Asian Little Teen Ero

Asian Little Teen Ero




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Asian Little Teen Ero
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The BBC investigation by Stacey Dooley uncovered how the sexualisation of young girls is widespread in Japan
VULNERABLE kids as young as six are being paid to wear sexy clothing while paedos legally take photos in Japan, a new documentary has revealed.
The BBC investigation by Stacey Dooley uncovered how the sexualisation of young girls is widespread in Japan, with child rape featuring in comic books.
The show, set to air on Tuesday, focuses on a ‘legal grey area’ called Chako Ero which sees kids forced to wear sexy costumes because of an obsession with “virginity”.
Dooley spoke to one producer, who admitted he had filmed a six-year-old girl playing with toys while she was dressed in a swimming costume.
“We filmed her playing in her bathing costume, playing with the toys,” he told the show .
“Her mum was standing behind the camera with her favourite doll. There are lots of guys in Japan who have this Lolita complex.
“The younger they are, the more likely they are to look like virgins.”
Possessing child pornography was only made illegal in Japan three years ago.
But despite the stricter rules, the investigation found that sexual images of young girls are still being “openly and widely distributed" for commercial gain.
Chako Ero exploits a legal loophole because the children wear clothes - usually sexual costumes - in the photoshoots.
“Japan is seen to have a serious problem with the sexualisation of children,” a BBC spokesman said.
Dooley also visited a legal Tokyo JK café where schoolgirls are paid to hold hands and talk about sex with older men.
She spoke to police in Japan who say they are doing their utmost to protect vulnerable girls.
The filmmaker was held by Japanese police for two hours after the crew shot footage of two schoolgirls walking on a Tokyo street where men can rent teenagers.
In footage of the incident, two men can be heard telling the presenter “no movies" and demanding the crew erase footage.
Stacey Dooley Investigates Young Sex for Sale in Japan will be available to watch on BBC Three from 10am on Tuesday.
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By South-East Asia correspondent Anne Barker
Posted Thu 8 Oct 2020 at 2:15pm Thursday 8 Oct 2020 at 2:15pm Thu 8 Oct 2020 at 2:15pm , updated Fri 9 Oct 2020 at 7:54pm Friday 9 Oct 2020 at 7:54pm Fri 9 Oct 2020 at 7:54pm
abc.net.au/news/philippines-seeks-to-raise-age-of-consent-from-12-to-16/12740514
Posted 8 Oct 2020 8 Oct 2020 Thu 8 Oct 2020 at 2:15pm , updated 9 Oct 2020 9 Oct 2020 Fri 9 Oct 2020 at 7:54pm
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In the Philippines, sex with a 12yo is considered legal if it's consensual. But new laws are set to change that
Rosario Baluyot took seven months to die.
The internal injuries she received from an alleged rape caused a severe infection in her cervix that eventually led to her death in a Philippines hospital.
Her gravestone at Olongapo, north-west of Manila, states that Rosario was just 11 years old when she died in 1987.
But the lack of a birth certificate — or any proof of her age — was one factor that led the court to acquit the man originally charged and convicted of rape with homicide in a country where the age of consent for sex is 12.
Her case has since become the subject of a documentary novel, titled Rosario is Dead, and helped to pave the way for significant legal reforms in the Philippines, including legislation in 1992 to give stronger protection to children from sexual abuse or exploitation.
But those reforms did not include raising the age of consent, which has remained at 12 since it was enshrined in a penal code that was first enacted in the Philippines in 1930.
That could be set to change now, as draft legislation proposes raising the age of consent to 16.
Heinrich Stefan Ritter, an Austrian doctor, was initially convicted of Rosario's 'rape with homicide'. He was ordered to pay 'moral and exemplary damages' to her family, and immediately deported and banned from returning.
In his appeal, the defence counsel for Dr Ritter argued that Rosario was 13 — above the age of consent — and that as a child-prostitute who lived on the street, she had willingly submitted to his sexual advances in exchange for money.
In most countries, sexual relations with a 13-year-old would automatically amount to statutory rape.
But not in the Philippines, where an adult can legally have sexual relations with a child as young as 12 and argue that it was consensual.
It is the lowest age of consent in Asia, and the second-lowest in the world after Nigeria where it's 11 — though some African or Middle Eastern countries have no age of consent, but ban sex outside of marriage.
In the case of Rosario, the Philippines Supreme Court ultimately ruled that the onus fell on the prosecution to prove that she was under 12 at the time of the alleged rape.
And they found that ultimately it had failed to do so.
He was acquitted of rape and freed.
But now, 33 years after Rosario's death, Philippine politicians are finally preparing to pass new legislation to raise the age of consent from 12 to 16.
"This law reform is particularly urgent because the Philippines has such a high prevalence of violence against children," chief of child protection at the UN children's agency UNICEF Patrizia Benvenuti said.
"UNICEF and the child rights community have lobbied and campaigned actively for many years on this issue."
The proposed legislation — which is almost certain to pass after it goes before a bicameral sitting of Congress in November — will ensure any adult who has sexual relations with a child under 16 would automatically be guilty of rape.
They can no longer argue the child was a willing partner.
The legislation will also remove marriage as an exemption for those perpetrators who later marry their victims.
And it will include a 'sweetheart clause' that removes criminal liability for those who have sex with an underage child if their age difference is between two and four years.
Bernadette Madrid, director of the Philippines' Child Protection Unit, said the new law will inevitably help to lower the incidence of sexual abuse against children.
"They've done studies on the age of statutory rape and found that per age that you increase, you decrease the number of sexual abuse," she said.
"So there's a relationship between the higher age and the greater decrease in rape."
The statistics on child rape and sexual abuse in the Philippines are staggering.
On average, a woman or child is raped almost every hour, according to the Centre for Women's Resources. Around seven in 10 victims are children.
A national study on violence against children in 2015 revealed that most child rapes occur in the home and that the most common perpetrators are family members — including the father, brother and cousins.
"Economic status has something to do with it," Nenita Dalde from the Philippine Legislators' Committee on Population and Development Foundation said.
"Most adolescents belong to poor households or families and depend on these types of relationships to gain economic empowerment."
Many, if not most, rape victims are boys. The national study found one in five children, aged 13 to 17, had experienced sexual violence.
But the figures were higher for boys at 24.5 per cent than girls at 18.2 per cent.
Until now, children's rights groups say perpetrators of sexual assault against boys are given much lesser sentences than those found guilty of raping girls.
It is hoped the proposed laws will address this issue by giving equal protection to boys under the law.
The alarming incidence of child rape is also cited as one reason why the Philippines has the highest rate of teenage pregnancy in South-East Asia.
Of those pregnancies, Ms Dalde said many can be attributed to rape or sexual abuse, and most babies were fathered by much older men.
"Evidence points to adult males who prey on younger children, not just girls but boys," she said.
Importantly, she says raising the age of consent will remove the horrific onus on many child rape victims to testify in court that they did not consent to the sexual exchange.
And those under 12 years old will also no longer be required to testify that they were under the age of consent.
Instead, perpetrators who have sex with a child under 16 will automatically face accusations of rape and could face a maximum sentence of 40 years in jail if found guilty.
The move has been welcomed by children's rights organisations, who say the new laws, once enacted, will bring the Philippines into line with international standards.
"A 12-year-old is only in sixth grade and has barely gone through puberty," Ms Benvenuti said.
"There is ample evidence to prove that the rational part of a person's brain — the part that responds to situations with sound judgement — will not fully develop until age 25.
"So pegging 12 as the age of consent to sex is not consistent with any scientific studies of child and brain development."
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January 26, 2018 published at 5:41 AM
Tokyo - In a cramped and dark venue in a sleazy Tokyo district, dozens of middle-aged men cheer at a performer on stage: The object of their adoration is a six-year-old girl.
Decked out in make-up with ribbons in her hair, Ai is dressed like an adult, but still looks very much a child.
She is a so-called "idol" singer - common in Japan, where rights groups have complained that society's sometimes permissive view of the sexualisation of young girls puts minors at risk.
It was only in 2015 that possessing child pornography was criminalised and authorities are struggling to bring the country into line with other advanced nations on the issue.
In the crowd at an idols show, Soichiro Seki, 40, says he watches young girls on stage twice a week. He insists he goes just to encourage the performers and feels no shame.
But he did concede that other fans objectify them.
"(For them) coming to a concert like this and visiting a hostess club in Kabukicho are essentially the same thing," he said, referring to Tokyo's major red-light district.
[embed]https://www.facebook.com/AFPnewsenglish/videos/1581015971936400/[/embed]
Idol Tama Himeno, who has performed on stage since the age of 16, says the men attending her shows worship the performers and crave communication with young girls that they cannot get elsewhere.
Most fans are "pure," insists Himeno, now 24, although she admits she was once offered 30,000 yen ($260) for her used pantyhose.
"Men idolising young girls is relatively accepted in Japan," said Himeno, citing the "Tale of Genji", an 11th-century classic depicting a nobleman's romantic relationships with women, as well as a small girl.
For Ai's manager Hidenori Okuma, the men are attracted by the thought of contact with a "girl next door".
"Meeting and chatting with high-school idols has become so popular," said Okuma.
"It's now less embarrassing to admit you like young girls. Now they (male fans) say they prefer primary school girls, without hesitation." .
Ai's mother, Mami Yamazaki, says her daughter has wanted to be an "idol" singer since she watched an anime cartoon about young girls striving for stardom.
"On television, you see kids acting in dramas and commercials. In magazines, children are modelling clothes. What Ai is doing is not much different," she says, despite the audience for idol shows being mainly adult males.
Yamazaki, 26, herself played in a band as a teenager and sees her daughter's performances as a way into the popular and lucrative world of idols.
It can be a pathway to fame, as demonstrated by Japan's AKB48 band, one of the most successful acts of all time, who started in a small stage in Tokyo's Akihabara, with the youngest member aged 11.
But getting a foothold into the idol scene means the child has to interact with adult fans, taking photos together and autographing the backs of their t-shirts.
"It must be a bizarre sight" for foreigners, admits Himeno but she stresses any sexual advances are an absolute "no-no." 
Japan's battle against paedophilia is well documented. The number of minors abused in child pornography has risen five-fold in the past decade, according to official figures.
Police have failed to stamp out so-called JK (Joshi Kosei, or high school girls) businesses, which offer men services such as going for a walk with a teenage girl so the customers have a chance to negotiate for sex.
Quasi-pornographic "chaku-ero", or clothed eroticism - images of small children posing in tiny swimsuits - are easily found on the Internet, slipping through a legal loophole.
Lawyer Keiji Goto, who campaigns for minors' rights, says the problem is a social one.
Many Japanese think that sexually objectifying young girls is not taboo but rather "just falls into a grey zone," said Goto.
Japan is far from being the only place with a problem of sexualising children.
In America, concerns have been raised about the hyper-sexualisation of children appearing in beauty pageants, as well as on reality shows such as "Toddlers and Tiaras." And the French Parliament in 2014 adopted a ban on "mini miss" competitions for girls younger than 13, prompted by controversy over a 2010 Vogue magazine photo shoot featuring provocative images of a 10-year-old.
But in Japan, there has been little public debate of the issue.
Psychiatrist Hiroki Fukui, who also treats paedophiles, says the awareness in Japan that children need to be protected from potential sexual predators is "so low." He explained: "We need to realise this situation in Japan is not normal." Shihoko Fujiwara, the representative of an NGO that helps victims of human trafficking and sexual abuse, warned of a dangerous mindset.
"The girls will think to themselves the audience is crazy about them because they are small girls and because their value will reduce once they get to the age of 18.
"A society that allows children to have such a twisted self-identity can never protect them."

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