According to Thailand’s National Economic and Social Development Council ( NESDC ), the growing threat of sexual harassment on social media is having a serious impact on young people.
In its cultural view report released on Aug 26, the NESDC said patients of such abuse are at risk of developing social, emotional, and mental health problems, including anxiety and depression.
In some cases, they actually commit criminal acts as a result of the hardships they have experienced. ECPAT International, a Unicef-affiliated company, identified Thailand as one of the 25 countries with disturbing rates of online sexual abuse against children and youth. This knowledge corresponds with data from the Royal Thai Police, which shows a sharp increase in child sexual abuse situations, from 48 in 2017 to 540 next year.
According to the NESDC, website sexual abuse against kids is broken into three categories. The perpetrators of low-level harassment are frequently accused of not taking their steps seriously as damaging. At this point, offenders abuse victims by making offensive remarks about school-aged children, such as those who are romantically inclined to like young girls.
The average level concentrates on repeated deeds intended to cause victims emotional distress. It usually involves prolonged harassment, attempts to embarrass and embarrass victims, and the progressive invasion of individual privacy.
Rampant abuse
The severe/high stage involves violent and aggressive steps, causing emotional and psychological damage. This amount of harassment is in direct violation of the laws governing sexual abuse. Examples include conniving minors into intimate relationships and making them commit intimate functions, recording these functions without their consent, and exploiting the victims by charging them to watch the recordings.
Some young people who have experienced online sexual abuse or who have friends who have it do not know how to get support, according to a report released by Unicef in 2022. According to the NESDC, some people do not recognize themselves as patients, while others are too timid to review it, which leads to underreporting these crimes.
Actions may be implemented to address the problem, the NESDC said. These include addressing the confidence with which physical abuse is tolerated, starting with community members carefully monitoring their son’s use of social advertising. Additionally, the government and local societies may take steps to punish those who commit crimes.
The NESDC even emphasized the need for educational institutions and communities to inform people about their rights, the dangers of online sexual abuse, and the changing nature of online threats. According to the NESDC, families may instruct their children to defend their personal information, while education providers should educate them about how to handle physical cleaning as part of their curricula.