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Recommendation 1371 (1998)[1]
Abuse and neglect of children
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The Council of Europes purpose is to promote the rule of
law and to protect the rights of individuals, as understood throughout the continent. A
fundamental principle of this "European model" is the effective protection of
the weakest members of society and, in particular, of children.
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The Parliamentary Assembly draws attention to the considerable
amount of work it has already carried out to strengthen the legal and social protection of
children, and in particular to its Recommendation 1065 (1987) on the traffic in children
and other forms of child exploitation, its Recommendation 1121 (1990) on the rights of
children, and its Opinion No. 186 (1995) on the draft European convention on the exercise
of childrens rights.
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The discovery of serious crimes committed against children and
the existence of paedophile networks in Europe prompted a painful awareness of this
problem and led the Assembly to hold an emergency debate in September 1996 and to adopt
Resolution 1099 (1996) on the sexual exploitation of children.
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However, dramatic new events lead the Assembly to propose
strengthening the protection of children from serious and, it would seem, increasingly
frequent abuse of their rights and of their physical and psychological integrity.
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Sexual exploitation and abuse of children know no borders, be
they geographical, cultural or social, and are afflictions requiring resolute action and
genuine consultation and co-operation at European level.
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It has to be said that the European Convention on Human Rights
does not specifically protect the rights of children except where the courts have upheld
them on grounds of the protection of family life. Similarly, the European Convention on
the Exercise of Childrens Rights, opened to signature on 25 January 1996, governs
minors access to the courts and judicial representation but contains no provisions
on the substantive rights which might be granted children and legally safeguarded.
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Europe still needs to develop a genuine culture of
childrens rights: children need specific protection because of their vulnerability
and their less developed capacity to judge various risks which adults are able to assess,
such as sexual abuse, rape, prostitution, pornography, incest or ill-treatment.
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The horror provoked by various recent instances of sexual
violence against children should not distract our attention from violence and
ill-treatment within the family circle, from which tens of thousands of children suffer
even from the earliest age.
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The Assembly calls upon member states to incorporate the
necessary protection against the specific dangers facing children into their national
legislation. In particular, it believes that children must be afforded legal and social
protection against:
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paedophilia;
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exploitation for pornography;
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prostitution;
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incest;
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inappropriate criminal proceedings;
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repetition of offences of sexual violence against minors;
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abusive sterilisation;
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violence and mutilations of girls;
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abuse, including abuse within the family;
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refusal of necessary care;
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fraudulent actions with a view to adoption.
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The Assembly, emphasising that the ill-treatment of children and
especially ill-treatment of a sexual nature, is characterised by a high rate of
recidivism, points out that, under the law of almost all Council of Europe member states,
offenders are only considered as recidivists if the offences are committed on the
territory of the same state; and that therefore persons who have been convicted in one
state are not regarded as re-offenders if, after serving their sentence, they commit the
same offence on the territory of another state, and thus are not subject to the more
severe sentences imposed upon recidivists.
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It also notes that many sexual offenders indulge in sexual abuse
of minors abroad, thereby all too frequently escaping any judicial proceedings or
convictions both in the country where such offences are committed and in the state of
which they are nationals.
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For all of the above reasons, there is a need to draw up a
Council of Europe convention providing for the exchange of relevant information and making
provision for previous convictions in one or more member states of the Organisation to be
taken into account by national courts.
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The Assembly therefore recommends that the Committee of
Ministers ask the member states of the Council of Europe:
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to step up the fight against paedophilia:
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by improving prevention, which presupposes special training for
those professionally in contact with children. Persons convicted of paedophilia should be
systematically excluded from such contact;
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by setting up a national file or register of final convictions
for paedophile acts, which is accessible to national and foreign authorities;
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by arranging suitable medical and psychological treatment for
offenders both during imprisonment and during whatever period is deemed necessary after
release to prevent recidivism; this follow-up should include judicial supervision;
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by establishing effective legal co-operation throughout all
Council of Europe member states, in particular by standardising the legal definition of
paedophile offences in order to ensure punishment not just of rape but of all the physical
and psychological offences known to have a devastating effect on the equilibrium of
children;
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lastly, by establishing necessary procedures making punishment of
this behaviour possible in cases where it is perpetrated in "closed communities"
or sects, in some cases with the familys consent;
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to combat the exploitation of children in pornography:
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by following the same recommendations as those set out above for
paedophilia, in particular in respect of magazines, films, cassettes and Internet sites;
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by establishing and incorporating into their domestic
legislation a legal definition of this type of criminal behaviour which takes full account
of the existence of the inalienable rights of minors to respect for their privacy and
their image, including in relations with their family since the latter is not entitled to
determine the enjoyment of this right;
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by refusing to draw a distinction between the private
possession of pornographic pictures and trading in such pictures, since both kinds of
behaviour entail denial of childrens right to respect for their privacy and image.
At most, this distinction may be reflected in a scale of penalties;
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to combat child prostitution:
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by stating unequivocally that prostitution of minors of under 15
years always constitutes rape or sexual abuse and that, even where money has been handed
over, there is a presumption of violence since a child cannot be regarded as a consenting
party;
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by organising conferences with the host countries of "sex
tourism" so as to create a more general awareness that a growth in profits from this
sector will result in the short and medium term in disastrous human and social costs,
including the spread of Aids, the social exclusion of tens of thousands of young people
and the growth of crime centred on procuring, etc.;
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by running training programmes for the social services, the
police and the courts so that they can provide assistance and physical, psychological and
occupational rehabilitation of the young victim;
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by limiting punishment to the clients and all those
(brothel-keepers, travel agents and others) who promote child prostitution, make money
from it and should accordingly be prosecuted, including within their own country, for
aggravated procuring and complicity in rape;
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by taking poverty into account as a factor in child prostitution,
and therefore giving high priority in national aid budgets to improving education and care
provision for children, especially girls who are traditionally subject to social
discrimination, and devoting a higher proportion of GNP year by year to meet the United
Nations targets for international aid, and within such aid giving high priority to
education and care for children;
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by recognising the extent of the growth of child prostitution in
states which have recently converted to the market economy since for children
prostitution is merely a miserable means of survival, which damages their physical health
and jeopardises their psychological equilibrium;
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by organising international judicial and police co-operation
against child prostitution networks, in particular by promoting the exchange of
information;
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to reinforce the prevention and punishment of abuse, including
within the family circle:
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by concentrating primarily on prevention, establishing care and
therapy for abusive families and providing medical and social follow-up for the child and
his or her family;
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by helping to restore the self-image of mistreated children so
that they do not in turn become abusive parents;
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by complementing the sexual education given at school with
information about the responsibilities and constraints of very young parents involved in
caring for new-born children and their needs;
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by arranging for a parent or family member suspected of abuse to
be removed from the family home, pending the outcome of any investigations, rather than
the child, or, in the interest of the child, by arranging for children who have been taken
away from abusive families to be adopted by foster families rather than institutions and,
in particular, encouraging the accommodation of siblings together in stable
"childrens villages", provided that none of the siblings is personally
guilty of abusive conduct;
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by training all professionals who work with children, as well as
doctors and health care professionals, to detect abuse and any signs that may lead to a
suspicion of physical or psychological violence;
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by establishing medical and social services in co-operation with
schools so as to provide children both with an easily accessible ear and an initial place
in which any physical traces can be detected;
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by making a single, free phone number generally available and
making schoolchildren aware of this, so that they can contact qualified doctors or
psychologists who would be authorised, where appropriate, to launch a medical and social
procedure or even a judicial investigation;
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to legislate against incest:
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by giving a legal definition of sexual abuse within the family to
make it possible to punish an offence whose seriousness has been ignored for too long;
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by organising appropriate staff training for the social
services, the police and courts which takes account of the ambivalence which often
surrounds such offences, by working to restore young victims self-image;
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by promoting the exchange of experiences of family therapy;
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to arrange for non-traumatising criminal proceedings, and
appropriate time-limits for bringing legal proceedings:
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by establishing procedures restricting questioning of young
victims to the absolute minimum and by arranging for such questioning to take place in
conditions which reassure children and do not on any account induce in them feelings of
guilt;
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by ensuring that periods of statutory limitation for reporting
any offence by the victims should be long enough to enable victims to take legal action
after reaching the age of majority;
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by allowing child protection organisations to bring an action
in all cases of sexual offences against minors;
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to prevent abusive sterilisation:
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by encouraging persons with parental authority and persons
working in institutions providing care and accommodation to have recourse where the
state of physical or mental health of a minor causes concern lest reproduction entail a
serious risk to their health and/or for their descendants to reversible methods of
contraception;
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by resorting to sterilisation only in exceptional cases, when
reproduction entails particularly serious risks for the minor and/or the minors
descendants, and in these cases to secure the prior authorisation of a judge with
jurisdiction over family matters and/or the protection of individual rights, in addition
to the agreement of the minors legal representatives and a panel of three doctors,
including at least one independent medical expert;
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to eliminate mutilation and discriminatory practices affecting
girls:
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by making a distinction between, on the one hand, the necessary
degree of tolerance or protection of minority cultures and, on the other, blindness to
customs which amount to torture and inhuman and barbaric treatment which the Council of
Europe is committed to eradicating;
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by proclaiming the pre-eminence of the universal principles of
respect for the individual and the individuals inalienable right to
self-determination as well as complete equality between men and women;
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by adopting the position of the World Health Organisation,
Unicef, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and the United
Nations Commission on Human Rights which now treat genital mutilations as torture and call
for their prohibition as well as the prosecution of those who carry them out, in
accordance with the 1989 United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child aimed at
protecting children from sexual violence, and the conclusions of the United Nations
conferences in Cairo in 1994 and Beijing in 1995;
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by declaring contrary to human rights the genital sexual
mutilation of young girls, the practices aimed at controlling virginity of young girls, as
well as the customary marriage of under-age girls, polygamy and repudiation;
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by systematically informing people arriving in any member state
of the Council of Europe from countries where this mutilation of young girls still exists
that these practices are prohibited, whether they benefit from family reunion, are asylum
seekers or refugees;
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by arranging, on the basis of an offence of violence resulting
in mutilation or a specific offence, for the punishment of these acts by prosecuting
offenders and their accomplices, including the parents;
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by arranging for special time-limits enabling victims to bring
actions after they have reached their majority as well as entitling child protection
organisations to bring actions;
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to overcome refusal to provide vital care:
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by passing legislation enabling doctors to decide to hospitalise
children and determine their treatment whenever their health would be endangered by
failure or refusal on the part of the persons exercising parental authority;
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by establishing an offence of non-assistance to a person in
danger in order to make it an offence for persons exercising parental authority to forgo
or refuse care, whenever doing so puts the childs health at risk;
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to introduce international sanctions for abduction with a view to
adoption:
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by uncovering mafia networks which organise trafficking in
new-born babies or young children to supply the international adoption market and which
have no compunction in taking children away from families in the poorest regions of
developing countries;
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by improving transfrontier police and judicial co-operation to
deal with such networks, which also operate across borders;
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by calling on all Council of Europe member states to ratify the
Hague Convention on the Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry
Adoption, opened for signature on 29 May 1993, which to date has been signed by only
thirty-two countries and ratified by only seventeen of the member states of the Hague
Conference on International Private Law;
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by subscribing in this way to provisions which will guarantee
children the right to grow up within their natural family provided that no court has ruled
that the latter is not in a position to fulfil this role and has permanently withdrawn
parental rights, and provided that the family has not given its explicit and informed
consent for the child to be legally adopted in his or her best interests.
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The Assembly invites the Committee of Ministers:
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to exert its influence on the environment which nurtures this
criminal behaviour by drawing up a Council of Europe convention open for signature by
non-member states, aimed at:
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prohibiting the dissemination of paedophile pictures and messages
both in the written press and via new communication and information technologies,
particularly on the Internet;
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harmonising the definition of criminal use of pornographic
pictures of minors, so that possession of, and trade in, such images can be punished;
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co-operating with a view to monitoring and tracking down the
international dissemination of such pictures, whatever the media or technology used and
including encoded communications between private persons;
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making provision to ensure that the encoding of messages between
private persons cannot be designed to hamper checks carried out by the national
authorities responsible for law and order and the application of criminal law;
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to organise judicial co-operation between Council of Europe
member states in order to punish recidivist sex offenders, by drawing up, in conjunction
with the Parliamentary Assembly, a Council of Europe convention setting up a register of
convictions for offences against minors:
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by providing for this register to be placed under the authority
of the President of the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg;
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by giving the President of the European Court of Human Rights
authority to monitor compliance with the convention, in particular as regards
confidentiality, the validity of requests for consultation and application of rules on
amnesty;
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by providing that, for the purpose of compiling the
above-mentioned register, the President of the European Court of Human Rights shall be
notified by the criminal courts of signatory states of all final convictions carrying a
sentence for an offence against a minor as well as ancillary penalties, depending upon the
definition, procedural rules and sentences in force in the state in which the offender is
convicted; and providing also for notification of amnesties and cancellations of
convictions occurring after notification of the original judgment;
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by defining the rules for access to data held in this register,
which may be requested only by:
a court trying an offence or crime against a minor;
any person requesting a certificate to the effect that
his/her name is not listed in the register, where such a certificate is required in order
to apply for a job entailing direct contact with children;
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lastly, by providing for the application of the rules on amnesty
to convictions which have been notified and the subsequent cancellation of entries in the
register set up under the convention, in accordance with the provisions of the criminal
law of the state in which the judgment notified was passed.
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Finally, the Assembly asks the Committee of Ministers to
transmit this recommendation immediately to the Follow-up Conference to the Stockholm
World Congress against Commercial Exploitation of Children, to be held on 28 and 29 April
1998 in Strasbourg.
[1]
Assembly debate on 23 April 1998 (15th Sitting)
(see Doc. 8041, report of the Social, Health and Family Affairs Committee, rapporteur: Mr
About; and Doc. 8076, opinion of the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights,
rapporteur: Mrs Plechatá).
Text adopted by the Assembly on 23 April 1998 (15th Sitting).
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