Child Erotic

Child Erotic




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Child Erotic
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Qafár af Аҧсшәа bahasa ambon Acèh адыгабзэ адыгабзэ تونسي/Tûnsî تونسي Tûnsî Afrikaans Akan Gegë Alemannisch тÿштÿк алтай тил አማርኛ Pangcah aragonés Ænglisc अङ्गिका العربية ܐܪܡܝܐ mapudungun جازايرية الدارجة مصرى অসমীয়া American sign language asturianu Atikamekw авар Kotava अवधी Aymar aru azərbaycanca تۆرکجه башҡортса Bali Boarisch žemaitėška Batak Toba Batak Toba جهلسری بلوچی Bikol Central беларуская беларуская (тарашкевіца)‎ беларуская (тарашкевіца)‎ български روچ کپتین بلوچی भोजपुरी भोजपुरी Bislama Banjar bamanankan বাংলা བོད་ཡིག বিষ্ণুপ্রিয়া মণিপুরী بختیاری brezhoneg Bráhuí bosanski Batak Mandailing Iriga Bicolano ᨅᨔ ᨕᨘᨁᨗ буряад català Chavacano de Zamboanga Mìng-dĕ̤ng-ngṳ̄ нохчийн Cebuano Chamoru Choctaw ᏣᎳᎩ Tsetsêhestâhese کوردی corsu Capiceño Nēhiyawēwin / ᓀᐦᐃᔭᐍᐏᐣ qırımtatarca къырымтатарджа (Кирилл)‎ qırımtatarca (Latin)‎ čeština kaszëbsczi словѣньскъ / ⰔⰎⰑⰂⰡⰐⰠⰔⰍⰟ Чӑвашла Cymraeg dansk Deutsch Österreichisches Deutsch Schweizer Hochdeutsch Deutsch (Sie-Form)‎ Thuɔŋjäŋ Zazaki dolnoserbski Dusun Bundu-liwan डोटेली ދިވެހިބަސް ཇོང་ཁ eʋegbe Emiliàn Ελληνικά emiliàn e rumagnòl English Canadian English British English Esperanto español español de América Latina español (formal)‎ eesti euskara estremeñu فارسی Fulfulde suomi meänkieli Võro Na Vosa Vakaviti kvääni føroyskt français français cadien arpetan Nordfriisk furlan Frysk Gaeilge Gagauz 贛語 赣语(简体)‎ 贛語(繁體)‎ kriyòl gwiyannen Gàidhlig galego گیلکی Avañe'ẽ गोंयची कोंकणी / Gõychi Konknni गोंयची कोंकणी Gõychi Konknni Bahasa Hulontalo 𐌲𐌿𐍄𐌹𐍃𐌺 Ἀρχαία ἑλληνικὴ Alemannisch ગુજરાતી Gaelg Hausa 客家語/Hak-kâ-ngî Hawaiʻi עברית हिन्दी Fiji Hindi Fiji Hindi Ilonggo Hiri Motu hrvatski Hunsrik hornjoserbsce Kreyòl ayisyen magyar magyar (formal)‎ հայերեն Արեւմտահայերէն Otsiherero interlingua Bahasa Indonesia Interlingue Igbo ꆇꉙ Iñupiak ᐃᓄᒃᑎᑐᑦ inuktitut Ilokano ГӀалгӀай Ido íslenska italiano ᐃᓄᒃᑎᑐᑦ/inuktitut 日本語 Patois la .lojban. jysk Jawa ქართული Qaraqalpaqsha Taqbaylit Адыгэбзэ Адыгэбзэ Kabɩyɛ Kabuverdianu Kongo کھوار Gĩkũyũ Kırmancki Kwanyama ဖၠုံလိက် қазақша قازاقشا (تٴوتە)‏ قازاقشا (جۇنگو)‏ қазақша (кирил)‎ қазақша (Қазақстан)‎ qazaqşa (latın)‎ qazaqşa (Türkïya)‎ kalaallisut ភាសាខ្មែរ ಕನ್ನಡ 한국어 조선말 Перем Коми Kanuri къарачай-малкъар Krio Kinaray-a karjal कॉशुर / کٲشُر کٲشُر कॉशुर Ripoarisch kurdî كوردي (عەرەبی)‏ kurdî (latînî)‎ къумукъ коми kernowek Кыргызча Latina Ladino Lëtzebuergesch лакку лезги Lingua Franca Nova Luganda Limburgs Ligure Līvõ kēļ لەکی Ladin lumbaart lingála ລາວ Silozi لۊری شومالی lietuvių latgaļu Mizo ţawng لئری دوٙمینی latviešu 文言 Lazuri मैथिली Basa Banyumasan мокшень Malagasy Ebon олык марий Māori Minangkabau македонски മലയാളം монгол ꯃꯤꯇꯩ ꯂꯣꯟ ဘာသာ မန် молдовеняскэ मराठी кырык мары Bahasa Melayu Malti Mvskoke Mirandés မြန်မာဘာသာ эрзянь مازِرونی Dorerin Naoero Nāhuatl Bân-lâm-gú Napulitano norsk bokmål Plattdüütsch Nedersaksies नेपाली नेपाल भाषा Oshiwambo Niuē Nederlands Nederlands (informeel)‎ norsk nynorsk norsk ᨣᩴᩤᨾᩮᩥᩬᨦ Novial ߒߞߏ Nouormand Sesotho sa Leboa Diné bizaad Chi-Chewa Nyunga occitan Livvinkarjala Oromoo ଓଡ଼ିଆ Ирон لسان توركى ਪੰਜਾਬੀ Pangasinan Kapampangan Papiamentu Picard Deitsch Plautdietsch Pälzisch पालि Norfuk / Pitkern polski Piemontèis پنجابی Ποντιακά Prūsiskan پښتو português português do Brasil Runa Simi Runa shimi Rumagnôl Tarifit rumantsch kaalengo tšimb romani čhib Kirundi română armãneashti tarandíne русский русиньскый armãneashti Vlăheşte Влахесте Vlăheşte Kinyarwanda मारवाड़ी संस्कृतम् саха тыла ᱥᱟᱱᱛᱟᱲᱤ sardu sicilianu Scots سنڌي Sassaresu کوردی خوارگ davvisámegiella Cmique Itom Koyraboro Senni Sängö žemaitėška srpskohrvatski / српскохрватски Tašlḥiyt/ⵜⴰⵛⵍⵃⵉⵜ Tašlḥiyt ⵜⴰⵛⵍⵃⵉⵜ ၽႃႇသႃႇတႆး tacawit සිංහල Simple English Кӣллт са̄мь кӣлл bidumsámegiella ubmejesámiengiälla slovenčina سرائیکی سرائیکی slovenščina Schläsch Gagana Samoa åarjelsaemien julevsámegiella anarâškielâ sääʹmǩiõll chiShona Soomaaliga shqip српски / srpski српски (ћирилица)‎ srpski (latinica)‎ Sranantongo mbia cheë SiSwati Sesotho Seeltersk себертатар Sunda svenska Kiswahili ślůnski Sakizaya தமிழ் Tayal ತುಳು తెలుగు tetun тоҷикӣ тоҷикӣ tojikī ไทย ትግርኛ Türkmençe Tagalog толышә зывон Setswana lea faka-Tonga Tok Pisin Türkçe Ṫuroyo Seediq Xitsonga татарча/tatarça татарча tatarça chiTumbuka Twi reo tahiti тыва дыл ⵜⴰⵎⴰⵣⵉⵖⵜ удмурт ئۇيغۇرچە / Uyghurche ئۇيغۇرچە Uyghurche українська اردو oʻzbekcha/ўзбекча ўзбекча oʻzbekcha Tshivenda vèneto vepsän kel’ Tiếng Việt West-Vlams Mainfränkisch Volapük Vaďďa Võro walon Winaray Wolof 吴语 хальмг isiXhosa მარგალური saisiyat ייִדיש Yorùbá 粵語 Vahcuengh Zeêuws ⵜⴰⵎⴰⵣⵉⵖⵜ ⵜⴰⵏⴰⵡⴰⵢⵜ 中文 文言 中文(中国大陆)‎ 中文(简体)‎ 中文(繁體)‎ 中文(香港)‎ Bân-lâm-gú 中文(澳門)‎ 中文(马来西亚)‎ 中文(新加坡)‎ 中文(台灣)‎ 粵語 isiZulu
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The offenders are paying a premium to watch the sexual abuse of children in the Philippines live on their screens, a sickening new report reveals.
Kelly Burke / Crime / Updated 19.02.2020
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More than 200 Australians have collectively paid more than $1.3 million to watch live streamed child sexual abuse filmed in the Philippines.
In the video above, a report in December found Facebook responsible for two thirds of all reported online child sex abuse
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And the offenders often request how they want the child to be sexually abused as the crimes are happening, a new report says.
The shocking statistics were revealed on Wednesday in a report by the Australian Institute of Criminology , which says it has identified more than 2,700 financial transactions linked to 256 webcam child predators between 2006 and 2018.
The institute said it matched the transactions using AUSTRAC (Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre) records that linked the accounts in Australia to people arrested for child sexual exploitation in the Philippines.
The live-streaming nature of the material was particularly sickening, the institute’s report noted, because of the real-time element.
“Offenders often request how they want the child to be sexually abused either before or during the live-streaming session,” the report said.
One Australian alone spent almost $300,000 on live streamed material, the report found.
An analysis of the 256 Australians identified paints a typical profile of someone in the 50s or 60s, most (55 per cent) with no previous criminal history.
The youngest live streaming purchaser was 27 years and the oldest was 82.
The report found perpetrators came from a wide range of backgrounds, with stated occupations including aged care worker, boilermaker, carpenter, chef, computer technician, driller, driver, gardener, lawn mower, rigger, road freight transporter, sales assistant and tradesperson.
“Others described their occupation as accountant, architect, clerk, general manager, quality technician and self-employed,” the report said.
“One described her occupation as housewife. “
The AUSTRAC transactions suggested many users over time escalated the frequency of access to the live-stream facilitators and increasingly spent larger amounts on each session.
The institute noted that while child sex crimes were rife in multiple countries, the Philippines has been identified by international law enforcement agencies, NGOs and academics as the global ‘hub’ for live streaming such material.
In November 2019, live streaming of child sex abuse came to national attention after AUSTRAC took legal action against Westpac Bank over 23 million alleged breaches of anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism laws.
Westpac was accused of failing to monitor $11 billion worth of suspicious transactions, including those to the Philippines suspected to be for child sexual exploitation.

Updated Jan. 20, 2018 7:08PM ET / Published Jan. 20, 2018 7:00PM ET 
“ Eventually she pieces together an explicit, clear-eyed recollection of the relationship with Bill, and we watch it play out on screen. It’s sickening. ”
‘The Tale’ depicts a grown woman (Laura Dern) working through the realization that she was sexually abused at age 13, graphically depicting those horrifying sexual-assault scenes.
In many respects, The Tale has been in the making for the last 35 years. But its Sundance Film Festival premiere Saturday afternoon—the first of this year’s festival to receive a standing ovation that we witnessed—is so timely it could very well have been called: #MeToo, The Movie .
The Tale is a memoir film in which writer-director Jennifer Fox confronts the sexual abuse she suffered when she was a 13-year-old girl, having spent the next three-and-a-half decades of her life convincing herself that she was engaged in a “special” relationship with a 40-year-old man, facilitated by a woman she trusted.
Both were people in her life she loved: “Mrs. G” (names were changed from Fox’s own life) was her equestrian trainer, and “Bill” was her running coach. Thirteen-year-old Jennifer is intoxicated by the regal, beautiful Mrs. G, and trusts Bill because of it. When Bill starts to coax Jennifer into a sexual relationship, she convinces herself that they’re in love. But she was just a girl. It was child rape.
Immediately following the post-screening Q&A, in which stars Ellen Burstyn and Jason Ritter broke down in tears talking about the movie, it became clear that this is the film everyone at Sundance will be talking about.
Its resonance —a woman realizing that what she had thought was a consensual sexual relationship was actually child rape—is one thing. That it shows, with purposeful unflinching detail, Jennifer’s rape at age 13 is another. (We witnessed multiple people walk out after this.) But that it doesn’t direct you how to feel about it, or moralize, or redeem, or reassure is its greatest power.
The Tale is relentlessly uncomfortable, and sometimes even aggravating. It wades into the murky waters of a complicated debate currently consuming culture, but doesn’t seek to satisfy or conclude it—which can be infuriating but is also necessary. It lacerates right through that conversation, letting the full range of opinions spill out. Yet it doesn’t seek to stitch it back up again and heal. Because that’s not it’s job.
But The Tale isn’t a linear narrative about a child who was raped. It’s an adult woman’s journey to the horrifying realization that her innocence was preyed on; that she was abused in a way that impacted the rest of her life. It’s her struggle through frustrating notes of denial, rationalization, misremembrance, and anger as she tries to piece together what really happened to her—not what her memory of it was—and why. How she feels about it now is almost an afterthought, until, at a major climax, it isn’t.
Throughout the film, Fox plays with form, storytelling structure, and the truth in jarring ways here—at one point Laura Dern , who plays Jennifer as an adult, is actually in conversation with Isabelle Nelisse, who plays her at age 13—to illustrate the myriad ways in which a person needs to communicate, with others and themselves, past and present, to reckon fully with an event like this.
When we meet Dern’s Jennifer, her mother (Burstyn) is leaving her a litany of emotionally charged voicemails, having just discovered an essay Jennifer wrote when she was 13 titled “The Tale,” which discussed the loving relationship she had with two adults: Bill (Jason Ritter) and Mrs. G (Elizabeth Debicki.) Her mother is beside herself. Suspicions she had 35 years before were true: these adults had taken advantage of her daughter.
“This is why I didn’t tell you,” Jennifer says, dismissing her mother’s concerns. “Can’t I just sit with my own memories?” she pleads, preferring to remember the relationship fondly instead relitigate it as assault. Nearly every line of dialogue hits you like a cannonball, its relevance to the stories and confessions that have been chronicled in the #MeToo movement these last months uncanny. “No,” her mother says. “I want you to nail them.”
She starts to visit people she hadn’t seen in decades, attempting to get a more detailed picture of that time that the years have blurred—part of her desperate search for a reason this happened to her. Or even to answer if anything happened to her.
“You were raped,” she’s told multiple times. “It’s complicated,” she instinctively retorts. She rages at the word “victim,” an indictment of the inherent lack of sensitivity in imposing a victim narrative on anyone who comes forward with a traumatizing story.
Eventually she pieces together an explicit, clear-eyed recollection of the relationship with Bill, and we watch it play out on screen. It’s sickening.
Bill baits her with lines like, “You’re not afraid of life, right, Jenny? You’re not afraid of living?” He and Mrs. G flatter her by telling her that she’s special, that they think of her as an equal, that they think they can trust her with secrets. Then we start to see the rape happen.
Would the film be as powerful if the acts were implied, instead of shown to wincing eyes on screen? Perhaps. But arguably, too, the impact is in bearing witness to the things Bill says and does and their brutal reality.
It starts with Bill getting Jenny to cuddle with him under a blanket. He says she deserves better than silly young boys; that he wants to “save” her from them. He phrases things in a way to make her think it’s her idea, like to take her top off, giving her the false comfort of an agency she doesn’t have.
We see them make out and it is grotesque. We see him, over multiple scenes that take place over a series of weeks, attempt to penetrate her. “We have to keep stretching you open, slowly,” he says. And then again: “No young boy would do this for you.” We see her give him a blowjob when it doesn’t “fit.” Eventually it happens, the camera switching between her face and his as it does.
The film ends with a disclaimer that the sex scenes were shot using an adult body double. Nelisse, who was 11 at the time of filming, only shot the dialogue parts of the scene, which are graphic in their own right. Fox would coach her on how to react properly to the pain of losing one’s virginity: ”Act like you’ve been stung by a bee.”
It would be impossible to list the myriad tenets of the conversation surrounding abuse and victimhood that the film explores. Should there be guilt or shame? Is she emotionally scarred? We wouldn’t purport to answer any of those questions, and maybe the film doesn’t intend to either. And that’s the prickly part of it, the thing that will keep us and anyone who sees it itching long after it ends.
While watching it, you’re not exactly sure what Jennifer wants the outcome of this whole journey to be, and you’re especially not sure what you want it to be either. What are you rooting for, if anything at all? It all builds up to a confrontation between Jennifer and Bill. Is it satisfying? Could it possibly be?
Casting Jason Ritter as Bill was a crucial decision. His image, based on the characters he’s played in Parenthood , Girls , Kevin (Probably) Saves the World , is that of the consummate nice guy—the adorable, safe, all-around “good” guy. “The whole idea was to take out of the closet the idea that perpetrators aren’t monsters that we can pick out,” Fox said after the film. Mission accomplished.
There was an air of speechlessness as the standing ovation died down. How does someone talk about this film? What do we even say? It’s something that Burstyn herself acknowledged, before beginning the dialogue in an impassioned, immediate way: “The exploitation of innocence is a deep, criminal crime, and it’s time now, right now, in this moment in our history, to change it.”
But she wasn’t done. “And I want to thank Donald Trump for that disgusting tape that he made that we all heard that was the final straw that broke the camel’s back,” she said to rousing applause. “And we can now at last deal with this problem that has gone on for centuries all over the world. This film is giving voice to it.”

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