The Deputy Children’s Commissioner Sue Berelowitz, in her study of sexual exploitation by urban gangs found that the “use and impact” of pornography was a major factor in 48 percent of interviews with abuse victims and perpetrators.
The highly easy access of porn online skewed young people’s views about what is “acceptable, required or expected” of sex – and could leave boys seeing girls as ‘objects’ to be used and abused,” Berelowitz says.
Naive younger people are often found “wandering ’round” in the “thicket” of the Internet. “There are some neighborhoods where sexual violence and a sense of entitlement were completely normalized.”
The report said that it’s rare to find abuse cases where technology such as mobile phones and computers were not in some way connected.
Examples of Internet sexual abuse includes encouraging girls to swap sexually explicit images on mobiles, adults grooming children on social networking sites such as Facebook and the viewing of extreme or violent pornography and discussing it during sexual assaults.
The report found that at least 16,500 children were identified as being at risk between April 2010 and March 2011.
Not all of the child victims were from troubled backgrounds. “Children from loving and secure homes can be abused in gangs and groups, as well as children with pre-existing vulnerabilities.”
Children were included in the report if they met at least three out of 13 risk measures highlighted by experts.
These included missing from home, care or school; committing a crime; using drugs or alcohol; self-harming or getting repeated sexual infections.
“The reality is that each year, thousands of children in England are raped and abused by people seeking to humiliate, violate and control them. The impact on their lives is devastating. Continue reading
Image: The Prisma
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