13/12/2006

Ban sought on child abuse images

The government is to seek a ban on computer-generated images of child abuse, Home Secretary John Reid has announced.

Mr Reid, who was chairing his first meeting of the Task Force on Child Protection on the Internet, said that he was currently consulting with Cabinet colleagues on how to ban images such as cartoons and graphic illustrations of child being abused.

The Home Secretary said: "There is no higher purpose for government than to protect children. Computer-generated images of child abuse are often found by police stored alongside illegal material held by paedophiles. Yet, at the moment, while it is illegal to distribute these abhorrent images, it is entirely legal to possess them."

Mr Reid also announced that the Task Force had developed an industry standard for software to help parents protect their children on the internet. By the spring, all parental control software that meets a set of minimum requirements will have a BSI Kitemark, the Home Secretary announced.

A training pack for prison, probation and social work professionals, developed by childrens' charities, the NSPCC and NCH, on the benefits and dangers of internet and communications services and how to spot the warning signs, has also been developed.

John Carr, from NCH, said: "CGI computer images of child abuse are becoming more and more prevalent and the fact that they are legal sends out totally the wrong message to child abusers. Banning their possession is the only sensible way forward."

Jim Gamble, CEO of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection centre, said: "These measures when implemented would be vital additions to our overall toolkit - closing legislative loopholes, better informing the public and sharing expertise with the professionals working with both offenders and victims can only be seen as sensible steps forward."

(KMcA/EF)


Related UK National News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

16 October 2015
Kent Police Investigative 'Tool' Rolled Out Across EU
A "tool" developed by Kent Police and the University of Liverpool, which assesses the level of risk posed by a suspected paedophile and the likelihood of that person becoming a contact offender, is to be developed for use across Europe.
13 October 2015
Police Hunt Man Who Skipped Bail On Indecent Images Charges
Police have appealed for help in tracing 59-year-old Ali Hasan Soyer, who failed to appear for bail after he was arrested on suspicion of possessing/making indecent images of children. Soyer is wanted for questioning by officers from the Met's Sexual Offences, Exploitation and Child Abuse Command.
11 December 2014
PM Announces New Unit To 'Hunt' Online Paedophiles
The Prime Minister has announced a new joint unit of the GCHQ and National Crime Agency to tackle online paedophiles, making and sharing child abuse images.
29 October 2013
Ex-Councillor Jailed For Possession Of Child Abuse Images
Former leader of Kingston Borough Council, Derek Osbourne, has been sentenced to two years in jail after pleading guilty to 17 charges of possessing and distributing child abuse images. The 59-year-old admitted downloading nearly 2,850 images and 293 videos of child abuse.
06 June 2013
RE Teacher Fired Over Child Abuse Images Ruled Fit To Teach Again
A professional conduct panel has ruled a teacher sacked for possession of child pornography should be allowed to return to work. 36-year-old Geoffrey Bettley, who taught religious education at St Mary's Catholic School in Menston, West Yorkshire, was suspended in 2010 when almost 200 child abuse images were found on his computer.