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Trump’s TAKE IT DOWN Act: Not Enough to End Sexual Exploitation

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Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : The global crisis of sexual exploitation did not happen by chance. It was the direct consequence of a single legal decision: the June 21, 1973 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court in Miller v. California, which legalized the distribution and marketing of adult content under the guise of free speech. This decision unleashed a monster that grew unchecked, embedding itself into cultures, economies, and digital landscapes worldwide. Today, we are living with the consequences of that decision, and unless the root cause is reversed, no legal reform, including the recently passed TAKE IT DOWN Act, will be enough to stop the damage.
The pornography industry is not a small fringe sector—it is a global behemoth. Estimates put its annual revenue between $97 billion and $100 billion. In the United States alone, the industry contributes between $12 and $20 billion to the economy. In California, over 50,000 individuals work in the porn sector, from performers to production crews. This industry thrives on the exploitation of women, children, and marginalized communities—turning human intimacy into a commodity for mass consumption.
The online adult entertainment market, valued at $76 billion in 2024, is projected to exceed $118 billion by 2030. Cable and satellite providers also profit enormously, retaining up to 80% of pay-per-view revenues from adult content. And this is not a phenomenon confined to the United States. The ripple effects of America’s legal precedent have spread worldwide, creating industries of sexual exploitation in vulnerable countries.
Thailand: Once known for its cultural heritage, Thailand has become a global hub for sex tourism. Thousands of women and children, often trafficked, are trapped in an industry catering to foreign demand, particularly from Western countries.

Philippines: The country faces an epidemic of online sexual exploitation of children (OSEC). Tens of thousands of minors are coerced into performing explicit acts in front of webcams, with paying customers predominantly in the U.S. and Europe. The National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) reported over 30,000 cases of OSEC in a single year.

India: With weak enforcement and a booming digital market, India is grappling with millions of cases of non-consensual intimate images, sextortion, and revenge porn. Victims, predominantly women, face lifelong stigma and psychological trauma.
Pakistan: The impact of legalized pornography has been profound. The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority reported that approximately 20 million Pakistanis attempt to access pornographic websites daily, despite government bans. In 2023, the NGO Sahil documented 4,253 cases of child abuse, with over half involving sexual abuse. Additionally, the U.S. State Department’s 2024 Trafficking in Persons Report identified 20,809 sex trafficking victims in Pakistan, including 921 children.
Africa: Trafficking networks in Nigeria, South Africa, and other regions have expanded, with victims—especially minors—coerced into sex work. Human trafficking for sexual exploitation is now one of the fastest-growing criminal enterprises across the continent.

Europe: The European Union reported over 10,000 victims of human trafficking in a single year, with the majority subjected to sexual exploitation. Eastern Europe, in particular, has become a pipeline for trafficking women into Western markets.

United States: Despite its legal protections, the U.S. is far from immune. The National Human Trafficking Hotline identified 15,299 victims in 2022, with 5,572 cases involving sex trafficking. The FBI has flagged an alarming rise in cases of child exploitation linked to online pornography.

Globally, the University of Edinburgh estimates that over 300 million children are victims of online sexual exploitation and abuse annually. In the UK alone, reports of AI-generated child sexual abuse material surged by 380% in a single year. These statistics are not just numbers—they are lives shattered, futures stolen, and human dignity erased.
This is the landscape in which the TAKE IT DOWN Act was introduced. The Act, passed in December 2024 and signed into law by Trump on 19th of May 2025 was championed by First Lady Melania Trump aimed at criminalizing the distribution of non-consensual intimate images, including deepfakes, and requires platforms to remove such content within 48 hours of notification. It is a necessary step, but let us be honest—it is not enough. The law addresses the symptoms of the problem, not its cause.
The real issue is that the legal framework created by Miller v. California remains intact. As long as pornography—whether consensual, adult, or otherwise—is legally protected and commercially distributed, the monster will continue to thrive. The victims, especially in poorer nations, will not have the resources, knowledge, or legal access to seek redress. They will remain trapped in a system that profits from their suffering.
It is not practical to expect millions of exploited individuals across the globe to navigate complex legal systems to have their images removed. Laws like the TAKE IT DOWN Act are reactive; they respond after the harm is done. By then, the damage—psychological, reputational, and financial—is irreversible.
What is needed is a complete reversal of the 1973 decision. Pornography, in all its forms—whether adult, consensual, or otherwise—must be outlawed. This is not about censorship or prudery; it is about common sense and basic human decency. It is about dismantling an industry that profits from the exploitation of the vulnerable, the normalization of deviance, and the destruction of societal values.
The numbers speak for themselves. The global sex trade, fueled by legalized pornography, is estimated to involve over 25 million people, with children—both girls and boys—making up a significant portion of the exploited. Human trafficking for sexual purposes alone is a $99 billion industry. These figures represent not just economic data but a moral failure on a global scale.
The TAKE IT DOWN Act is a step in the right direction, but unless we confront the root cause—the legal and commercial normalization of pornography—the exploitation will continue. The world must learn from America’s mistake, not repeat it. It is time for countries to outlaw pornography entirely, dismantle the legal frameworks that protect it, and take decisive action to protect their citizens—especially the most vulnerable.
This is not a call for censorship; it is a call for sanity. A call to protect the fundamental dignity of the human person, to stop treating bodies as commodities, and to halt an industry that has done untold harm. The TAKE IT DOWN Act has opened the door. Now, the world must walk through it and finish the job.

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‘The bodies just kept coming’ – photographer at deadly Rio police raid

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A photographer who witnessed the aftermath of a massive Brazilian police operation in Rio de Janeiro has told the BBC of how residents came back with mutilated bodies of those who had died.

The bodies “kept coming: 25, 30, 35, 40, 45…”, Bruno Itan told BBC Brasil. They included those of police officers.

One of the bodies had been decapitated – others were “totally disfigured”, he said. Many also had what he says were stab wounds.

More than 120 people were killed during Tuesday’s raid on a criminal gang – the deadliest such raid in the city.

Bruno Itan told BBC Brasil that he was first alerted to the raid early on Tuesday by residents of the Alemão neighbourhood, who sent him messages telling him there was a shoot-out.

The photographer made his way to the Getúlio Vargas hospital, where the bodies were arriving.

Itan says that the police stopped members of the press from entering the Penha neighboorhood, where the operation was under way.

“Police officers formed a line and said: ‘The press doesn’t get past here.'”

But Itan, who grew up in the area, says he was able to make his way into the cordoned-off area, where he remained until the next morning.

He says that Tuesday night, local residents began to search the hillside which divides Penha from the nearby Alemão neighbourhood for relatives who had been missing since the police raid.

Bruno Itan Around two dozen residents of Penha search a hillside for people who went missing after a police raid. Some of them are looking down what looks like a ravine, while others are walking.

Residents of the Penha neighbourhood proceeded to place the recovered bodies in a square – and Itan’s photos show the reaction of the people there.

“The brutality of it all impacted me a lot: the sorrow of the families, mothers fainting, pregnant wives, crying, outraged parents,” the photographer recalled.

Bruno Itan A group of people - many of them women - look at the ground where bodies have been placed. One man is covering his mouth with his T-shirt. A woman is grabbing the shoulders of the woman in front of her and is crying.
There was shock in Penha as locals retrieved more and more bodies from the nearby hillside

The governor of Rio state said that the massive police operation involving around 2,500 security personnel was aimed at stopping a criminal group known as Comando Vermelho (Red Command) from expanding its territory.

Initially, the Rio state government maintained that “60 suspects and four police officers” had been killed in the operation.

They have since said that their “preliminary” count shows that 117 “suspects” have been killed.

Rio’s public defender’s office, which provides legal assistance to the poor, has put the total number of people killed at 132.

According to researchers, Red Command is the only criminal group which in recent years has managed to make territorial gains in the state of Rio de Janeiro.

It is widely considered one of the two largest gangs in the country, alongside First Capital Command (PCC), and has a history dating back more than 50 years.

According to Brazilian journalist Rafael Soares, who has been covering crime in Rio for years, Red Command “operates like a franchise” with local criminal leaders forming part of the gang and becoming “business partners”.

The gang engages primarily in drug trafficking, but also smuggles guns, gold, fuel, alcohol and tobacco.

According to the authorities, gang members are well armed and police said that during the raid, they came under attack from explosive-laden drones.

The governor of Rio state, Cláudio Castro, described Red Command members as “narcoterrorists” and called the four police officers killed in the raid “heroes”.

But the number of people killed in the operation has come in for criticism with the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights saying it was “horrified”.

At a news conference on Wednesday, Governor Castro defended the police force.

“It wasn’t our intention to kill anyone. We wanted to arrest them all alive,” he said.

He added that the situation had escalated because the suspects had retaliated: “It was a consequence of the retaliation they carried out and the disproportionate use of force by those criminals.”

The governor also said that the bodies displayed by locals in Penha had been “manipulated”.

In a post on X, he said that some of them had been stripped of the camouflage clothing he said they had been wearing “in order to shift blame onto the police”.

Felipe Curi of Rio’s civil police force also said that “camouflage clothing, vests, and weapons” had been removed from the bodies and showed footage appearing to show a man cutting camouflage clothing off a corpse.

Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes has summoned Governor Castro to a hearing on Monday to explain the police actions “in detail”.

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Trump’s Asia tour sees deals, knee-bending and a revealing final meeting

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US presidential trips abroad have traditionally been an opportunity to display the power of the American nation on the world stage. Donald Trump’s five-day swing through eastern Asia, on the other hand, has been a display of the power of Trump – but also, at times, of that power’s limitations.

Trump’s stops in Malaysia, Japan and South Korea over the course of the first four days were an exercise in pleasing a sometimes mercurial American president. It was an acknowledgement that Trump, with the flick of a pen, could impose tariffs and other measures that have the potential to devastate the economies of export-dependent nations.

His sit-down with Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Thursday, however, was something entirely different.

It was a meeting of equals on the global stage, where the stakes for both nations – for their economies, for their international prestige, for the welfare of their people – were enormous.

With China, Trump may flick his pen, but such actions come with consequences. They come with a cost.

For the first four days, Trump’s most recent foray into global diplomacy was smooth sailing.

Each stop was punctuated by a blend of traditional trade negotiations – deals made under the shadow of Trump’s “reciprocal” tariffs – and personal accommodations that at times bordered on the obsequious.

In Malaysia, Trump secured access to critical minerals and made progress toward finalising trade arrangements with south-east Asian nations. He also presided over a treaty that should ease border tensions between Thailand and Cambodia – the kind of “peace deal” the American president loves to tout.

In Japan, Trump’s Marine One flew past a Tokyo Tower lit red, white and blue – with a top in Trumpian gold.

Newly elected Prime Minister Sanai Takaichi detailed $550bn in Japanese investments in the US and offered the American president a gift of 250 cherry trees for America’s 250th birthday, and a golf club and bag that belonged to Shinzo Abe, the assassinated former prime minister who bonded with Trump in his first term.

She also became the latest foreign leader to nominate Trump for his much-desired Nobel Peace Prize.

Not to be outdone, South Korea welcomed Trump with artillery firing a 21-gun salute and a military band that played Hail to the Chief and YMCA – the Village People song that has become a Trump rally anthem.

President Lee Jae Myung held an “honour ceremony” for Trump during which he gave the American leader his nation’s highest medal and a replica of an ancient Korean dynastic crown.

Lunch with Lee featured a “Peacemaker’s Dessert” of gold-encrusted brownies. Later that day, the Koreans served Trump vineyard wine at an intimate dinner in Trump’s honour with six world leaders attending the Asia-Pacific Economic Conference summit.

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Trump caps refugee admissions at 7,500 – mostly white South Africans

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The Trump administration will limit the number of refugees admitted to the US to 7,500, and give priority to white South Africans.

The move, announced in a notice published on Thursday, will apply for the next fiscal year and marks a dramatic cut from the previous limit of 125,000 set by former President Joe Biden.

No reason was given for the cut, but the notice said it was “justified by humanitarian concerns or is otherwise in the national interest”.

In January 2025, Trump signed an executive order suspending the US Refugee Admissions Programme, or USRAP, which he said would allow US authorities to prioritise national security and public safety.

The notice posted to the website of the Federal Register said the 7,500 admissions would “primarily” be allocated to Afrikaner South Africans and “other victims of illegal or unjust discrimination in their respective homelands”.

In the Oval Office in May, Trump criticised South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and claimed white farmers in his nation were being killed and “persecuted”.

The White House also played a video which they said showed burial sites for murdered white farmers. Trump said he did not know where in South Africa the scene was filmed.

The tense meeting came just days after the US granted asylum to 60 Afrikaners. It later emerged that the videos were scenes from a 2020 protest in which the crosses represented farmers killed over multiple years.

On his first day in office on 20 January, Trump said the US would suspend USRAP to reflect the US’s lack of “ability to absorb large numbers of migrants, and in particular, refugees, into its communities in a manner that does not compromise the availability of resources for Americans” and “protects their safety and security”.

The US policy of accepting white South Africans has already prompted accusations of unfair treatment from refugee advocacy groups.

Some have argued the US is now effectively shut to other persecuted groups or people facing potential harm in their home country, and even former allies that helped US forces in Afghanistan or the Middle East.

“This decision doesn’t just lower the refugee admissions ceiling,” Global Refuge CEO and president Krish O’Mara Vignarajah said on Thursday. “It lowers our moral standing.”

“At a time of crisis in countries ranging from Afghanistan to Venezuela to Sudan and beyond, concentrating the vast majority of admissions on one group undermines the programme’s purpose as well as its credibility,” she added.

The South African government has yet to respond to the latest announcement.

During the Oval Office meeting, President Ramaphosa said only that he hoped that Trump officials would listen to South Africans about the issue, and later said he believed there is “doubt and disbelief about all this in [Trump’s] head”.

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