Espaņol
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T he text of the
Yokohama Global Commitment 2001 was negotiated between governments during
the week and adopted in consensus, while a number of delegations chose to
add Explanatory Statements to it. So did the European Union, the US,
India, Iran and the group of Arab and African States. While these
additions develop certain viewpoints of countries and regions, they are
all endorsing the Yokohama Commitment. This document is below, together
with indication of the annexed documents from the regional consultations
and the Stockholm Declaration and Agenda for Action.
The Yokohama Global
Commitment 2001
I. Our Follow-Up:
1. We, representatives
from governments, intergovernmental organizations, non-governmental
organizations, the private sector, and members of civil society from
around the world, have gathered together in Yokohama, Japan, at the
Second World Congress against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children
(17-20 December 2001) ("The Yokohama Congress"). Five years
after the First World Congress against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of
Children held in Stockholm, Sweden in 1996, we have reviewed
developments as a follow-up process to strengthen our commitment to
protect children from sexual exploitation and sexual abuse.
2. We reaffirm, as our
primary considerations, the protection and promotion of the interests
and rights of the child to be protected from all forms of sexual
exploitation, and we welcome the following developments, visible in a
number of countries, since the First World Congress:
- the greater emphasis on the rights of
the child and the call for more effective implementation of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child by State Parties to create an
environment where children are able to enjoy their rights ;
- the increasing mobilization of
governments, local authorities and the non-governmental sector, as
well as the international community, to promote and protect the rights
of the child and to empower children and their families to safeguard
their future;
- the adoption of multi-faceted,
inter-disciplinary measures , including policies, laws, programmes,
mechanisms , resources and dissemination of the rights of the child,
to ensure that children are able to grow up in safety and dignity;
- enhanced actions against child
prostitution, child pornography and trafficking of children for sexual
purposes, including national and international agendas, strategies or
plans of action to protect children from sexual exploitation , and new
laws to criminalize this phenomenon, including provisions with
extra-territorial effect;
- the promotion of more effective
implementation/enforcement of policies, laws and gender-sensitive
programmes to prevent and address the phenomenon of sexual
exploitation of children, including information campaigns to raise
awareness, better educational access for children, social support
measures for families and children to counter poverty, action against
criminality and the demand for sexual exploitation of children, and
prosecution of those who exploit children;
- the provision of child-sensitive
facilities such as telephone helplines, shelters, and judicial and
administrative procedures to prevent violations of the rights of the
child and to provide effective remedies;
- the comprehensive, systematic and
sustained involvement of the private sector, such as workers' and
employers' organizations, members of the travel and tourism industry,
the communications industry, including Internet service providers, and
other businesses, in enhancing child protection, including their
adoption and implementation of corporate policies and Codes of Conduct
to protect children from sexual exploitation ;
- greater participation by children and
young people in promoting and protecting their rights, notably through
young people's networks and forums and the involvement of young people
as peer communicators and counselors;
- the development of international and
regional standards to protect children from sexual exploitation
through new instruments, including the following: the Protocol to
Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, especially Women
and Children, Supplementing the United Nations Convention against
Transnational Organized Crime (2000); and the Convention on Cybercrime
(2001), while noting relevant provisions of the Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court (1998);
- the entry into force of the
International Labour Organization (ILO)'s Convention No.182 concerning
the Prohibition and Immediate Action for the Elimination of the Worst
Forms of Child Labour (complemented by ILO Recommendation No.190) on
19 November 2000, and the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the
Rights of the Child on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and
Child Pornography on 18 January 2002;
- the progress made in the preparations
for the forthcoming Special Session of the General Assembly on
Children, including its outcome document;
- the emergence of a broader partnership
among and between local and national governments, intergovernmental
organizations, non-governmental organizations, regional/sub-regional
and international organizations, communities, and other key actors,
and closer linkage between the United Nations and other monitoring
mechanisms on the issue, especially the Committee on the Rights of the
Child and the Special Rapporteur on the Sale of Children, Child
Prostitution and Child Pornography of the Commission on Human Rights
under the United Nations Commission on Human Rights.
3. We take into account
with appreciation the regional consultations held in Bangkok, Thailand;
Rabat, Morocco; Dhaka, Bangladesh; Montevideo, Uruguay; Budapest,
Hungary; and Philadelphia, United States of America (see Annex); and
various national seminars leading up to the Yokohama Congress, and
related activities, including those with young people's participation,
and their conclusions and recommendations enriching the content of our
follow-up action, and we encourage their effective implementation by
governments that have participated in them in partnership with all
stakeholders, including non-governmental organizations,
intergovernmental organizations, and young people.
4. We recognize that much
more needs to be done to protect children globally and express our
concerns at the delays in the adoption of needed measures in various
parts of the world.
II. Our Global Commitment:
5. We have come together
to:
- reiterate
the importance and the call for more effective implementation of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child by State parties and related
instruments, and underline our belief in the rights of children
to be protected from commercial sexual exploitation in the form of child
prostitution, child pornography and trafficking of children for sexual
purposes;
- encourage
early ratification of the relevant international instruments, in
particular, ILO Convention No.182 concerning the Prohibition and
Immediate Action for the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labour
and the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child
on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography;
- reaffirm
our commitment to build a culture of respect for all persons based upon
the principle of non-discrimination and to eliminate commercial sexual
exploitation of children, in particular by sharing the lessons learnt
since the First World Congress, and by improving cooperation in this
regard;
- recommit
to the Declaration and Agenda for Action of the First World Congress
(" The Stockholm Declaration and Agenda for Action"), and in
particular to developing national agendas, strategies or plans of
action, designated focal points and comprehensive gender-disaggregated
data collection, and effective implementation of measures, including
child-rights based laws and law enforcement;
- reinforce
our efforts against commercial sexual exploitation of children, in
particular by addressing root causes that put children at risk of
exploitation, such as poverty, inequality, discrimination, persecution,
violence, armed conflicts, HIV/AIDS, dysfunctioning families, the demand
factor, criminality, and violations of the rights of the child, through
comprehensive measures, including improved educational access for
children, especially girls, anti-poverty programmes, social support
measures, public awareness-raising, physical and psychological recovery
and social reintegration of child victims, and action to criminalize the
commercial sexual exploitation of children in all its forms and in
accordance with the relevant international instruments, while not
criminalizing or penalizing the child victims;
- emphasize
that the way forward is to promote closer networking among key actors to
combat the commercial sexual exploitation of children at the
international, inter-regional, regional/sub-regional, bilateral,
national and local levels, in particular, among communities and the
judicial, immigration and police authorities, as well as through
initiatives interlinking the young people themselves;
- ensure
adequate resource allocation to counter commercial sexual exploitation
of children, and to promote education and information to protect
children from sexual exploitation, including educational and training
programmes on the rights of the child addressed to children, parents,
law enforcers, service providers and other key actors;
- reiterate
that an essential way of sustaining global action is through
regional/sub-regional and national agendas, strategies or plans of
action that build on regional/sub-regional and national monitoring
mechanisms and through strengthening and reviewing existing
international mechanisms with a monitoring process, to improve their
effectiveness as well as the follow-up of their recommendations, and to
identify any reforms that may be required;
- take
adequate measures to address negative aspects of new technologies, in
particular, child pornography on the Internet, while recognizing the
potential of new technologies for the protection of children from the
commercial sexual exploitation, through dissemination and exchange of
information and networking among partners;
- reaffirm
the importance of the family and strengthen social protection of
children, young people and families through awareness-raising campaigns
and community-based surveillance/monitoring of commercial sexual
exploitation of children;
- commit
ourselves to promoting cooperation at all levels and to combining
efforts to eliminate all forms of sexual exploitation and sexual abuse
of children worldwide;
- declare
that the sexual exploitation of children must not be tolerated and pledge
to act accordingly.
Appendix: Explanatory
Statements
The following documents
were submitted to the Chair at the conclusion of the Second World Congress
against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children.
Annex
- Regional Commitment and Action Plan of the
East Asia and Pacific Region against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of
Children, adopted at the East Asia and the Pacific Regional Consultation
for the Second World Congress against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of
Children held in Bangkok, 16-18 October 2001
- Declaration of the Arab-African Forum
against Sexual Exploitation of Children, adopted at the Arab-African
Forum against Sexual Exploitation of Children held in Rabat, 24-26
October 2001
- South Asia Strategy, adopted at the South
Asia Consultation for the 2nd World Congress against Commercial Sexual
Exploitation of Children, held in Dhaka, 4-6 November 2001
- Commitment to a Strategy against
Commercial Sexual Exploitation and Other Forms of Sexual Violence
against Children and Adolescents in the Latin American-Caribbean Region,
adopted at the Interamerican Congress against Sexual Exploitation of
Children, held in Montevideo, 7-9 November 2001
- Commitment and Plan of Action for
Protection of Children from Sexual Exploitation in Europe and Central
Asia, adopted at the Conference on Protection of Children against Sexual
Exploitation, held in Budapest, 20-21 November 2001 }
Suggestions from North American Regional
Consultation on the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children, held in
Philadelphia, 2-3 December 2001Declaration and Agenda for Action, adopted
at the World Congress against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children,
held in Stockholm, 27- 31 August
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