Yedda Marie K. Romualdez TINGOG party-list Rep. Yedda Marie K. Romualdez

House panel, Romualdez back ATIP Act

August 25, 2021 Ryan Ponce Pacpaco 730 views

Act includes online sexual abuses as part of human trafficking

THE House committee on the welfare of children chaired by Tingog party-list Rep. Yedda Marie K. Romualdez on Wednesday endorsed for plenary approval the Anti-Trafficking in Persons (ATIP) Act that seeks to expand and strengthen the policies against human trafficking by including online sexual abuses as part of human trafficking.

“It redefines trafficking in persons to include online offenses or the engagements of others for production of child sexual abuse and exploitation materials (CSAEM) and online sexual abuse,” Romualdez said after her panel approved the measure.

“Something has to be done to prevent exploitation of people for labor and sexual purposes,” Romualdez said, adding one of the objectives of the measure is to modernize the law in order to cover trafficking activities committed in the advent of new technologies.

“We want to seek the assistance of private sector, which by the nature of their business activities, may come into contact with a suspected trafficking situation,” she said.

The measure enhances the ability of the Philippine National Police (PNP) and National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) or any of their representatives who have been duly authorized by the Department of Justice (DoJ) in writing to submit exparte applications for the issuance of written orders from the authorizing court, to conduct “wiretapping” or interception on any communication in pursuing crime of trafficking.

The measure includes additional provisions for qualified trafficking when the persons trafficked are persons with disability, belongs to an indigenous community, when the crime is committed in times of crisis or emergency, when the crime has resulted in pregnancy, or through the use of information and communications technology or using any computer system.

The still unnumbered bill in substitution of House Bill Nos. 5609, 5651, 5684, 8295, and 1239 were introduced by Reps. Marlyn “Len” B. Alonte, Bernadette “BH” Herrera-Dy, Sol Aragones, Luis Raymund“LRay” F. Villafuerte, Jr., Micaela S. Violago, Yedda Marie K. Romualdez, Paz C. Radaza, Anna Marie Villaraza-Suarez, Ma. Lourdes Acosta-Alba, Rosanna ‘Ria’ V. Vergara, Maria Fe R. Abunda, Ma. Lourdes T. Arroyo, Naealla Bainto Aguinaldo, Ruth Mariano-Hernandez, and Irene Gay F. Saulog.

It seeks to amend Republic Act (RA) No. 9208 or the Anti-Trafficking Act of 2003 as amended by RA 10364 otherwise known as the Expanded Anti-Trafficking Act of 2002.

The measure defines “child sexual abuse and exploitation material (CSAEM or CSAM) ”instead of pornography.

It transposes the phrase “by means of threat or use of force, fraud, deceit, violence, coercion, or intimidation” from only the act of removal and sale of bodily organs, into the general provision of the Acts of Trafficking in Persons, to cover all acts of trafficking.

It provides as unlawful the use of online digital platforms to commit any trafficking in persons.

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