Spain sees four-fold jump in child sex abuse cases: study

The number of reported cases of child sexual abuse in Spain has quadrupled over the past decade, according to a study published Tuesday, with campaigners warning the rise of the internet has left minors more vulnerable to exploitation.

A total 1,093 cases of sexual abuse involving children and underage teenagers were reported to the ANAR Foundation, a Spanish child protection charity, compared with 273 in 2008, it said in a new report.

The figures are based on an analysis of telephone and internet messages received during this period by a helpline and online support service run by the ANAR Foundation, which stands for Aid to Children and Adolescents at Risk.

Only 10 percent of victims go on to file a complaint with police, the report said.

Around four in five victims were girls, the majority in their teens. In the cases where boys were abused, they were mostly under the age of 12, the study found.

Most of the abuse involved inappropriate touching, but one in 10 of the victims reported suffering penetration accompanied by violence.

“Can we as a society allow these figures, knowing that behind each one there are vulnerable victims suffering immeasurably?” the head of the charity’s legal department, Sonsoles Bartolome, told a news conference.

While a greater willingness on the part of young victims to speak up is partly behind the rise, greater use of the internet by minors is also to blame, she added.

“New technologies have opened the door to new kinds of offences that did not exist before,” Bartolome said, citing the online grooming of victims or the publishing of nude photos online without consent as examples.

The foundation’s programme director, Benjamin Ballesteros, said easy access to online porn was blamed for a “every alarming” rise in sexual assaults of minors carried out by groups, which he said now account for 10 percent of all child sexual abuse, up from just 2.1 percent in 2008.

“We feel this is clearly related to the uncontrolled use, without parental control, of the internet and above all porn” where group sexual assaults are often depicted and women are often “degraded, humiliated and mistreated,” he added.