LISTEN: Increasing number of children contacting helpline after seeing porn online
An increasing number of children across Scotland are contacting a charity helpline over worries after seeing online porn.
An increasing number of children across Scotland are contacting a charity helpline over worries after seeing online porn.
NSPCC-run helpline Childline's bases in Glasgow and Aberdeen took 248 calls from young people on the issue in the past two years - 119 in 2014/15 and 129 in 2015/16.
Across the UK the number of calls by children worried by online porn has increased by 60% in the same two-year period, from 529 to 844.
More than half of the callers in 2015/16 were aged 12-15 but 10% were 11 or younger.
Elaine Chalmers is from Childline:
Many of those who contacted the free 24-hour helpline said they felt ashamed'',
guilty'' and addicted'' after viewing porn online and some were being pressured into watching it by other young people.
The charity is calling for tougher laws to ensure porn websites strictly enforce age verification policies to protect children.
The NSPCC believes current proposals contained in the UK Parliament's Digital Economy Bill for commercial porn websites to require age verification do not go far enough, and is concerned that fines will be shrugged off by companies who breach the legislation.
Matt Forde, national head of service for NSPCC Scotland said: A generation of young people are being exposed to extreme or violent sexual acts online. This is robbing children of their innocence and is not the right way for them to learn about sex or relationships. Worryingly, some children think that porn is realistic and want to act out what they've seen online.
Children should be protected from adult-only material online just as they are in the off-line world. It is crucial that porn websites that fail to comply with age verification checks can be blocked, so they cannot be accessed by children in the UK.''