Note: CASE has been working closely with CFA to
circulate the petitions. By March 8th, 2010 we had approx. 18,000 and ten MP's
did the presentations.
Canadian
Group Launches National Campaign to Protect Children from Child Porn, Sex Crimes
OTTAWA, Ontario, March 10,
2010 (LifeSiteNews.com)
- Canada Family Action (CFA) has launched a nation-wide citizen action campaign
to demand tougher laws to protect children, deter pedophiles and achieve justice
for victims of internet child sex crimes.
“Canada won 14 gold medals at the Olympics, but CFA wants our country to be on
top of the podium as a global winner for protecting kids from pedophiles,”
says Brian Rushfeldt, CFA Executive Director. “Right now, Canada wouldn’t
even make the qualifying round.”
Charges for distribution and production of child sex images increased 800%
between 1998 and 2003 in Canada, and the number of internet child sex images
quadrupled, according to a June 2009 report by the Ombudsman for Victims of
Crime. Most of those images are of children between the ages of three and
eight.
“Canadian law lags far behind some other nations in protecting kids and
deterring pedophiles,” Rushfeldt says.
Minimum sentences for child
pornography crimes, under Section 163 of the criminal code, range from 14 days
for possession to 90 days for production and distribution.
“Weaknesses in our
criminal code, and the failure of judges to mete out justice, contribute to
Canada’s reputation as a safe haven for pedophiles and our second place
ranking for hosting child sex sites,” says Rushfeldt.
CFA says they have already received requests for nearly 300,000 of its “Child
Safe Nation” brochures on the issue from citizens who are demanding change,
and almost 30,000 signatures have been received on petitions.
“Our goal is that hundreds
of thousands of Canadian citizens who value children and care about justice will
contact their MP and request the Conservative government take immediate action
to protect kids,” said Nathan Cooper of CFA. “CFA wants the Criminal Code
term ‘child pornography’ replaced with ‘child sex abuse images’; we want
mandatory minimum sentences of 10 years for those who produce child sex images,
and we want legislation requiring all citizens including ISPs to report known
sex images and sites.”
Rushfeldt said the “Child Safe Nation” brochure is sparking anger and
disgust in Canadians who are shocked by the weak laws and lax sentencing by
judges. “Some callers to talk radio shows have said they will take matters
into their own hands if judges fail to apply just sentences,” says Rushfeldt.
“Liberal judges need to rethink what justice means and they need sensitivity
training on this issue. Defenseless children are lifelong victims since internet
images live forever.”
Charles McVety, President of CFA, said: “CFA is asking the Conservative
government to make these changes to the criminal code a high priority in the
2010 sessions of Parliament. Canada’s children deserve protection and justice.
It is unconscionable to continue to allow giant ISP corporations to distribute,
with impunity, images of children being raped. Imagine the risk to our children
with pedophiles viewing such material.”
“If our elected officials
do not protect our children then it begs the question, is there any good in
having them?” McVety added.