Summary: Many forms of abuse and CRC THEME DAY STATE VIOLENCE AGAINST CHILDREN YOUTH The case of sexual violence, Reflections for discussion purposes GENERAL Both the CRC and the more recent ILO Convention 182 as well as positions taken by the Committee and UNICEF representatives have made it clear that the sexual exploitation of minors under 18 and their use for the purpose of pornographic material is a form of violence and a violation of their Rights. Similarly, the CRC makes it equally clear that children who are victims or at risk of such abuse require special protection. In 1996, the World Congress held in Stockholm dealt specifically with these abuses andproduced an Agenda for Action outlining concrete measures to protect and prevent these offences and rehabilitate the victims. The implementation of this Agenda by the States who unanimously adopted it four years ago will be reviewed in Yokohama, Japan 17-20 December 2001. Many psychologists claim that sexual abuse/exploitation is one of the ultimate forms of humiliation and violence. It is an extreme abuse of power and its traumatic impact has often dire physical consequences and always leaves lasting psychological scars on the victims. Some say that although some children and youth eventually learn to cope with these handicaps, real healing is practically impossible. So, our first premise is that sexual abuse and exploitation of children are extreme forms of violence. The second is that it is often perpetrated or tolerated by the State. This perpetration and tolerance of sexual violence directed toward children and youth can often be obvious, as shown by the(not exhaustive) instances listed below. However, it can also be much more insidious and less directly identified, and the relationship of cause and effect is not clearly defined in the public mind. THE OBVIOUS CASES Many of these forms of abuse and exploitation are generally seen as belonging to the realm of the "private criminal sector", or within the sanctity of the family. There are, however, evident instances which are clearly State sponsored or tolerated such as the situations listed below THE STATE AS UNWITTING PERPETRATOR OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE Often, the part of the state in the perpetration of sexual violence is much less direct but no less real. It is more a sin of omission than of commission. The Convention has articles dealing with all the situations enumerated above. Further, these articles clearly contain obligations for State Parties to take all appropriate measures, including the review of their national legislation, to fully implement their protective role. When these laws contradict the CRC and victimise children, the stage is easily set for the worse abuses. This type of official neglect or, worse, intentional callousness, is rarely accorded high priority. Following are examples, again not exhaustive: The culmination of this benign neglect is the disappointing results of the long negotiations on an additional protocol to the CRC on the Sale of children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography adopted at this year’s session of the Commission on Human Rights. One had hoped that the States’ intent was to enhance the protection provisions contained in the CRC. Instead, the protocol appears more concerned with ensuring the protection of national laws than the protection of children. Indeed, there are so many references to the precedence of these national laws over international standards that one wonders how this new instrument will be implemented. This may reflect a growing trivialisation of sexual exploitation in general and, as a consequence, of the sexual exploitation of children. Far from being considered a violence, terms such as child sex workers, increasingly used all over the world, relegate the issue to a simple labour matter. We may expect that in the not too distant future, we will be talking about improving the working conditions of these workers instead of fighting to eliminate the extreme violence there are subjected to. 18 August 2000.
exploitation are generally seen as
belonging to the realm of
the "private criminal sector", or
within the sanctity of the family.
There are, however, evident
instances which are clearly State
sponsored or tolerated.
State Violence Against Children and Youth: The case of sexual violence Reflections for discussion purposes
The sexual abuse and exploitation of children and youth in public institutions such as prisons, orphanages, schools, etc. has been fully documented in the press, North and South, East and West. We have ourselves supplied many credible reports to the Committee and to the relevant Special Rapporteurs.
Some groups, because of their vulnerability and lack of political status, such as minority and street children are often prey to sexual abuse by state agents, such as the police, who know that their behaviour will not be the object of sanction by an indifferent State.
Organisation:
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