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Sex Offender Disclosure It's Time to Take
Bolder Action to Protect Children
South Korea will soon become the second country in the world after the United
States to make public personal profiles of all convicted sex offenders against
children. The Ministry of Health, Welfare and Family Affairs said Wednesday that
a revised law is to take effect Jan. 1 to disclose online the name, age, address
and photo of the offenders as part of efforts to better protect children from
sexual violence.
The ministry will operate a Web site to post personal information about those
convicted of rape and other sex offenses against minors under 13. All adults
aged 20 and older will be able to log on to the site to get details about the
criminals, including a summary of their offenses. Such information is to be left
posted for five to 10 years, depending on the length of prison terms for the
offenders. The ministry also plans to mail the personal information of those
convicted to all families with children living in the offenders' neighborhood.
The disclosure plan came after a recent report about a rape on an
eight-year-old girl by a habitual sex offender which took place in Ansan, south
of Seoul, last December. The case shocked the nation as the brazen-faced
offender was sentenced to only 12 years in prison for his horrifying sexual
attack on the innocent first grader who sustained irreparable damage to her body
and left untold pain and trauma on her and her parents. Many people have called
for a re-trial and life imprisonment for the 57-year-old offender identified as
Cho. Even President Lee Myung-bak expressed dissatisfaction over the lenient
court ruling.
The case has forced the government and law enforcement authorities to
overhaul the current loose system of preventing and fighting sexual violence
against minors. In addition to the disclosure of the offenders' personal
information, the administration plans to allow the police and the prosecution to
store DNA information of those convicted of rape, sexual violence, kidnapping,
homicide, arson and other grave crimes in their database permanently. It is also
considering forcing sex offenders to wear an electronic monitoring device for a
longer period than the current maximum of 10 years.
These plans are badly needed measures to set up a tighter anti-crime
infrastructure. We urge the authorities to make the utmost effort to faithfully
implement the plans. The steps are necessary but not sufficient conditions for
the prevention and crackdown on the soaring number of heinous crimes targeting
minors. Whenever kidnapping, murder or brutal sexual violence involving children
takes place, policymakers usually promise to take all possible means to get
tougher with criminals. Past experiences show that they have been long on words
but short on action.
The public are still doubtful over the latest government measures to wage a
war on crimes against children. It is quite disappointing that the Lee
administration is seeking more than a 5-percent cut in next year's budget to
finance its efforts to prevent sexual violence on minors and provide
rehabilitation programs for victims. How dare the government slash the budget
despite its pledges against the crimes? It should go all-out to match its strong
words with actions to better protect children who are the future of the nation.
Source: The Korea Times
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