1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
Crime

More powers to prosecute child porn cases

March 8, 2019

Germany's abuse commissioner has called for stronger powers for prosecutors in the wake of the convictions for four men in the 'Elysium' child pornography case. Sexual violence is widespread, an NGO in Germany warned.

https://p.dw.com/p/3EenH
BKA computer screen
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/A. Dedert

Trade and traffic in child pornography must be stopped, Germany's Federal Commissioner for Sexual Abuse Issues Johannes-Wilhelm Rörig said on Friday. Otherwise, more — and younger — children will become victims of increasingly brutal exploitation, he warned.

In the wake of the convictions of four men for operating the "Elysium" child pornography platform, Rörig called for more powers for prosecutors: "At the moment, the net is a paradise for pedophiles," he told the Funke media group. "We can no longer tolerate that as the rule of law."  

Rörig compared investigations in the US and Australia into Darknet, or hidden, platforms, saying that German investigators were restricted in what they could do to trap the criminals. He suggested computer-generated misuse images should be used to track users and operators of child pornography portals on the Darknet and trap them: "I hope that will soon be possible by law," Rörig said.

Rörig called for the Interior and Justice Ministers to become responsible for the problem and that investigators' powers should be extended to the maximum. Obligations should be placed on internet providers to report child pornography and provide relevant data.

Read more: Ban smartphones for under-14s, says German government adviser

The Interior and Justice Ministries should become responsible, Commissioner Rörig says
The Interior and Justice Ministries should become responsible, Commissioner Rörig saysImage: picture-alliance/dpa/F. Gentsch

Sexual violence in Germany

Germany's head of the international child protection group "Innocence in Danger," Julia von Weiler said society must start waking up to the extent of the problem. Between two and four students in each school class in Germany were affected by sexual violence, she told public broadcaster Deutschlandfunk on Friday.

Von Weiler also warned it could take 20 years to bring together all the information from the various commissions, and it was time to wake up to the extent of the problem.

According to Innocence in Danger, one in seven women and one in 25 men worldwide have experienced at least one act of sexual violence in their lifetime. The average age of children when they are attacked is 8 years, and more than three-quarters of the violence is perpetrated within the family. More than 90 percent of those affected never complain or report the abuse.

jm/rt (KNA, AFP)

Each evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.