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Man held for kissing daughter

 
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bacasper



Joined: 26 Mar 2007

PostPosted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 8:09 am    Post subject: Man held for kissing daughter Reply with quote

This was in Off-Topic but is better here.

As I said there, it is sad to see America and the Anglophone world exporting its child sex abuse witchhunt and hysteria even to South America.


Man held after kissing daughter

By Gary Duffy
BBC News, Sao Paulo


There is growing controversy in Brazil over the arrest of an Italian tourist held after kissing his eight-year-old daughter in public.

Witnesses told police the man allegedly touched the girl in an intimate way.

Under a strict new law partly designed to combat child sex abuse in South America's largest country, he faces eight to 15 years in jail if convicted.

The unnamed man has been in custody for almost a week. A new attempt to secure his release this weekend failed.

His Brazilian wife says the case is all a misunderstanding, while staff at the resort where the incident took place have been reported as saying they saw nothing unusual.

'Misunderstanding'

The Italian tourist, a 48-year-old businessman, was arrested on 2 September in the coastal city of Fortaleza, in the north-east of Brazil, where he was on holiday with his wife and daughter.

He was reported to the police by a Brazilian couple who claimed he had been touching a young girl inappropriately and had kissed her on the mouth while they were both at a swimming pool close to the beach in full view of other tourists.

It appears the couple who made the allegations did not know that the man was with his daughter.

The north-east of Brazil has for some years had a problem of paedophiles travelling to the area, often from overseas, and strongly-worded warnings about the penalties for exploiting children are posted in most hotels.

However the wife of the arrested tourist says it was all a misunderstanding by witnesses who had misinterpreted seeing a foreign white man with a young darker-skinned girl.

She told the Brazilian state news agency if there was any suggestion the claim was true she would not hesitate to take her daughter's side, and recalled that she had been present the whole time.

The woman said the allegations had the potential to destroy her family.


Under strict new legislation passed only last month the offence of molesting a child under the age of 14 can carry a penalty of between eight and 15 years in jail.

The arrested businessman - who had been due to return to Italy with his family last week - remains in custody, and it is thought another attempt to secure his release will be made on Tuesday.
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On the other hand



Joined: 19 Apr 2003
Location: I walk along the avenue

PostPosted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 11:49 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
As I said there, it is sad to see America and the Anglophone world exporting its child sex abuse witchhunt and hysteria even to South America.


Where do you get the idea that this is a result of Anglo-Americans exporting hysteria to South America? From reading the article, it seems that it might be a case of Brazilians in a certain area misunderstanding the situation, not neccessarily because they've watched too much Oprah, but because they have legitimate concerns about child-abusers in the area.

I agree with you about the witchhunt hysteria in North America and the UK. I'm just not sure that that's the culprit in this particular instance.
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bacasper



Joined: 26 Mar 2007

PostPosted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 10:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The ratcheting up of the penalties is what I think attests to it. They have just been increased in Brazil to 15 years.

A bunch of these US-based child-saver NGOs and treaties to which the US is a part require other countries to do such things.

I'd have to research the specifics in the case of Brazil, but I am guessing that they have been subject to US (and European) pressure in this area.
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