ITB Berlin 2011 Campaigns for the Protection of Children's Rights
ITB Berlin is campaigning to protect children against sexual exploitation in tourism information on protection measures available to exhibitors and visitors code of conduct to be signed on Friday, 11 March 2011
Children represent our future. ITB Berlin is campaigning for their rights and will sign a code of conduct pledging to protect children against sexual exploitation in tourism (Child Protection Code). In 1998, the international organization for the protection of children, ECPAT (End Child Prostitution, Pornography and Trafficking of Children) co-authored the Child Protection Code in Sweden, together with Scandinavian tour operators and UNTWO. To date more than 947 tour operators, tourism organizations and their corresponding umbrella organizations, as well as hotel chains in 37 countries have signed this document. Queen Silvia of Sweden has also given her support to this code of conduct for the protection of children. Dr. Martin Buck, Director of the Competence Center Travel and Logistics, Messe Berlin, will sign this document in the ICC, Saal 6, at 11 a.m. on Friday, 11 March.
Members of ITB Berlin have drawn up a joint action plan to ensure compliance with the provisions of the Child Protection Code, which contains short and long-term measures. The focus is on activities at ITB Berlin which will inform its exhibitors and visitors and which will call upon them to protect children’s rights.
“This is mainly about our responsibility towards society, which we are aware of and accept. We wish to communicate this message throughout the industry, for as the leading travel trade show we also consider ourselves to be a leading voice. We would like our efforts to contribute towards ending the exploitation of children“, said Dr. Martin Buck, explaining the need for the Child Protection Code.
The signatories of the Child Protection Code pledge to put the following measures into practice: to introduce a corporate philosophy opposed to the commercial sexual exploitation of children; to make workers sensitive to this issue and to instruct them accordingly; to incorporate provisions in agreements with service providers expressly rejecting the sexual exploitation of children; to provide customers with information on the sexual exploitation of children and on implemented measures; to cooperate with travel destinations and to deliver an annual report to ECPAT on the measures which have been put into practice.
TheCode, a registered organization, was co-founded by ECPAT, UNICEF and UNWTO and is based in New York. TheCode has introduced clear guidelines and reporting procedures to ensure compliance with the provisions of the Child Protection Code. National ECPAT organizations support and closely monitor implementation of the Child Protection Code by the tourism companies who have signed the agreement.
ECPAT (End Child Prostitution, Pornography and Trafficking) is part of an international network based in Bangkok in Thailand which has 84 affiliated national organizations. The aim of this international organization for the protection of children’s rights is to combat child pornography, child prostitution and child trafficking and to heighten public awareness of children’s rights everywhere in the world. ECPAT’s aim is to ensure children’s rights are respected and observed, as laid down in the UN Children’s Rights Convention and its additional protocols.
ECPAT Germany is a strong alliance that opposes the sexual exploitation of children. In 2002, 29 organizations, aid schemes and information centres combined to form ECPAT Germany, which is making every effort to ensure that children can grow up free from the risk of sexual exploitation.
A working group which meets regularly and comprises DRV, BTW, Rewe Touristik, TUI, Studiosus, Thomas Cook, the Police Crime Prevention Group of the Federal States and of the German government, Tourism Watch, ECPAT, and ITB Berlin, monitors compliance with the provisions of the Child Protection Code.
Dr. Martin Buck: “ITB Berlin is very pleased to be undertaking concrete efforts to protect children’s rights as with immediate effect. The world’s largest tourism trade show sees it as an obligation and as part of its corporate social responsibility to take an active stand on this issue.“ Information on ITB Corporate Social Responsibility is available at http://www.itb-berlin.de/csr.