Campaign on the legislation to prevent and combat child sexual abuse
Turning the rising wave of child sexual abuse.
Child sexual abuse is a real and growing danger. More and more often, abusers use the internet to communicate with each other, share materials, and reach out to children. Predators take photos and videos of the abuse they commit in real life and share them though the internet.
They use web cams, mobile phones, social media or other online platforms to coerce or blackmail children into inappropriate and illegal sex acts. Photos and videos of children being sexually abused are shared online on a massive scale. In 2021, 85 million such pictures and videos were reported by Internet companies.
Knowing that there are such horrid images of me that hundreds of people are looking at and doing who knows what, is unbearable.
Survivor of child sexual abuse, the Netherlands
Abuse and exploitation know no borders. Images of crimes committed in one country are circulated and watched across the globe. Victims rarely come forward. Abuse is often committed by a person in the child’s circle of trust, often in the child’s own home.
It took a long time before there was a therapist that didn't dismiss me as a liar straightaway. Don't dismiss everything as untrue just because it is too awful to believe.
Survivor of child sexual abuse, Sweden
In many cases, the abuse comes to light only when the actions of perpetrators are detected online. Online service providers play an essential role in reporting online child sexual abuse. Unfortunately, the current system of voluntary reporting is not effective enough. A total of 95% of all reports currently come from one single service provider (Meta). As a society, we need to make it mandatory for all tech companies in Europe to detect and report child sexual abuse online to the authorities.
To address this global problem, the EU has proposed legislation that will help us to find, report, and prevent cases of online child sexual abuse and to support victims. We are all responsible to keep our children safe from sexual predators.
New EU rules against child sexual abuse The Commission is proposing new EU legislation that aims to help EU countries to:
detect and report child sexual abuse online
prevent child sexual abuse
support victims
This legislation makes it mandatory for service providers to report child sexual abuse online on their platforms and to alert the authorities, so that predators can be brought to justice. Providers will also be required to report cases of grooming – a practice where sexual predators build a relationship, trust and emotional connection with children so they can manipulate, exploit and abuse them.
EU centre to prevent and combat child sexual abuse
To protect children in Europe and worldwide, the Commission proposes to set up a European centre to prevent and fight child sexual abuse and support victims. The centre will:
coordinate actions to fight against child sexual abuse: from detection and reporting, to prevention and assistance to victims
provide EU countries with expertise on prevention and victim support
support law enforcement to act on reports and save children
provide companies with indicators to find and report online child sexual abuse
work closely with partners outside the EU, including similar centres in the US, Canada and Australia
The centre will work with companies, research institutes, and law enforcement to help them exchange information and best practices, providing oversight, transparency and accountability.
Source: EC Europa EU