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CharitiesAidWelfare, Crime

AI Tech Centre Fuels New Hope in Fight Against Online Child Exploitation

Sunny Comms for Destiny Rescue 3 mins read

A ground-breaking centre harnessing advanced facial recognition technology to identify and rescue children from online sexual exploitation has officially opened under the leadership of Destiny Rescue. Known as VISTA (Victim Identification Support Through Analysis), the facility in Thailand represents a bold leap forward in the charity’s fight to end the abuse of children online across the globe.

VISTA is operated by Destiny Rescue’s Scientia team, a specialist unit that has already helped rescue over 116 children from online exploitation across four countries, with some as young as just four years old. VISTA allows investigators to rapidly match images and videos to real-world victims using AI and facial analysis, accelerating time-sensitive rescues in collaboration with law enforcement agencies globally.

“VISTA is more than a tech centre, it's a symbol of our resolve to go wherever children are being hurt and bring them home,” said Paul Mergard, CEO of Destiny Rescue Australia, who attended the launch ceremony recently. “What we’re doing here is setting a new global standard in how technology can serve justice and bring freedom.”

The launch comes amidst an alarming global rise in child abuse material. According to recent reports, child sexual abuse material (CSAM) is reported online every second, and the eSafety Commissioner has noted a year-on-year doubling of online abuse reports since 2019. In Australia alone, 7.5% of men have admitted to engaging in online child exploitation behaviours, revealing a national crisis demanding urgent attention.

“Australians need to know this isn’t happening somewhere else. The Australian Federal Police received nearly 60,000 reports of online child abuse last year alone. Many of those children were exploited for audiences here in Australia,” said Paul Mergard. 

These rising statistics are confirmed by Destiny Rescue’s continued expansion across Asia, Africa and Latin America, as outlined in their 2024 Impact Report, with over 1,800 children rescued globally in the past year alone.

“The internet has put innumerable kids at risk of exploitation without ever even meeting their trafficker in person. At the same time, criminals hide behind online anonymity to avoid getting caught by police. Their tactics are evolving as quickly as the technology they utilise. But we’re not letting them get ahead,” explained Paul Mergard.

The VISTA centre doesn’t just identify victims. It also plays a critical role in indexing hundreds of thousands of CSAM files, improving the ability of international task forces to link evidence to Australian-based offenders. Already, Destiny Rescue has helped facilitate the referral of nearly 400 offenders to the Australian Federal Police (AFP) following investigations in Southeast Asia.

Additionally, when a child is rescued and a perpetrator arrested with their phone and/or computer taken into evidence, they often reveal dozens, sometimes hundreds, of additional victims. This is where VISTA’s technology shines: using facial recognition, body mapping, and metadata analysis, the system can quickly flag matching victims across massive datasets, fast-tracking identification and rescue.

The VISTA centre is already analysing over 300,000 child sexual abuse material (CSAM) files, many of which depict Thai children whose identities remain unknown.

Previously, these files had to be manually reviewed by trained specialists. Destiny Rescue requires all their team in this space to be Interpol-certified Content Assessors, but the emotional toll is profound, and the process is slow.

“This technology means we can work faster, safer, and smarter. Project VISTA gives us a way to honour the child behind every frame,” shared Caleb, Destiny Rescue’s Global OSEC Director.

Once children are rescued, they are not left to navigate recovery alone. Destiny Rescue ensures every survivor has a plan - trauma-informed, individually tailored recovery journeys that can include education, psychological support, job training and, when possible, safe reunification with families.


About us:

Destiny Rescue is a not-for-profit organisation funded largely by generous donations from individuals, businesses, and philanthropic partners. Every rescue is made possible because people choose to stand on the side of freedom. To help rescue and restore more children trapped in exploitation, you can learn more or make a donation at www.destinyrescue.org.au.


Contact details:

Media Contact

Lizzie Henebery

0402 809 650 | [email protected] 

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