IWF sets sights on tackling online child sexual abuse to mark 30th anniversary of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child

Published:  Wed 20 Nov 2019

A UK charity is leading the fight to eradicate online child sexual abuse across the world as new tools to help people report abuse anonymously are rolled out across the world. 

The IWF, a Cambridgeshire-based charity which works to remove child sexual abuse material from the internet, is launching new reporting portals across the world.

The portals, set up with funding from the Global Fund to End Violence Against Children, help people securely and anonymously flag up images of child sexual abuse on the internet.

Today (November 20) is the 30th anniversary of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC). To celebrate this, The Gambia is preparing to launch an IWF reporting portal. 

Once websites with child sexual abuse material are reported anonymously to the IWF in Cambridge, the images will be assessed by trained analysts and removed from the internet.

Susie Hargreaves OBE, IWF CEO said: “Children are being abused all over the world. The scale of the problem is global, and our response to it has to be too.

“Working with local partners and helping provide these safe spaces is the first step in the fight to protect children. 

“I am so pleased we can take this step and launch this portal in time for the 30th anniversary of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. 

“Our analysts are really leading the way and, with the help of partners on the ground, we can make a real difference.”

International Development Manager Valentina Picco has worked with local partners on the ground in The Gambia to help set up the portal. 

She said the portal is an essentia tool to fight online child sexual abuse because, in some countries, people do not feel they can report images or videos to the police. 

Ms Picco said: “It is very difficult for people to find the courage to report to the police, and the fact that through the portal they can do it anonymously can be very helpful. Violence against children can be taboo.”

She added: “I would say portal projects are generally very well received. Every time we launch a new tool to fight against violence they are well received. 

“It is our dearest hope that the reports from Portals will lead to children being removed from further abuse and being safeguarded.”

Ms Hargreaves added: “Removing just one image or video of child sexual abuse could make all the difference. I want everyone, wherever they are in the world, to have somewhere they can turn to to help get child sexual abuse imagery eradicated from the internet.” 

A Portal also helps achieve UN Sustainable Development Goals 16.2, which specifically targets tackling child sexual abuse and enables national governments to fulfil part of the WePROTECT Model National Response. 

This is a global benchmark for all countries to take responsibility for protecting children online. 

The IWF has already helped establish such platforms in 27 countries – working with national governments, NGOs, local law enforcement partners, and regional telecoms networks to widen the battle against child sexual exploitation and abuse on the web.

Find out more about our Reporting Portals here

This article was amended on December 13, 2019.

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