Japan urged to ban ‘child manga porn’
TOKYO: A UN special envoy o Monday called on Japan to ban cartoon images featuring "extreme" sexualised images of children, after Tokyo last year fell into line with other G7 nations by criminalising possession of child pornography. Graphic images of paedophilia in manga comic books remain legal under the new
By our correspondents
October 27, 2015
TOKYO: A UN special envoy o Monday called on Japan to ban cartoon images featuring "extreme" sexualised images of children, after Tokyo last year fell into line with other G7 nations by criminalising possession of child pornography.
Graphic images of paedophilia in manga comic books remain legal under the new law, which came into effect this summer, while books and videos of real children in sexually provocative poses are still widely available -- and legal.
Campaigners had long urged Japan to toughen its stance on child pornography, complaining it was a major source of the material globally.
"When it comes to particular, extreme child pornographic content, manga should be banned," Maud de Boer-Buquicchio, the UN’s special rapporteur on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography, told reporters as she wrapped up a week-long Japan tour.
But she acknowledged the challenge in "finding the right balance" between artistic freedoms and the need to protect children. "I accept that the freedom of expression argument should outweigh, should prevail when it comes to adult pornography," she added.
Despite calls for manga imagery to be included in the new rules, there was strong resistance from manga artists, free-speech advocates and publishers, who said it would impinge on freedom of expression and allow authorities to make arbitrary decisions about art.
De Boer-Buquicchio criticised the law for being riddled with "numerous loopholes" and lashed out at so-called "child erotica", saying kids were being exploited. The still-legal offerings feature photos and other materials depicting half-naked children in skimpy outfits, such as tiny bikinis.
DVDs or photo books of child erotica are readily available online and at stores in Tokyo including in the city’s well-known Akihabara district. "All these are obviously lucrative businesses. What is worrying is that there is a trend which seems to be socially accepted and tolerated," the UN envoy said.
Billboards featuring women with voluptuous figures and distinctly child-like faces are also widely seen in urban centres.
Japanese police say they have been cracking down with an 11 percent on-year increase in cases -- a total of 1,828 -- in 2014.
Child prostitution has declined in Japan, but materials featuring the abuse of children have proliferated online, the envoy said, as she pointed to poverty, a lack of gender equality, social tolerance and few prosecutions.
Graphic images of paedophilia in manga comic books remain legal under the new law, which came into effect this summer, while books and videos of real children in sexually provocative poses are still widely available -- and legal.
Campaigners had long urged Japan to toughen its stance on child pornography, complaining it was a major source of the material globally.
"When it comes to particular, extreme child pornographic content, manga should be banned," Maud de Boer-Buquicchio, the UN’s special rapporteur on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography, told reporters as she wrapped up a week-long Japan tour.
But she acknowledged the challenge in "finding the right balance" between artistic freedoms and the need to protect children. "I accept that the freedom of expression argument should outweigh, should prevail when it comes to adult pornography," she added.
Despite calls for manga imagery to be included in the new rules, there was strong resistance from manga artists, free-speech advocates and publishers, who said it would impinge on freedom of expression and allow authorities to make arbitrary decisions about art.
De Boer-Buquicchio criticised the law for being riddled with "numerous loopholes" and lashed out at so-called "child erotica", saying kids were being exploited. The still-legal offerings feature photos and other materials depicting half-naked children in skimpy outfits, such as tiny bikinis.
DVDs or photo books of child erotica are readily available online and at stores in Tokyo including in the city’s well-known Akihabara district. "All these are obviously lucrative businesses. What is worrying is that there is a trend which seems to be socially accepted and tolerated," the UN envoy said.
Billboards featuring women with voluptuous figures and distinctly child-like faces are also widely seen in urban centres.
Japanese police say they have been cracking down with an 11 percent on-year increase in cases -- a total of 1,828 -- in 2014.
Child prostitution has declined in Japan, but materials featuring the abuse of children have proliferated online, the envoy said, as she pointed to poverty, a lack of gender equality, social tolerance and few prosecutions.
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