THE DARK WEB OF CHILD PORN
Last October, Prajwala, a Hyderabad-based NGO that rescues and rehabilitates sex trafficking survivors, came across some disturbing footage of child pornography on the internet. When Sunitha Krishnan, co-founder of Prajwala, went to meet a child featured in it, she expected a scared, silent, suspicious person. Instead, she found a cherubic 12-year-old girl, bursting with enthusiasm. Praniti (name changed) was no problem child. She attended school, was polite and never begged for chips or soda. She would chat with a close friend online, someone her parents assumed was from school. Nothing prepared them for the discovery that the person was a stranger and that sexually explicit photographs of their daughter were all over the internet. Praniti’s reaction was different. There was only denial. “She was adamant this person was her friend, that she had done nothing wrong,” says Krishnan. The biggest threat in children being ‘groomed’ through the internet is the complete transfer of trust from the prey to the predator. It destroys the construct of victimhood in a child’s mind. “The child doesn’t know he or she is being exploited. Imagine a childhood spent grappling with the notion of betrayal and abuse,” says Krishnan.
INDIAN USERS HAVE UPLOADED 25,000 IMAGES OR VIDEOS IN JUST THE PAST FIVE MONTHS. DELHI TOPS THE LIST
Cyber grooming of the very young, like Praniti, is the newest threat in a booming online child pornography market that has reached alarming proportions in India (see ). According to the US-based National Centre for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), India now accounts for the maximum number of online child sexual abuse imagery in the world, followed by Thailand. NCMEC estimates that Indian users have uploaded 25,000 images or videos in just the past five months. Delhi tops the list for the maximum
You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days