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PRESS
RELEASE
Children’s
Organisations across the World Call for Action on
Internet Safety
London/Bangkok –
April 18, 2005 – Today children’s
organizations in 67 countries are uniting to call on
the world’s leading Internet and high tech companies
to take responsibility for ensuring children’s
safety online.
The call comes at the launch of the worldwide
make-IT-safe campaign led by ECPAT International, a
global child-rights NGO based in Bangkok, Thailand,
and the UK-based Children’s Charities Coalition
on Internet Safety (CHIS).
The make-IT-safe campaign will lobby IT
leaders to create a global child protection body to
set and implement worldwide industry standards, research
safety technologies, and fund a global educational campaign.
The campaign will also urge governments
to adopt IT child protection policies to ensure industry
responsibility, to enable international legal co-operation
against online child abuse, and to provide care and
protection for children abused or exposed to harmful
images and messages online.
CHIS spokesman and UK Internet safety
expert John Carr says the IT industry must do much more
to protect children and young people using its technologies.
“Children are constant and large
scale users of the Internet yet daily, across the world,
they are being exposed to harmful or damaging materials
online and we continue to read of tragic instances of
children being abused by sexual predators where the
Internet played a key part in facilitating the initial
contact that led to the abuse.
“When dealing with issues such as
spam, viruses, phishing and other threats, the internet
and online industries have shown a great willingness
and a great ability to come together to develop common
technical standards and protocols, and to agree common,
effective means of promoting them. This has simply not
happened in the field of child protection. This must
change. And soon.”
ECPAT International executive director
Carmen Madriñán says it’s time for
the IT industry to acknowledge that it shares the same
responsibility for protecting children as all other
members of the global community.
“Parents, teachers, children’s
groups and governments all have their part to play.
But only the IT industry can deliver the technological
and financial resources to ensure the safety of children
and young people online and in interactive technologies.”
Ms Madriñán says some IT
companies are concerned to ensure their technologies
are safe for children, but it’s not nearly enough.
The proof is seen daily in the courts, the news and
in thousands of harmed children.
“Of the millions of images of child
abuse that Interpol reports to be circulating online,
for example, so far only 297 of the children abused
to make these images have actually been located.
“Now it’s time for concerned
IT companies to take the lead and ensure effective,
global standards to make IT safe for all children and
young people.”
ECPAT International's Asia youth representative
Sangeet Shirodkar is calling on young people to take
up the make-IT-safe campaign.
“Young people and children in need
or in distress often look to the Internet to find affection
and support from unknown people. A number of children
are getting attracted to these chat rooms and later
land up being exploited. IT industries must do much
more to make the chat rooms safe and to block the transmission
of illegal photos, videos and messages.”
Mr Shirodkar says the IT industry should also take responsibility
for educating young people about the dangers of chat
rooms and of circulating personal details and photos
via cell phones.
The make-IT-safe campaign is supported
by the UN Special Rapporteur on the Sale of Children,
Child Prostitution and Child Pornography. It is also
backed by the Subgroup against Sexual Exploitation of
Children of the NGO Group for the Convention on the
Rights of the Child.
The make-IT-safe campaign is running a
global online petition and lobbying IT leaders and governments
around the world. Industry and government responses
will be monitored and publicized on the campaign website.
# # #
ECPAT International global launch press
conference: 10am-11am, Monday April 18,
ECPAT International Secretariat, 328 Phaya Thai Rd,
Bangkok.
Ms Madriñán is available
for advance interviews in Bangkok from April 16. Please
contact her directly on mobile +66 (0)1-9294962.
ECPAT spokespersons from the following
countries are available for media interviews on April
18: Brazil, Costa Rica, Denmark, India, Japan, Nepal,
Netherlands, New Zealand, Russia, Sweden, Thailand,
Taiwan, United Kingdom, and Ukraine.
For more information on the ECPAT
press conference and group spokespersons, contact: Karen
Mangnall, ECPAT International communications officer,
Tel: ++ 66-2-215-3388 ext 112 or email karenm@ecpat.net.
Mr Carr of CHIS is available for interview.
For further information contact: Siobhan McCann in the
NCH press office, UK on ++ 44 (0) 20 7704 7198
or email siobhan.mccann@nch.org.uk.
Out of hours mobile: 07902 806 679.
Notes to editors:
1. ECPAT and CHIS will be publishing the
responses to their call to action on a specially designed
web site. See http://www.make-it-safe.net
2. ECPAT - End Child Pornography, Child
Prostitution and Trafficking of Children for Sexual
Exploitation, is an integral part of the UN’s
monitoring of child protection issues around the world.
ECPAT chairs the special Subgroup against Sexual Exploitation
of Children of the NGO Group for the Convention on the
Rights of the Child. ECPAT has 73 groups in 67 countries
in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas and Oceania. See
www.ecpat.net
3. Members of the Children’s Charities
Coalition for Internet Safety (CHIS) include all of
the UK’s largest child welfare and child protection
NGOs: Barnardos, Childline, National Children’s
Bureau, National Council of Voluntary Child Care Organisations,
NCH: The Children’s Charity, National Society
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, and The Children’s
Society. See www.nch.org.uk/chis
4. The Special Rapporteur on the Sale
of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography
has just delivered a report to the United Nations Commission
on Human Rights on child pornography and the Internet.
See www.ohchr.org/english/issues/children/rapporteur/annual05.htm
5. The traditional way for the Internet
industry to resolve technical or other issues which
cut across the interests of individual firms is to form
industry working groups or working parties to hammer
out a standard to which they can all subscribe, and
which can be incorporated into their own products. This
ensures inter-operability and consistency and can create
a platform on which other products and services can
be built.
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