Brazil Congress Urges All-Hands-on-Deck Approach to Fight Child Sex

UNICEF display Gathered in Brazil, a United Nations-backed forum to combat the sexual exploitation of children called this Friday, November 28, for a comprehensive strategy comprising laws, policies, regulations and services across all social sectors as well as a shift in social attitudes and practices, such as child marriage.

"There is no single intervention that protects children from sexual exploitation," UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) Regional Director for Latin America and the Caribbean Nils Kastberg said at the end of World Congress III Against the Sexual Exploitation of Children in Rio de Janeiro.

"Building and strengthening child protection systems is critical and requires action from all actors to provide children with the protection they deserve."

Representatives of 137 governments, meeting with children, international organizations, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and private sector companies, conceded that ending the scourge is a long and difficult battle, but the Congress organizers said countries are in a better position now to win the fight as a result of days of work in developing a blueprint for action.

The Rio Declaration and Action Plan to Prevent and Stop the Sexual Exploitation of Children and Adolescents calls on governments to enact laws that protect all children in their jurisdiction, including undocumented migrants or those who have been trafficked so that every child is provided protection under the law. Governments are also asked to pass laws that do not criminalize children for crimes they have committed as a result of their sexual exploitation.

On prevention, the Rio Action Plan stresses the need for a comprehensive strategy and the involvement of all social sectors, especially social welfare, education, health, security and justice, to support prevention and respond to risks.

Unlike previous World Congresses, where the recommendations of young participants were prepared separately, in Rio de Janeiro the young people participated fully in the drafting of the action plan.

Studies indicate an increase in the sexual exploitation of the young and UNICEF noted that predators continue to use new tools to target children, including cyberspace and new generation mobile phone technologies, with adults preying on children in chat rooms and using the Internet to post or download pornography.

The gathering was co-sponsored by UNICEF, the Brazilian Government, ECPAT (End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography, and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes), a global non-profit network of organizations and individuals set up in 1991, and the NGO Group for the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Seven years after the last World Congress in Yokohama, Japan, which focused exclusively on commercial sexual exploitation of children, the current Congress also discussed strategies for combating non-commercial forms of child sexual exploitation, including the sexual exploitation of children in their homes, by religious leaders, teachers, peacekeepers and armed groups in war zones.

The First World Congress Against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children took place in Stockholm in 1996, resulting in the 'Stockholm Declaration and Agenda for Action,' which was adopted by 122 countries. This committed countries to develop strategies and plans of action with agreed-upon guidelines and 161 countries have now signed on.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Chicken Exports to Middle East Grow 17%, Bring 66% More Revenue

The volume of Brazilian exports of chicken to the Middle East should break a ...

Movits’s multifaceted art

Brazilian Ricardo Movits is the artist who is writer who is musician who is ...

In Brazil Oil Exploration Is Not Only for Big Shots Anymore

The National Petroleum, Natural Gas and Biofuel Agency (ANP) of Brazil wants to establish ...

Mr. Blair, State Sanctioned Execution Is Not the Way to Go!

The 27-seven-year-old Brazilian born electrician, Jean Charles de Menezes was killed by an anti-terrorist ...

Justice Approves Varig’s Sale. It’s Too Late to Save Brazilian Airline Though.

The Brazilian justice decided that bankrupt airline company Varig, which once was the pride ...

Industry of Fear Thrives in Brazil

The original target was to collect 80,000 weapons by the end of the year. ...

IDB to Hold Its Next Annual Assembly in Brazil

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva received the president of the Inter-American Development ...

Financing for Brazilian Farmers Up 7% to US$ 61 Billion in the Next Crop

Brazilian farmers should have 116 billion reais (US$ 61 billion) for the financing of ...

Brother of US Nun Slain in Brazil Tries Again to Take Case to Federal Court

David Stang, the brother of the American nun, Dorothy Stang, who was murdered in ...