1. [para. 1] A recent report by the Beijing Zhongyi Charity Foundation highlights a surge in child sexual abuse in China, driven by artificial intelligence tools and deepfake pornography, compounding a crisis traditionally involving educators and family members.2. [para. 2] The 2025 Report on the Statistical Analysis of Child Sexual Abuse Cases analyzed 204 publicly reported offenses involving 690 child victims, with the youngest victim aged 4 and girls accounting for 95.69% of targets. Perpetrators ranged from boys under 10 to a 93-year-old man.3. [para. 3] The research relied solely on media reports and court cases, excluding undisclosed crimes, so the figures reflect only a fraction of actual assaults.4. [para. 4] Among 185 cases with clear interpersonal dynamics, acquaintances accounted for 71.89% of offenses. Teachers and school staff were responsible for 42.11% of cases, online contacts 21.8%, and relatives 15.04%. Strangers were perpetrators in 28.11% of cases.5. [para. 5] Educators are the adults with most access to children outside legal guardians, routinely forming the largest proportion of known offenders. In one 2025 case, a male teacher in Haikou raped a 10-year-old girl and threatened to kill her if she spoke out; the victim endured trauma for five years.6. [para. 6] Sun Xuemei, foundation chairwoman, noted that family members (biological fathers, stepfathers, grandfathers) represent a highly damaging category, with crimes deeply hidden due to family ethics, financial dependence, and emotional pressure.7. [para. 7] On April 17, 2025, an 11-year-old girl in Sichuan was repeatedly abused by her stepfather for six months; her mother dismissed signs as “adolescent rebellion.”8. [para. 8] Repeat offenses accounted for 54.9% of cases. Sun Xuemei stated that sexual abuse by family members has lasted up to 11 years, and without intervention, it almost never stops.9. [para. 9] The analysis identified eight minor perpetrators (3.92% of total), with the youngest under 10. Seven offenders were over 60 (3.43%), with the oldest being 93.10. [para. 10] The drop in offender age highlights growing youth trends posing legal hurdles. In one 2025 case, an offender under 10 conspired with others to sexually assault a female peer. Minors also engaged in “remote molestation” via anonymous chats.11. [para. 11] Elderly offenders introduce complexities in penal execution and public justice. Three abusers in 2025 were over 70. One 70-year-old man raped an intellectually disabled victim, causing pregnancy.12. [para. 12] A 93-year-old man was sentenced to 15 years for raping a minor, but the detention center refused admission due to his self-care inability, sparking social backlash.13. [para. 13] Internet access and AI growth have laid groundwork for novel predatory tactics, with online contacts becoming the second-largest acquaintance category at 21.8%.14. [para. 14] As children go online at younger ages, digital channels have matured into a primary vector for child grooming. “Remote molestation” involves forcing children to send nude files or engage in naked webchats.15. [para. 15] The Supreme People’s Court and Procuratorate clarified in June 2023 that coercing minors to expose themselves or perform obscene acts via video chats constitutes forced molestation under criminal law.16. [para. 16] Li Wei, a senior prosecutor, noted AI-era crimes have uniquely dangerous qualities: deepfakes, automated undressing programs, and virtual avatars diversify abuse methods. Predators use fake personas and dummy accounts, making danger hard for children to recognize.17. [para. 17] Li warned that the internet also lures teens into criminality. In 2025 cases, several minors exposed to malicious web content preyed on peers remotely. Web anonymity blurs the boundary between victim and abuser.18. [para. 18] Liu Lin, a political advisor, pointed out AI virtual companions pose acute threats to impressionable minors, as human operators or malicious algorithms can manipulate children emotionally dependent on them.19. [para. 19] Liu urged regulators to tighten AI governance, enforce content-generation standards, and push parents to view AI tools as risk vectors.20. [para. 20] A University of Edinburgh study indicated online abusers exploit minors’ vulnerability and emotional voids to establish control, linking depression, anxiety, and low self-esteem to heightened exploitation risks.21. [para. 21] China’s judicial apparatus has ramped up enforcement. Procuratorates indicted 73,000 individuals for offenses against minors in 2025. In May 2025, three people convicted of raping minors were executed.22. [para. 22] Regional data shows mounting pressure: Guangdong charged 7,268 people for offenses against minors in 2025; Jiangxi indicted 1,962; Ningxia indicted 519; Fujian arrested 5,554 and charged 7,223.23. [para. 23] Fang Yan, an NPC deputy, stated that barring released sex offenders from recontacting children remains a blind spot. She recommended comprehensive rules to shift from post-crime damage control to proactive prevention.24. [para. 24] Prosecutors are upgrading structural defenses. Li noted digital forensics units flag risks through internet patrols, dismantling black-market ecosystems, and matching hotel-registry data with high-risk dossiers to alert police.25. [para. 25] Post-trial psychological damage is routinely ignored. Sun Xuemei detailed a case of a 4-year-old victim whose mother, immobilized by trauma, dragged the child on a legal crusade; by age 10, the child had never attended school.26. [para. 26] Li underscored AI-driven abuse is uniquely indelible: deepfaked content is functionally permanent once uploaded, saddling victims with chronic anxiety over redistribution.27. [para. 27] Widespread sex education is advocated as a primary defense. During the “Two Sessions,” politicians demanded mandatory sexual-health curricula. Tuo Qingming pushed to install sex education from fourth grade through junior high.28. [para. 28] Chen Wei proposed embedding sex education into standard teaching degrees and staffing specialized instructors in primary schools. Gao Jie criticized parental bias that talking about biology encourages activity.29. [para. 29] Zhang Yue argued parents must secure the narrative before the internet does. Gao advised teaching boundaries in kindergarten. The Girls Protection team confirmed a spike in self-reported police complaints by minors.30. [para. 30] Experts agreed protecting minors requires collaboration among families, educators, tech giants, and the judiciary, with parents monitoring behavioral shifts and schools ensuring relevant curricula.AI generated, for reference only
AI Tools Open New Front in Child Sexual Abuse in China, Report Warns
A charity report says deepfakes, virtual companions and online grooming are reshaping risks for minors, while acquaintances remain the biggest source of abuse








