sentence was reduced, on
appeal, to 800+ years! Landslide Productions, the company Reedy formed, was
sentenced to pay a fine of $6 950 970.28 . According to Quick Facts (2004), the
child pornography industry is worth $2-3 billion dollars and that in excess of
20 000 child abuse images are posted on the Internet each week.
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5. Is it illegal to merely watch child pornography?
Watching child pornography could constitute the offence of possession, which is
an offence in terms of section 27(1)(a)(i) of the Films and Publications Act,
1996 and any person convicted of such an offence could be sentenced to a
maximum of 10 years imprisonment. But whether or not merely watching child
pornography which was unsolicited, such as, for instance, opening an e-mail
attachment not knowing that it contained child pornography, would constitute an
offence depends on the particular circumstances of that act. If you stumbles
across child pornography by accident or unknowingly, and take immediate steps
to either report that to the police, or the Film and Publication Board’s
“hotline” (0800 148 148), or erase it, you would not have committed an offence
because you watched that image without any intention to actually watch child
pornography, or even knowing that it was child pornography, and you took
immediate steps to disassociate yourself from that image.
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6. Why is child pornography illegal if I am simply watching it
but take no part in creating or producing it?
6.1 Child pornography is inherently harmful to children and to society.
Children’s right are not limited only to the rights set out section 28 of the
Constitution – Children’s Bill of Rights - but includes every right guaranteed
a to “every person”. All children are entitled to the right to human dignity
and the very existence of expressions which are degrading, demeaning and
dehumanising, on their own, violate the dignity and equality rights of
children. “Expression that degrades or dehumanises is harmful in and of itself
as all members of society suffer when harmful attitudes are reinforced. The
possibility that pornographic representations may be disseminated creates a
heightened risk of harm.”
6.2 Collectors of child pornography stimulate the demand not only for more child
abuse images but for more violent images of younger and younger children. Child
pornography, in effect, creates child pornography and leads to the abuse and
torture of more innocent children.
6.3 The correlation between the collection of child pornography and the actual
sexual abuse of children is sufficiently high to conclude that a collector will
become a child abuser. In a study of persons arrested for computer-related
offences against children in the US, 40% of those convicted were “dual
offenders” – they were both collectors of child pornography and actual abusers
of children .
6.4 Prohibiting the possession of child pornography is intended to reduce the
market for such material. If the consumption of child pornography is reduced,
the production and the abuse of children will be reduced. “The production of
child pornography is fuelled by the market for it, and the market in turn is
fuelled by those who seek to possess it. Criminalising possession may reduce
the market for child pornography and the abuse of children it often involves.”
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7. Is it illegal to download child pornography from the
Internet?
The Internet is the medium of choice for the distribution of child abuse images.
If you download child pornography from the Internet, you would, in fact, be
charged with two offences:
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possession, under section 27(1)(a)(i) of the Films and Publications Act, 1996,
and
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creation in terms of section 27(1)(a)(ii).
You would then be facing a maximum of 10 years imprisonment on each count.
Transmission via the Internet is in binary language, which is the language of
computers, and consists of batches of zeroes and ones. The act of downloading,
which is usually the action of “pointing and clicking”, creates, out of the
digital information, an analogue picture. Each picture downloaded would amount
to a separate creation. If you download 10 pictures, you would be charged with
10 counts of possession and 10 counts of creation, and could face a maximum of
10 years imprisonment for each count. Even ignoring the issue of the nature of
transmission of information via computers, the ordinary meaning of “to create”
is to bring into existence. Downloading a picture from the Internet is to bring
into existence that picture.
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8. Is it illegal to open an e-mail attachment that contains
child pornography?
Not unless you knew that the attachment contained child pornography. If you knew
that the attachment contained child pornography, or if you actually solicited
child pornography via e-mail, you would be charged with the possession, as well
as the creation, of child pornography in terms of section 27(1)(a) of the Films
and Publications Act.
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9. What must I do if I come across child pornography
accidentally?
If you come across child pornography by accident and not because you actually
went looking for it, you should report all the details of that to the Film and
Publication Board’s “hotline” at 0800 148 148, or to the police.
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10. Is it illegal to subscribe to a pornographic website that
contains child pornography even if I am not downloading any pictures?
In terms of section 27(1)(a)(iii) of the Films and Publications Act, it is an
offence to, “in any way take steps to procure, obtain or access” child
pornography. Subscribing to a website which contains child pornography is to
“take steps to ….. access” child pornography and it is most certainly illegal.
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11. Are writings or verbal descriptions of child pornography
also illegal?
In terms of South African law, there is no distinction between visual
representations and verbal descriptions of child pornography. Child pornography
in any form – visual, verbal or audio – is illegal and constitutes a serious
offence.
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12. What about child pornography created without using an
actual child, such as by drawing or by using computer graphics?
The Films and Publications Act does not distinguish between child pornography
created by using actual children and those created out of one’s imagination.
South African law is not “victim-harm based ” – child pornography is illegal
regardless of the manner of its creation. As far as South Africa is concerned,
material that is illegal does not become legal because it is created by a
different means.
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13. What must I do if I know or suspect that someone is
involved with child pornography?
If you have information or suspicions about any person who is in possession of,
or involved in any way with, child pornography, you must report that
information or suspicion to the police. Failure to make such a report is itself
an offence in terms of section 27(2)(a) of the Films and Publications Act,
1996. The legal obligation, on pain of prosecution, to report knowledge of
child pornography is upon every person who comes by such knowledge, such as
those who repair or service computers and those who provide Internet services
and those who process and develop photographs.
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14. What can I do to help Government stop the creation,
distribution and possession of child pornography?
The protection of children from maltreatment, abuse and degradation is not only
a moral obligation but a constitutional obligation. You should unite with
Government in its fight against child pornography. Making people around you
aware of the existence of this terrible crime, of the risks that children are
exposed to, of the traumatic impact of child pornography not only on the
child-victim but to the family and friends of a child-victim and to society
itself, reporting knowledge or suspicions of persons involved in any way with
the abuse and exploitation of children to the police, reporting incidents of
unsolicited child pornography that you stumble across to the Board’s “hotline”
(0800 148 148) and persuading your Internet service provider to take all steps
to block access to websites containing child pornography are some of the ways
in which you can help Government in its fight to eliminate child pornography.
Silence is a betrayal of all children, including your own.
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15. How can I protect my child against becoming a victim of
child pornography?
15.1 Children, especially younger children, are not suspicious of the motives of
even strangers and are incapable of recognising danger signs. Talk to your
child about paedophiles and child molesters and about “stranger danger”. They
should know to never get into a car with a stranger. Never accept gifts and
sweets from strangers. Never trust any person they do not know offering rides
or gifts or trying to be friendly. Your child must trust you enough to be able
to talk to you about anything that makes her or him feel uncomfortable,
especially if it concerns strangers. Remind your child, as a general rule, that
nobody but a doctor is allowed to touch or examine her or his body. You owe it
to your child to know enough about paedophiles and child abusers to protect her
or him from becoming another victim.
15.2 In so far as protecting your child from becoming of a victim of Internet
predators – computer sex offenders – the following tips may help-
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Train your child to be “cyber smart” so that they can recognise potential
dangers and know how to avoid threatening situations. Talk to your children
about sexual victimisation and the use of the Internet, especially chat rooms,
by paedophiles and child molesters looking for child victims. Encourage your
children to tell you if they receive messages which make them feel
uncomfortable or threatened, especially messages of a sexual nature
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Remember that your child might have access to the Internet outside your home,
such as in a school or library or a friend’s home or even the mobile cellular
phone. The more your children know and understand about being “cyber smart”,
the safer their exploration of the Internet. Your supervision of your
children’s daily lives to ensure their safety in the real of-line world must
apply equally to their lives in the on-line “cyber world”
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Spend time with your children when they are on-line and ask them to tell you
about what they are doing and what they enjoy about the Internet. Show interest
in their Internet activities. And if your child has ever been involved in any
form of on-line sexual exploitation, even if willingly, make sure she/he
understands that it is not her/his fault and that she/he is the a victim of
unscrupulous abusers of the Internet
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Make sure your child’s computer is in a room used by the family and not in the
child’s bedroom. Internet predators would not be so keen to attempt to groom
your child if they know that the computer screen is visible to every person in
the household
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Install filtering software in computers used by your children. Filtering
software can be programmed to block access to websites that contain materials
to which children should not be exposed. However, you must know that filtering
software does not provide a hundred percent guarantee that your child would not
stumble across unsuitable materials. It is a useful complement to all the other
measures that you would need to take to ensure that your child is safe on the
Internet. Filtering software may be downloaded from the Internet. It is useful
to talk to your Internet service provider or to someone who knows about
filtering and parental control programmes. (You can find a directory of
filtering software programmes at www.getnetwise.org/tools. You can get more
information about filtering and blocking software at
www.pin.org.uk/filtering.)
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You can also talk to your Internet service provider about rating systems that
rely on website operators to indicate the nature of the materials on their
websites. Internet browsers can be configured to allow children to visit only
websites that are rated at a level that are suitable for children. However,
remember that not all websites are submitted for rating
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Monitor your child’s use of chat rooms. Make sure you know enough about chat
rooms to advise your child about chat rooms which should be avoided. Direct
your child to safe chat rooms, especially those which have been created for
children. And, most importantly, tell your children to-
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never arrange or agree to any face-to-face meeting with any person they met
on-line
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never post to the Internet, or send to people they do not personally know, any
pictures of themselves
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never give out any personal information about themselves, even if the
information seems unimportant and innocent, to any person on-line
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never download pictures from an unknown source since there could be sexually
explicit images
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never respond to messages on-line that are sexually suggestive, obscene,
aggressive or harassing
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never believe as true anything that may be said by people on-line, especially
about themselves because people on-line are not always who they pretend to be
and paedophiles are particularly adept at pretending to be of the same age as
your child
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never open e-mail attachments unless they know the person sending them and know
what they contain
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never enter a private chat room
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Make sure you check your child’s e-mails and that your child knows that you
will do so. Assure your child that you will do so not because you do not trust
her/him but to ensure that she/he is safe from those who could harm her/him.
Better yet, share an e-mail address with your child so that you can monitor all
messages. You should also check your phone bills for unusual amounts and
unfamiliar phone numbers, and
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If your child receives messages or materials of a sexual nature, report all the
details to the police.
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16. How will I know if my child is being abused?
Parents often fail to recognise signs that their child is being sexually abused,
even when the abuser is their partner or spouse. However, sometimes a child who
is being abused will behave in a way that suggests sexual abuse.
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your child may avoid being alone with a particular person or family member
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your child may show unexpected fear of an adult ¤ your child may try to avoid
socialising with adults
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your child may hint about being asked to keep secrets
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your child may behave aggressively or be more withdrawn
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your child may have difficulty in sleeping
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your child may be performing badly in school
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your child may exhibit sexually inappropriate behaviour, including the use of
“sex language” which was not the case before
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your child seems to have the sort of sexual information which was not there
before and which was not learnt from any person you know or from school
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your child complains about ailments and soreness that don’t seem to have the
expected medical explanation, and
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your child has definite symptoms of sexual activity, such as anal or genital
soreness or unusual discharge. If you notice any of the above signs or other
symptoms that everything is not right with your child, talk to your child
immediately and, if necessary, get professional help.
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17. Are there other “film and publication” offences with
respect to children?
In terms of the Films and Publications Act, exposing children to any form of
pornography is a criminal offence. It may also constitute the common law
offence of indecent assault . Failure to take steps to prevent a child from
access to any pornographic materials under your control is also a criminal
offence under the Act. A less serious, but an offence nevertheless, is allowing
your child to watch a film or video or play a game or read a publication that
is classified and rated for children older than your child.
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18. Is child pornography also an offence in other countries?
Child pornography is an offence in almost every country in the world, although
there may be differences in what amounts to “child pornography” or who is a
“child” or the penalties upon conviction for a child pornography offence.
Unfortunately, while child pornography is illegal in most countries, not all
countries have laws which are specific to child pornography, relying, instead,
on laws with general provisions against obscenity, for instance . Given the
international nature of the trade in the production and distribution of child
pornography, and the borderless nature of the Internet, there are efforts to
introduce some harmonisation of international laws on child pornography to
facilitate a global response to this crime. The fact that almost all child
pornography exists on the Internet, and the Internet has no geographical
boundaries, means that child pornography does not exist in any particular
country but that it exists wherever there is a computer, a modem and a
telephone line or satellite signal, or wherever there is a mobile cellular
phone that allows access to the Internet.
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19. What if I watch child pornography in another country,
while I am on holiday, for instance?
In terms of the section 30A(a) of the Films and Publications Act, any South
African citizen or permanent resident who does anything outside South Africa
which would constitute an offence in terms of that Act if done within South
Africa, would be guilty of that offence as if it had been committed in South
Africa and will be charged with that offence once she or he returns to South
Africa, and liable to the penalties provided for in the Act.
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20. Are there instances or circumstances when the possession
of child pornography would not be an offence in terms of the Films and
Publications Act?
The critical question is the purpose or reasons why a person would want to
possess child pornography. There can never be any exemption from prosecution if
the purpose is sexual exploitation or financial or other advancement or gain.
However, a person in possession for the purpose of enforcing the laws against
the creation, distribution or possession of child pornography, for instance,
would not be committing an offence. A person in possession of child pornography
for a genuine and true scientific or medical purpose may, in appropriate
circumstances, be exempted from prosecution. In general, however, it would be
better to assume that there can and will be no exemptions from prosecution for
any person found in possession of child pornography. That is as far as
possession is concerned. However, there can NEVER be any circumstances under
which the creation or production of child pornography may be exempted from
prosecution and severe punishment.
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21. Are Internet service providers allowed to host or allow
the distribution of child pornography on or through their services?
21.1 The short answer is a definite NO. No person or institution or organisation
is allowed to distribute, or make possible the distribution, of child
pornography. However, Internet service providers are not responsible for the
content of what is transmitted through the services they offer and they are
prevented by laws and contracts from intercepting transmissions without lawful
authority, unless, of course, they have good reason to believe that an offence
is being committed. But if an Internet service provider has knowledge that
child pornography is being transmitted through the services being provided, or
that a website hosted by the service provider contains child pornography, that
service provider would be guilty of an offence if that knowledge is not
reported to the police. It is irrelevant how an Internet service provider comes
by or acquires such knowledge.
21.2 In terms of section 27A(1) of the Films and Publications Act, Internet
service providers are required to take all reasonable steps to prevent access
to child pornography by any person. Failure to do so would be an offence.
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22. What about banks and financial institutions that process
credit card transactions for payment for child pornography or for subscribing
to websites containing child pornography?
The Films and Publications Act is very clear and unambiguous. If a bank or
financial institution knows (or even ought to know), or has reason to suspect,
that the transaction is payment either for child pornography or for a
subscription to a website known to contain child pornography, then processing
that transaction, with that knowledge or reasonable suspicion, would amount to
a section 27(2)(a)(i) if that bank or financial institution does not report
that knowledge or suspicion to the police as soon as possible and provide the
police with all the relevant details when requested by the police. The critical
question is : did the bank or financial institution know that payment was for
child pornography or that it was a subscription to a website known to contain
child pornography? If the answer is “yes”, then section 27(2)(a)(i) of the Act
would apply. Section 52 of the Financial Intelligence Centre Act, 2001 may also
have application. In terms of this section, failure to report transactions
which have no apparent business or lawful purposes is an offence.
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23. What is harmful about child pornography?
“Look into the eyes of a child who has been sexually abused and you'll see pain
- a pain that endures long after the bruises have healed. This pain is
compounded by child molesters who create images of the sexual abuse and share
them with other child molesters. They trade them in chat rooms and post them on
thousands of Web sites. These people are making money from the pain and
suffering of children.”
23.1 Paragraph 3 above describes how paedophiles and child molesters use child
pornography. 23.2 The aim of the prohibitions on the creation, distribution and
possession of child pornography is to prevent harm to children and society
itself-
µ The possession of child pornography contributes to the cognitive distortions
of paedophiles by reinforcing their belief, and fuelling their fantasies, that
sexual activities with children is acceptable µ Child pornography cannot be
produced without physically abusing a child. Children are sexually abused,
physically tortured and suffer severe traumatic experiences in the creation of
child pornography. The trauma and violation of the child’s body, as well as the
child’s dignity, may stay with the child for as long she or he lives. Not
infrequently, the experience initiates a downward spiral into the sex trade
µ Child pornography violates a child’s right to life, well-being and security
that is guaranteed by the Constitution and is the birthright of every child. In
fact, child pornography threatens the physical and psychological security of
all children since every child is vulnerable and is at risk.
23.3 This report by Michael S Malone of ABC News sums up what child pornography
is all about- “You may think you know what the child pornography industry is,
but, no matter how cynical you are, you do not. Yes, it is naked children
exposing themselves. But it is worse than that. It is adults having sex with
children, even babies. But it is worse than that. It is the rape and torture of
little children. “But, as hard as it may be to accept, it is even worse than
that. A couple of years ago, there was the arrest of an Italian-pederast ring
that was taking orders from customers to kidnap Russian orphans according to
pre-specified characteristics, like hair colour, then torture and kill them on
camera for posting on the Web. “This is the very heart of darkness. These are
images that are more than shocking and repulsive. They kill your soul because
you know that every poor child you see on these sites is dead, if not now at
the hands of a sadist, then decades from now from drugs, alcoholism or suicide…
The pictures first make you sick, then angry, and finally homicidal… This is
not somebody else’s problem but ours…”
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