Belo Medical Group challenged to address problem of sex videos

Source: 
The Daily Tribune

Assistant Minority Leader and Gabriela party-list Rep. Liza Maza yesterday challenged the Belo Medical Group to address the pressing concerns over the massive proliferation of the notoriously controversial sex videos involving Dr. Hayden Kho and a number of women he has allegedly victimized.

Kho, who is a practitioner of the clinic, recently admitted he was capturing in videos his sexual encounters with women. This apparent perversion poses a serious question on the privacy and confidentiality of transactions between the Belo Medical Group and its clientele.

“The Belo Medical Group should assure the public that its entire clientele are accorded utmost privacy and confidentiality of transactions. We do not want more women to fall prey, waking up one day with their most private images being posted over the Internet and selling like pancakes in the streets,” Maza said during the Kapihan sa Cypress at Treehouse.

Furthermore, the Gabriela solon also scored the alleged involvement of Eric Chua, who is tagged as a major player in this whole brouhaha and whose DVD business is seen to have gained widely from this issue.

“Dr. Hayden Kho’s license should be revoked if proven that he has violated women. With his continued practice, more women may be in danger of being exploited and debased. This also goes for Eric Chua who should also be held accountable if his business is proven to have served as a vehicle for exploitation of women,” Maza stressed.

Earlier in the week, Maza had filed House Resolution 1184 directing the House of Representatives committees on public information, civil service and professional regulation and Justice to conduct an immediate inquiry into how the right to privacy can be best protected in the light of the various cases of proliferation of videos of women’s intimate acts with their partners without the victims’ consent and knowledge, the most recent of which is the Halili-Hayden sex videos, and recommend measures thereof, including bringing to justice those accountable and ensuring the protection of right to privacy and the dignity and well-being of the victims.