The 31st Meeting of the World Tourism Network on
Child Protection focused on the role and initiatives of the
private sector to fight Child Exploitation in tourism.
Awareness raising, training of staff and the
implementation of measures along the whole value chain of tourism
were pointed out as critical.
“We need to unite to fight child exploitation
and the commitment of the private sector is key” said UNWTO
Secretary-General opening the meeting.
Carol Bellamy, Chair
of the Network, recalled the role of the Network as a platform to
share research and good practices in the fight against the
exploitation of children in tourism.
At the meeting, the
Chair of the High Level Global Task Force to End Sexual
Exploitation of Children in Travel and Tourism, Najat Maalla M’jid,
shared the first findings of the Global Study carried out by the
Task Force.
Lack of reporting, weak legislation and the anonymity
of the internet were pointed out as some of the main challenges in
child protection from sexual exploitation in the sector. The
report aims to also address the chronic lack of robust evidence
and comparable data on this issue.
The Association of
British Travel Agents (ABTA) stressed the importance of providing
training to the staff on how to identify possible situation of
child exploitation as well as dealing with new emerging trends in
the sector such as ‘voluntourism’ while the TUI Group shared their
initiative ‘A collective NO’ to sexual exploitation of children in
holiday destinations initiatives to promote the inclusion of
measures to prevent and fight the exploitation of children within
the whole tourism value chain including actions on training,
awareness raising among host communities.
Other initiatives
presented included a project from the Network of Strategic and
International Studies which evaluates best practices from around
the world and work of the Airline Ambassadors International which
focus on training airline professionals to flight human
trafficking.
The World Tourism Network on Child Protection
is an open-ended network facilitated by UNWTO featuring the
multi-stakeholder participation of a range of tourism stakeholders
- governments, international organisations, non-governmental
organisations (NGOs), tourism industry groups and media
associations. Its mandate is to prevent all forms of youth
exploitation in the tourism sector (i.e. sexual exploitation,
child labour and child trafficking).
The Network's meetings, held
annually at the worlds’ foremost travel and tourism Fairs, such as
the ITB in Berlin, serve
as a platform to exchange experiences and best practices, present
awareness-raising materials and capacity building tools, and
promote the adoption of professional codes of conduct or other
responsible practices in line with the UNWTO Global Code of Ethics
for Tourism.
See other recent
news regarding:
Trafficking,
Children,
Exploitation
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