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Migration and Home Affairs

We Protect Global Alliance to End Child Sexual Exploitation Online

Child sexual abuse is a hideous crime. For the vast majority of us, the idea of violating, hurting and abusing a child is intolerable. Nonetheless, these crimes are not as rare as we would like to think. Every day, countless children around the world are sexually abused and exploited, and images and videos of the abuse are circulated.

We cannot afford to remain passive, and we cannot afford to act alone. This is not a phenomenon that any country can tackle on its own. Modern technology allows criminals to move images, videos and contacts quickly between jurisdictions, exploiting legal loopholes and the anonymity the Internet provides. International cooperation is essential if we want to stand a chance of rescuing victims, putting a stop to continuing re-victimization and of finding and prosecuting offenders.

The We Protect Global Alliance to End Child Sexual Exploitation Online, resulting from the merger between We Protect and the Global Alliance Against Child Sexual Abuse Online, tries to respond to these challenges.

We Protect

We Protect was created in 2014 in the UK as a global multi-stakeholder response to combating online child abuse and exploitation. Its participants were signatories to a global statement of action, to which 63 countries, 30 NGOs and 20 leading technology companies had already committed to.

The Global Alliance Against Child Sexual Abuse Online

The Global Alliance Against Child Sexual Abuse Online was launched on 5 December 2012.

  • It aims to raise standards worldwide and unite efforts around the world to better combat online sexual crimes against children.
  • It gathers 54 countries, which commit to pursue concrete actions to enhance victim protection, identify and prosecute offenders, raise awareness, and reduce the availability of child pornography online and the re-victimization of children.

Ministers and representatives from participating countries, experts from law enforcement authorities, the private sector, victim advocacy groups and frontline organisations assessed what progress has been made in the first 2 years of the Global Alliance and how to expand the fight against global proliferation of child sexual abuse online in the future.

Participating countries provided updates on their progress towards achieving the Global Alliance’s policy targets as well as detailed input on the evolving threat of child sexual abuse online, outlining the major changes that national law enforcement perceives.

Country commitments

Endorsing the Declaration on the Launch of the Global Alliance against child sexual abuse online, the countries committed to 4 key policy targets:

  • enhancing efforts to identify victims and ensure that they receive the necessary assistance, support and protection
  • enhancing efforts to investigate cases of child sexual abuse online and identify and prosecute offenders
  • increasing awareness among children, parents, educators and the community at large about the risks
  • reducing the availability of child pornography online and the re-victimisation of children

Guiding principles annexed to the Declaration set out concrete operational goals and examples of potential actions that participants could undertake to reach these goals.

Participants in the Global Alliance submitted commitments to undertake concrete actions in the immediate future to reach the four key policy targets. These commitments also included a detailed baseline, providing an overview of actions they already undertook. The choice of actions for reaching the overarching goals is left to each country.

Global Taskforce

Child sexual exploitation and abuse online is increasing in both scale and complexity. No single actor can address this urgent problem alone: only a coordinated cross-sector global response can bring it to an end. Governments play a fundamental role within this context, establishing strong regulatory frameworks and implementing relevant mechanisms to combat these crimes.

Acknowledging this, the (WPGA) established a Global Taskforce in 2022, uniting 20 national governments worldwide along with the African Union, in a collective mission to enhance cooperation and collaboration among governments. The European Commission actively participates in and chairs the Taskforce’s bi-annual meetings.

Alongside the Alliance’s other reference groups for the private sector, civil society and law enforcement members, the Global Taskforce will help identify gaps and opportunities in government responses. The taskforce will also increase the collaboration needed to close loopholes and ensure there are no safe havens for the facilitation or hosting of child sexual abuse online.

Documents

Progress reports

Participants produced progress reports on the actions they committed to, on the occasion of the Second Ministerial Conference, in September 2014.

The documents available below – both commitments and progress reports – reflect the choice and views of the individual country.

Albania

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Commitments
Report 2014

Armenia

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Report 2014

Australia

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Commitments

Austria

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Commitments
Report 2014

Belgium

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Commitments
Report 2014

Bosnia and Herzegovina

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Report 2014

Bulgaria

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Commitments
Report 2014

Cambodia

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Commitments
Report 2014

Canada

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Commitments
Report 2014

Croatia

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Commitments
Report 2014

Cyprus

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Commitments
Report 2014

Czech Republic

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Commitments
Report 2014

Denmark

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Commitments
Report 2014

Estonia

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Commitments
Report 2014

Finland

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Commitments
Report 2014

France

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Commitments
Report 2014

Georgia

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Commitments

Germany

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Commitments
Report 2014

Greece

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Commitments
Report 2014

Hungary

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Commitments
Report 2014

Ireland

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Commitments
Report 2014

Israel

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Commitments

Italy

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Commitments
Report 2014

Japan

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Commitments
Report 2014

Kosovo

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Report 2014

Latvia

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Commitments
Report 2014

Lithuania

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Commitments
Report 2014

Luxembourg

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Commitments
Report 2014

Malta

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Commitments
Report 2014

Mexico

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Report 2014

Moldova

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Commitments

Montenegro

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Commitments
Report 2014

Netherlands

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Commitments
Report 2014

New Zealand

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Commitments
Report 2014

Nigeria

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Report 2014

Norway

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Report 2014

Poland

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Commitments
Report 2014

Portugal

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Commitments
Report 2014

Republic of Korea

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Commitments
Report 2014

Romania

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Commitments
Report 2014

Serbia

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Commitments

Slovakia

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Commitments
Report 2014

Slovenia

Commitments
Report 2014

Spain

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Commitments
Report 2014

Sweden

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Commitments
Report 2014

Switzerland

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Commitments
Report 2014

Thailand

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Commitments

Turkey

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Commitments
Report 2014

Ukraine

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Commitments
Report 2014

United Kingdom

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Commitments
Report 2014

United States

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Commitments
Report 2014