Senator Calls For Review Of All Anime And Manga In Australia

A crossbencher in the Australian Senate has called for a of all manga and anime classified in Australia to screen out the glorification of child sexual abuse, specifically citing Eromanga Sensei for depicting “wide-eyed children” in “explicit sexual activities”.

Stirling Griff, a crossbencher from the Centre Alliance party that includes independents Rex Patrick and Rebekha Sharkie, used a speech in the Senate today to calling for all anime and manga in the country to be re-reviewed by the classification board. “They contain depictions of wide-eyed children, usually in school uniforms, engaged in explicit sexual activities and poses, and often being sexually abused,” Griff said, according to The Guardian and AAP.

Griff’s issue was that too much anime and manga contains “child abuse material”. “There is, unfortunately, a dark side and a disgusting side to anime and manga, with a significant proportion of the two media featuring child abuse material,” he said. “The classification board appears to be making decisions in isolation to criminal law. This must stop.”

Griff called out Eromanga Sensei, a novel series from 2013 about a 15-year-old high schooler who uses an anonymous partner called “Eromanga Sensei” to illustrate his stories, who is later revealed to be a 12-year-old junior high schooler. “The series also heavily features incest themes and many scenes are so disturbing I just won’t, I just can’t, describe them,” Griff reportedly said.

Manga and anime is exempt from exploitation laws in Australia, AAP reported, as cartoon characters are not considered to be depictions of real children. In Australia, the Classification Board has argued otherwise, with some anime games being refused classification precisely for sexual depictions of underage characters.

Omega Laybrinth Z was banned two years ago for simulating “sexual stimulation of a child”, according to the Classification Board’s report which was provided to Kotaku Australia.

“During this section of the game, with mis-clicks, dialogue can be triggered, in which Urara Rurikawa says, ‘Stop tickling…’, ‘Stop poking…’ and “Th-that feels strange…’, implying a lack of consent,” the board’s report into Omega Laybrinth Z said.

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