top of page

juliepaynemft Group

Public·428 members

Mark Nyuon
Mark Nyuon

Children Sexy (128) Mp4


Download - https://lastsembbrundoc.blogspot.com/?file=2tDOdV





Papua New Guinea's serious crime problem is being metwith a violent police response. Children, who make up nearly half of thecountry's some 5.6 million people, are especially vulnerable. The experience ofSteven E. reflects that of many children at the hands of the Royal Papua NewGuinea Constabulary, the country's police force. Brutal beatings, rape, andtorture of children, as well as confinement in sordid police lockup, arewidespread police practices. Although even high level government officialsacknowledge this, almost nothing has been done to stop it.


The vast majority of children who are arrested are severelybeaten and often tortured by members of the police. Almost everyone HumanRights Watch interviewed in each area we visited who had been arrested wasbeaten. Children reported being kicked and beaten by gun butts, crowbars ("pinsbars"), wooden batons, fists, rubber hoses, and chairs. Boys described beingshot and knifed while in custody. Girls told us that they had been forced tochew and swallow condoms. Many of those we interviewed showed us fresh woundsand scars on their heads, faces, arms, legs, and torsos that they said werefrom police. Serious injuries to the face, particularly around the eyes, werecommon.


According to victims and eyewitnesses, police typically beatindividuals at the moment of arrest, during the time they are transported tothe station, and often at the station itself. Beatings are so routine thatpolice make little or no attempt to hide them, beating children in front of thegeneral public and international observers. A man who said police beat him andforced him to fight naked with other detainees in a police station when he wassixteen or seventeen years old noted: "We thought it was their job and we justhad to accept it." Although police violence is endemic and adults describedsimilar experiences, children's particular vulnerability and the assumptionthat boys and young men are "raskols"-members of criminal gangs-make childrenespecially easy targets.


Many of the abuses the children recounted rise to the levelof torture.Under international law,torture consists of intentional acts by public officials that cause severephysical or mental pain or suffering for the purpose of obtaining informationor a confession, or for punishment, intimidation, or discrimination. We heardaccounts in which police intentionally inflicted severe pain and suffering,apparently motivated by the desire to punish those suspected of wrongdoing.Boys perceived to be part of raskol gangs are often targeted for abuse. Policesimilarly target street vendors, sex workers, and boys and men who engage inhomosexual conduct. (In Papua New Guinea, it is illegal to "live. . . onthe earnings of prostitution"; sodomy, and, in some places, selling on thestreet are also illegal.) In other cases, police use violence to obtainconfessions. For instance, we interviewed children whom police had burned, cut,whipped while naked, and humiliated during their interrogations in order tocoerce them to confess to a crime.


At police stations, many children are detained for weeks ormonths in squalid conditions that violate basic international standards. Mostsaid that police provided them with no medical care, even when seriouslyinjured. In addition, children are routinely mixed with adults in policelockup, where boys are at increased risk of sexual assault at the hands ofolder detainees. We found boys under the age of eighteen held together withadult detainees in nearly everypolice lockup we visited. In several of these police stations, separate cellswere available but were being used for adults. In some stations, childrenlacked bedding and sufficient food and water.


Police abuse of children and members of marginalized groups,including rape and other crimes of sexual violence, is not only a problem inand of itself: it may also fuel Papua New Guinea's burgeoning AIDS epidemic.Experts believe that at least 80,000 people-almost 2 percent of the population,the hig




About

Welcome to the group! You can connect with other members, ge...

Members

  • TikTok
  • Instagram
  • b-facebook
aamft-approved-supervisor.png
bottom of page