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T&T: Pornography and Child Sex Abuse creating Sex Offenders in Trinidad & Tobago says Senator

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#TrinidadandTobago, June 19, 2021 – Heart-breaking statistics about sexual abuse in Trinidad and Tobago has led to a bold new stride in law to expose sex predators and has drawn suggestions for effective social intervention.

Opposition Senator David Nakhid is at the center of reports on passage of the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Bill 2021.  He is also addressing the statistics which expose the damage to children and young people when explicitly sexual encounters and entertainment is thrust upon their impressionable minds. 

Trinidad and Tobago News Day reports Senator Nakhid as saying:  “Twenty-eight per cent of respondents reported that their abuser used pornography. For twelve per cent of the women who survived, pornography was imitated during the abusive incident. That says a lot.” Nakhid asked aloud how does a society like Trinidad and Tobago monitor the use (and presumably effect) of pornography.

The Senator substantiates his plea with a startling, concerning figures emanating from interviews with victims of sexual violence.

“Based on a 2008 study of a mix of 269 rapists and child abusers, he listed typical background traits of sex offenders.

He said child sex abusers had typically experienced child sexual abuse (73 per cent of respondents) and viewed pornography before age ten (65 per cent.)

“His dysfunction was related more to almost a compulsion or a maladaptive character in terms of how he would see that sexual experience.”

Nakhid said a rapist’s background was typically physical abuse (68 per cent of respondents), parental violence (78 per cent) and emotional abuse (70 per cent.)”

The Senator admonishes for families and leaders to remove the taboo around the sexual experience.

“All my research shows pornography actually rewires the brain, especially among our young kids. It’s actually a re-wiring of how we view relationships, how we see the sexual act, how we see women. So it comes to gender equality, because pornography is such a journey from the realities of relationships and sexual relationships that we find that men, because of their visual instant gratification that pornography provides, tend to end up frustrated in relationships, dissatisfied in relationships.”

On Tuesday, the Senate of Trinidad and Tobago, unanimously approved the Sexual Offenses Amendment Bill (2021) which now gives the public the right to access a sex offender website providing names, photographs and date of birth of convicted persons.

CNW Network, a US based Caribbean news organization, in its report said:  “Attorney General Faris Al-Rawi, who piloted the bill, said it is intended to create two registers: The National Sex Offender Register, which would be private and for the use of law enforcement only, and the Public Sex Offender Website, which would be accessible by the public. The website would be under the control of the Commissioner of Police.”

However, Senator Nakhid suggested the sexual offenders’ website be maintained by an independent board.

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