Former British prime minister Tony Blair is urging US president-elect Barack Obama to launch a crackdown on the millions of pornographic images of children distributed through the Internet system in the US every day.
Blair is believed to have grave concerns that the US’ reluctance to tackle the issue has serious consequences for other countries.
In an unusual move signaling his profound personal desire for the president-elect to take urgent action, it has emerged that Blair recently delivered a lengthy letter to Obama, signed by Britain’s leading children’s charities, calling for action.
Blair, who included a personal covering note, is understood to have been concerned about the issue for some time, having raised the matter with US President George W. Bush when they met at Camp David in 2001.
The Bush administration did not act upon Blair’s suggestions, but now charities including Action for Children, the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, Barnardo’s and the Children’s Society hope his successor would be more responsive to the “aspirations of millions who want to see the problem attacked with fresh vigor and determination.”
Until recently, the focus on tackling the distribution of child abuse images had concentrated on the major criminal gangs involved in their production in countries such as Russia and Thailand. But attention is switching to the companies and networks that provide hosting services.
The UK’s Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), which monitors the dissemination of child abuse images, says that more illegal images are hosted by internet companies in the US than in any other country.
During the first six months of this year, US companies hosted 70 percent of paid-for and 48 percent of “child porn” sharing sites, representing around 66 percent of all such content known to the IWF.
“If these companies were obliged to know more about their customers, perhaps particularly those of their customers using overseas billing addresses, this alone could have a dramatic impact,” the letter from the children’s charities said.
Seven people sustained mostly minor injuries in an airplane fire in South Korea, authorities said yesterday, with local media suggesting the blaze might have been caused by a portable battery stored in the overhead bin. The Air Busan plane, an Airbus A321, was set to fly to Hong Kong from Gimhae International Airport in southeastern Busan, but caught fire in the rear section on Tuesday night, the South Korean Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport said. A total of 169 passengers and seven flight attendants and staff were evacuated down inflatable slides, it said. Authorities initially reported three injuries, but revised the number
A colossal explosion in the sky, unleashing energy hundreds of times greater than the Hiroshima bomb. A blinding flash nearly as bright as the sun. Shockwaves powerful enough to flatten everything for miles. It might sound apocalyptic, but a newly detected asteroid nearly the size of a football field now has a greater than 1 percent chance of colliding with Earth in about eight years. Such an impact has the potential for city-level devastation, depending on where it strikes. Scientists are not panicking yet, but they are watching closely. “At this point, it’s: ‘Let’s pay a lot of attention, let’s
UNDAUNTED: Panama would not renew an agreement to participate in Beijing’s Belt and Road project, its president said, proposing technical-level talks with the US US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Sunday threatened action against Panama without immediate changes to reduce Chinese influence on the canal, but the country’s leader insisted he was not afraid of a US invasion and offered talks. On his first trip overseas as the top US diplomat, Rubio took a guided tour of the canal, accompanied by its Panamanian administrator as a South Korean-affiliated oil tanker and Marshall Islands-flagged cargo ship passed through the vital link between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. However, Rubio was said to have had a firmer message in private, telling Panama that US President Donald Trump
CHEER ON: Students were greeted by citizens who honked their car horns or offered them food and drinks, while taxi drivers said they would give marchers a lift home Hundreds of students protesting graft they blame for 15 deaths in a building collapse on Friday marched through Serbia to the northern city of Novi Sad, where they plan to block three Danube River bridges this weekend. They received a hero’s welcome from fellow students and thousands of local residents in Novi Said after arriving on foot in their two-day, 80km journey from Belgrade. A small red carpet was placed on one of the bridges across the Danube that the students crossed as they entered the city. The bridge blockade planned for yesterday is to mark three months since a huge concrete construction