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The Underground World of Colombia's Child Sex Trafficking Trade Part 1: Former CIA agent Tim Ballard and team set up a sting operation with authorities in Cartagena.

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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
Watch the latest News on Channel 7 or stream for free on 7plus >>
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.





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Like other living things, human beings reproduce. It's what keeps the population going. In humans, this happens when the male and female reproductive systems work together to make a baby.
The female reproductive system includes a group of organs in a woman's lower belly and pelvis.
It's called the reproductive system because it supports the development and growth of a baby.
This system is also responsible for a girl's monthly period, called menstruation.
The female reproductive system has several parts. The uterus is where a fetus, or baby, grows. It is a hollow, pear‑shaped organ with a muscular wall.
There are two ovaries, one on either side of the uterus. Ovaries make eggs and hormones like estrogen and progesterone. These hormones help girls develop, and make it possible for a woman to have a baby. The ovaries release an egg as part of a woman's cycle. When an egg is released, it's called ovulation . Each egg is tiny – about one‑tenth the size of a poppy seed.
Fallopian tubes go from the uterus to the ovaries. During ovulation, an ovary releases an egg into the fallopian tube next to it.
The cervix is the lower part of the uterus that opens into the vagina. During childbirth, the cervix expands about 4 inches (10 centimeters) so the baby can travel from the uterus through the vagina and into the world.
The vagina is a tube that connects the uterus to the outside of the body. The entrance to the vagina is on the outside of the body. It's called the vaginal opening .
The vaginal opening is a hole between a woman's legs, below her urethra (where pee comes out) and above her anus (where poop comes out). Here you can see how the vagina connects to the uterus.
During sex, sperm cells travel through the vagina to the uterus and fallopian tubes. In the fallopian tube, the sperm meets the egg that was released from the ovary during ovulation.
If a sperm cell fertilizes the woman's egg, it's the first step in reproduction (getting pregnant).
If all goes well, in 9 months, a baby will be born.
© 2020 The Nemours Foundation/KidsHealth. All rights reserved.




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Reproduction is the process by which organisms make more organisms like themselves. But even though the reproductive system is essential to keeping a species alive, unlike other body systems, it's not essential to keeping an individual alive.
In the human reproductive process, two kinds of sex cells, or gametes (GAH-meetz), are involved. The male gamete, or sperm, and the female gamete, the egg or ovum, meet in the female's reproductive system. When sperm fertilizes (meets) an egg, this fertilized egg is called a zygote (pronounced: ZYE-goat). The zygote goes through a process of becoming an embryo and developing into a fetus.
The male reproductive system and the female reproductive system both are needed for reproduction.
Humans, like other organisms, pass some characteristics of themselves to the next generation. We do this through our genes , the special carriers of human traits. The genes that parents pass along are what make their children similar to others in their family, but also what make each child unique. These genes come from the male's sperm and the female's egg.
The external part of the female reproductive organs is called the vulva , which means covering. Located between the legs, the vulva covers the opening to the vagina and other reproductive organs inside the body.
The fleshy area located just above the top of the vaginal opening is called the mons pubis. Two pairs of skin flaps called the labia (which means lips) surround the vaginal opening. The clitoris , a small sensory organ, is located toward the front of the vulva where the folds of the labia join. Between the labia are openings to the urethra (the canal that carries pee from the bladder to the outside of the body) and vagina. When girls become sexually mature, the outer labia and the mons pubis are covered by pubic hair.
A female's internal reproductive organs are the vagina, uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries.
The vagina is a muscular, hollow tube that extends from the vaginal opening to the uterus. Because it has muscular walls, the vagina can expand and contract. This ability to become wider or narrower allows the vagina to accommodate something as slim as a tampon and as wide as a baby. The vagina's muscular walls are lined with mucous membranes, which keep it protected and moist.
A very thin piece of skin-like tissue called the hymen partly covers the opening of the vagina. Hymens are often different from female to female. Most women find their hymens have stretched or torn after their first sexual experience, and the hymen may bleed a little (this usually causes little, if any, pain). Some women who have had sex don't have much of a change in their hymens, though. And some women's hymens have already stretched even before they have sex.
The vagina connects with the uterus , or womb, at the cervix (which means neck). The cervix has strong, thick walls. The opening of the cervix is very small (no wider than a straw), which is why a tampon can never get lost inside a girl's body. During childbirth, the cervix can expand to allow a baby to pass.
The uterus is shaped like an upside-down pear, with a thick lining and muscular walls — in fact, the uterus contains some of the strongest muscles in the female body. These muscles are able to expand and contract to accommodate a growing fetus and then help push the baby out during labor. When a woman isn't pregnant, the uterus is only about 3 inches (7.5 centimeters) long and 2 inches (5 centimeters) wide.
At the upper corners of the uterus, the fallopian tubes connect the uterus to the ovaries. The ovaries are two oval-shaped organs that lie to the upper right and left of the uterus. They produce, store, and release eggs into the fallopian tubes in the process called ovulation (pronounced: av-yoo-LAY-shun).
There are two fallopian (pronounced: fuh-LO-pee-un) tubes, each attached to a side of the uterus. Within each tube is a tiny passageway no wider than a sewing needle. At the other end of each fallopian tube is a fringed area that looks like a funnel. This fringed area wraps around the ovary but doesn't completely attach to it. When an egg pops out of an ovary, it enters the fallopian tube. Once the egg is in the fallopian tube, tiny hairs in the tube's lining help push it down the narrow passageway toward the uterus.
The ovaries (pronounced: OH-vuh-reez) are also part of the endocrine system because they produce female sex hormones
such as estrogen (pronounced: ESS-truh-jun) and progesterone (pronounced: pro-JESS-tuh-rone).
The female reproductive system enables a woman to:
Sexual reproduction couldn't happen without the sexual organs called the gonads . Most people think of the gonads as the male testicles. But both sexes have gonads: In females the gonads are the ovaries, which make female gametes (eggs). The male gonads make male gametes (sperm).
When a baby girl is born, her ovaries contain hundreds of thousands of eggs, which remain inactive until puberty begins. At puberty, the pituitary gland (in the central part of the brain ) starts making hormones that stimulate the ovaries to make female sex hormones, including estrogen. The secretion of these hormones causes a girl to develop into a sexually mature woman.
Toward the end of puberty, girls begin to release eggs as part of a monthly period called the menstrual cycle. About once a month, during ovulation, an ovary sends a tiny egg into one of the fallopian tubes.
Unless the egg is fertilized by a sperm while in the fallopian tube, the egg leaves the body about 2 weeks later through the uterus — this is menstruation. Blood and tissues from the inner lining of the uterus combine to form the menstrual flow, which in most girls lasts from 3 to 5 days. A girl's first period is called menarche (pronounced: MEH-nar-kee).
It's common for women and girls to have some discomfort in the days leading to their periods. Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) includes both physical and emotional symptoms that many girls and women get right before their periods, such as:
PMS is usually at its worst during the 7 days before a girl's period starts and disappears after it begins.
Many girls also have belly cramps during the first few days of their periods caused by prostaglandins, chemicals in th
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