The
COVID-19 pandemic is exposing and exacerbating gender inequalities
around the world. Each week, we
are sharing insights from Equality Now experts about how women’s and
girls’ lives are being affected by the pandemic and what can be done
to address the challenges.
This week, Tsitsi
Matekaire Global Lead for Equality Now’s End
Sex Trafficking program, discusses how the coronavirus crisis is
fueling the sexual abuse of children in the digital sphere.
Please can you tell us about the global surge in online
sexual exploitation of children since the onset of the COVID-19
pandemic?
To give a snapshot, The National Center for Missing and Exploited
Children has experienced a 106% increase in global reports of
suspected child sexual exploitation to its CyberTipline compared with
March 2019. In India, there has been a 95% rise in traffic searching
for child sexual abuse content, and Europol has also witnessed an
escalation.
Lockdown globally has meant people are spending more time online
and the volume of digital content being produced is increasing
exponentially, making it harder to scrutinize. And COVID-19 is
creating other challenges for policing the internet. To stop the
spread of the virus, tech companies like Facebook and YouTube have
furloughed content moderators and are relying more on automated
systems that are less accurate than human reviewers in recognizing
illegal material.
The Internet Watch Foundation, a UK charity that identifies child
sexual abuse content online, is also having to operate at reduced
capacity and has warned that the number of child sexual abuse images
being removed globally has fallen by 89% during the pandemic.
Capitalizing on this weakness, distributors of child sexual
exploitation material are becoming emboldened and are targeting
mainstream platforms to reach wider audiences.
What are some of the ways that the coronavirus pandemic is
putting children at greater risk of online sexual abuse?
Over 1.5 billion students worldwide have been impacted by school
closures, leaving many vulnerable to sexual predators. Taking
advantage of youngsters spending more time unsupervised online,
perpetrators are seeking to groom and exploit children through sexual
coercion and sextortion. Girls are particularly vulnerable, accounting
for 90% of those featured in online child abuse materials.
The global expansion of inexpensive, high-speed internet and the
growth of smartphone, tablet, and laptop ownership is swelling the
number of children who can be targeted, and new populations coming
online often have less awareness about how to spot dangers.
Meanwhile, minors trapped at home with abusive relatives may become
victims of the live-stream sex abuse trade and other lucrative forms
of cybersex trafficking.
Exacerbating this is the economic fallout of COVID-19. Millions of
families are being plunged into extreme poverty and impoverished
children are being forced onto the streets in search of basics like
food and money, making them accessible to human traffickers and other
abusers. The same applies to children fleeing home because of domestic
abuse, which has spiked globally during the pandemic.
What is required to combat this type of exploitation and
abuse?
Online child sexual exploitation is a complex crime that requires a
multifaceted, gendered, legal, and technological response with global
cooperation involving governments, international bodies, tech
companies, survivors, and CSOs. Immediate action that governments can
take include the provision of:
✅ Responsive reporting portals and hotlines where
suspected abuse can be reported;
✅ Well trained police who respond quickly,
effectively, and sensitively;
✅ Well equipped and adapted criminal justice systems
to prosecute and hold perpetrators to account;
✅ Adequately resourced organizations to provide long
term support for survivors and those at risk;
✅ Awareness raising campaigns in partnership with tech
companies and other relevant organizations to educate about online
harms and avenues for reporting;
✅ Laws and policies that place a duty of care on tech
companies to protect users of their services and products.
To learn more about Equality Now's work in protecting
women's rights and fighting online exploitation, check out some of
our current
campaigns.
COVID-19 is an unfolding crisis that is harming women and
girls in various ways. Here are some issues we are
following:
How
COVID-19 puts women's land and property rights at risk - Thomson
Reuters Foundation
In countries where discriminatory family laws curtail the rights of
women and girls to own property or receive equal inheritance, deaths
from COVID-19 may result in widows and daughters being further
disenfranchised, made homeless, or otherwise denied a fair share of
what should rightfully be theirs.
For
Arab women and girls, the crisis is just beginning
Marginalized groups have been disproportionately impacted by
COVID-19. For women and girls in the Arab region the ill effects have
been especially acute. Lina AbiRafeh warns that if women aren't
centered in the response to the pandemic, then patriarchal and
misogynistic control will consolidate and expand gender
inequality.
To stay up to date on the gendered impacts of the Coronavirus,
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and LinkedIn.
In Solidarity,
Tara Carey Senior Media & Content Manager
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