Interpol issues appeal in paedophile hunt

VIETNAM: Interpol yesterday launched an unprecedented worldwide public appeal as part of a hunt for a paedophile it says has…

VIETNAM:Interpol yesterday launched an unprecedented worldwide public appeal as part of a hunt for a paedophile it says has appeared in around 200 images on the internet sexually abusing boys who could be as young as six in Vietnam and Cambodia.

The agency released photographs of an unknown man which had been digitally blurred to disguise his face but have now been unscrambled by German experts to produce clear pictures.

Interpol said it believed the man, who appears to be in his 30s, may continue to be a danger to children while he remains at large.

Despite extensive earlier attempts to discover who he is, including circulating photos of him to police around the world through Interpol's network of 186 member states, his identity and nationality remain a mystery.

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The man is said to have distinguishing marks on his body that would prove he is the man in the photographs if he is found.

"For years, images of this man sexually abusing children have been circulating on the internet," Interpol's secretary general, Ronald Noble, said. "We have tried all other means to identify and to bring him to justice, but we are now convinced that without the public's help this sexual predator could continue to rape . . . We have very good reason to believe he travels the world in order to sexually abuse and exploit vulnerable children."

Interpol posted four reconstructed photographs of the man on its website, together with an original image where his face had been rendered unrecognisable. The manhunt has been codenamed Vico because of the links to Vietnam and Cambodia.

Anders Persson, a Swedish officer overseeing Interpol's human trafficking unit's database of images of child abuse, said one of the pictures found on the internet showed the name of a hotel in Vietnam, but police checks of the guest register turned up no clues. Cambodian police recognised locations in other photos.

The images must date from before December 2004, when they were first discovered online in Germany, and some are digitally stamped as having been taken in 2002 and 2003. The 12 boys who feature in the pictures have not been located.

Mr Persson declined to reveal how specialists at Germany's federal police agency produced the unblurred shots.

He added that he had opposed making the images public because it demonstrated to criminals that police could now unblur pictures, but that consideration and the risk the man could face public humiliation or violence were outweighed by the desire to protect children. -