MP
speaks about child luring
By
Faith Anderson
ST. BONIFACE —
Keynote speaker Shelley Glover,
MP for St. Boniface, spoke on child luring on the Internet at the St.
Boniface CWL convention April 17. Until being elected in 2008, Glover
served 19 years on the Winnipeg Police Force, four of them in the child
abuse unit. She is very much engaged in putting forward legislation to
fight these heinous crimes.

“Women will be
the driving force to make a difference in many of these children’s
lives,” she said.
Glover
identified key areas that people need to be aware of, including email,
usenet groups (discussion groups where images can be posted) and chat
rooms, where childrencan talk to another person without images. On the
Internet, children are exposed to inappropriate sexual material, some
of it violent in nature. There is also a danger of physical
molestation, as strangers who pretend to be children are actually
adults who encourage children to meet with them. Harassment, bullying
and luring are other dangers children are being exposed to.
Parents can
monitor computer use by making sure their child is in sight, Glover
suggested. They can discuss the risks and use filtering programs to
block inappropriate websites. Parents should know their children’s
passwords, be a part of their group — Facebook, for example — and limit
time spent on the computer. Glover stressed that children should never
provide their full name, date of birth or address when using the
Internet.
Glover cited
Bill C-15A, which received royal assent in 2002, an act to amend the
Criminal Code and extended the offence of possessing and distributing
child pornography to include accessing child pornography.
Bills C-46 and
C-47, which have been introduced, will give police officers authority
to obtain email information from Internet providers. Glover explained
that the police need a tool to gain access to email addresses that are
used inappropriately
Bill C-58, when
reintroduced, will mean the mandatory reporting of online child
pornography.
Bill C-34 deals
with the sex offender registry. Glover noted that, currently, police
cannot access the sex offender registry until a crime is committed, and
then the information is limited. the proposed change will allow police
to access the registry before a crime is committed and place vehicle
information into the registry, allowing the tracing of sex offenders
across borders.
Glover provided
three websites that can be used to report crimes: cybertip.ca, a
Canadian Internet tip line; bewebaware.ca, a bilingual tip line; and
Internet 101.ca, which is administered by the RCMP.