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By Andrew Prentice and Charlie Coë For Daily Mail Australia 22:55 BST 29 Oct 2020 , updated 22:55 BST 29 Oct 2020
A popular animated form of Japanese pornography has been banned in Australia due to its depictions of rape and child sexual abuse.
The Australia Border Force has stepped in recently after a number of imported Hentai images depicted rape, incest and sexual abuse.
Leading Japanese adult retailer J-List posted a statement online earlier this month claiming the Australian Border Force and customs had started to block all their adult products from entering the country.
'DHL Japan called us last week, informing us that Australian customs have started rejecting packages containing any adult product,' the company said in a statement.
'They then advised us to stop sending adult products to the country. Following that, current Australian orders with adult items in them were returned to us this week.'
Earlier this year, several South Australian politicians called for an urgent review of the nation's federal classification laws after discovering that a number of comic books and videos being sold in Australian showed highly sexual images of children—including scenes of rape, incest, and sexual abuse.
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A shocked Connie Bonaros, South Australia's Best Upper House MP, said the choice of content for minors was 'absolutely endless.'
In 2015, a 52-year-old man in Adelaide was given a suspended jail sentence for having more than 300 anime images classed as child pornography.
During sentencing, Judge Paul Muscat noted although the man thought what he was doing was 'similar to reading or taking part in a fantasy rather than contributing to the production of child exploitation material', it was not 'that great a step' to go from that to viewing material of actual, real-life child exploitation.
'Does it matter that most of the images you accessed on the internet were anime? On a limited assessment it must, for no actual child was being sexually abused,' Judge Muscat said.
'However, as I previously observed, the concern is that those who view anime will go on to view images of actual children being sexually abused.'
Daily Mail Australia has contacted the ABF for comment.
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Popular animated Japanese pornography known as 'hentai' now BANNED in Australia
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In September 2000 my daughter was nearly 13 and had just started secondary school. She had always got on well with other children and worked hard. But after a couple of months things began to change. She started wearing lots of make-up. The school was a stone's throw away, but friends began calling for her as early as 7.30am. Next my older daughter spotted her hanging about in the local park with some lads from school who introduced the girls they befriended to older boys and men. I was very alarmed. Then she started missing certain lessons, sometimes whole days.
When she started disappearing overnight, I trawled the streets looking for her. I had no control over her. Sometimes she would say she was going to have an early night, then she'd turn on the shower and climb out the bathroom window. Once when she disappeared, I went through the park looking for her and asked a teenage boy if he'd seen her. I was horrified when he said, "Yes, all the prostitutes hang out by the bowling green."
I confronted my daughter. "That's not true," she said. "Those boys are my boyfriends."
As far as she was concerned, she was doing what she wanted to do and I was hindering her. Money didn't seem to be changing hands, but the girls were getting drink and drugs and mobile phones. The men flattered them into believing they loved them as part of a process of grooming them to have sex with lots of different men, some in their 30s and 40s. People ask me why I use the word "grooming" rather than referring to them as paedophiles, but most of these men haven't been convicted.
I felt as if my daughter was sliding away from me and I'd never be able to get her back. Every minute of every day became a nightmare. I couldn't eat, sleep or function properly, and I could see no way back. Every time she disappeared, I thought I'd never see her alive again. If a girl is over 13, she has to be the complainant in a case of sexual assault. Because this was happening outside the house, there was nothing I could do. The worst thing, as a mother, was not being able to prevent my daughter from being abused.
At the end of 2001, a year after her first disappearance, I put her into care. She didn't want to go, but I could no longer cope. My lowest point was the first time I visited her. Seeing her and having to walk away was unbearable. Everything exploded while she was in care, and I had a breakdown.
My nephew killed himself unexpectedly during this time. My daughter and I attended the funeral, and were both extremely upset. Afterwards, I took my daughter firmly by the shoulders and said to her, "You'll never know how many times I thought I'd be going to your funeral."
Then I walked away. She seemed to turn some sort of corner that day, and so did I. She started to realise what she was doing to herself and I could see for the first time that she needed me. I think I had to feel as low as it was possible to feel before I found the strength to fight what was happening to her and other girls.
I started campaigning with Ann Cryer, the MP for Keighley, for a change in the law to make hearsay evidence admissible in grooming cases, a change we secured last year. I'm proud of what I achieved and my daughter is proud of me, too.
After two years in care, she came back to live with me, went back to college, got qualifications. At times she feels down about what happened to her, which she now recognises as abuse. Last year Channel 4 made a programme about the grooming issue in this area and, although some white men were involved, the BNP hijacked it as a race issue: Asians exploiting white girls. I was furious because this is not a race issue.
The men live locally and we see them from time to time. They call my daughter names, and me, too, if I'm with her. I say to them, "I'm not frightened of any of you." My daughter calls out, "I've moved on with my life and it's a shame you can't move on with yours." Our relationship is better than it has ever been. We talk to each other and if she goes out with friends, she leaves a note on the fridge telling me where she's gone and when she'll be back. It's fantastic to get those notes.
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