Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Abolishing Slavery and its Contemporary Forms
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- F. Prostitution
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Abolishing Slavery address such trafficking. The “sale of children” is defined as “any act or transaction whereby a child is transferred by any person or group of persons to another for remuneration or any other consideration”. 168 States are required to ensure that “offering, delivering or accepting, by what- ever means, a child for the purpose of: (a) sexual exploitation of the child; (b) transfer of organs of the child for profit; (c) engagement of the child in forced labour;” and “offering, obtaining, procur- ing or providing a child for child prostitution” are made criminal offences whether they are “committed domestically or transnationally or on an individual or organized basis”. 169 The scope of the Optional Protocol is therefore wider than that of the Trafficking Protocol, since it covers the trafficking of children within domestic borders and by individuals. In terms of providing protection for children who have been trafficked or otherwise abused, the provisions of the Optional Protocol go significantly further than those of the Trafficking Protocol, since it recognizes “the vulnerability of child victims” and requires States parties to adopt “procedures to recognize their special needs, including their special needs as witnesses” 170 and to provide “in appropriate cases, for the safety of child victims, as well as that of their families and witnesses on their behalf, from intimidation and retaliation”. 171 However, these comprehensive protection provisions are applicable only if the child is participating in the criminal justice process as a witness. 172 For example, article 8(d) only requires appropriate support services to be provided to child victims “throughout the legal process”. F. Prostitution 93. Prostitution takes various forms and involves women, children and also men. As noted in the previous section, it is very closely related to trafficking. The Suppression of Traffic Convention requires States to punish “any person who, to gratify the passions of another . . . procures, entices or leads away, for purposes of prostitution, another person . . . [or] otherwise exploits the prosti- tution of another person” (art. 1 (1) and (2)). The prohibition refers both to cases in which the pros- titute is subjected to some form of coercion and to acts carried out “with the consent of that per- son” (art. 1(2)). 173 94. International instruments do not contain a definition of prostitution, though it is most com- monly interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, that is “any sexual act offered for reward or profit”. The Suppression of Traffic Convention makes it clear that the reference to prostitution includes men practising prostitution, as well as women and children under the age of 18. The act 167 See, for example, Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development, chapter I, resolution I, annex, principle 11, United Nations document A/CONF.171/13 (1994) (stating that “all States . . . should give the highest possible priority to children” and that “[t]he child has the right to standards of living adequate for its well-being . . . and to be protected . . . from all forms of physical or mental violence . . . maltreatment or exploi- tation, including sale, trafficking, sexual abuse and trafficking in its organs”); Final Report of the World Congress against Commercial Exploitation of Children (1997) (considering the scope of the problem of child trafficking and measures that could be adopted to combat the problem); see also Report of the Special Rapporteur on the sale of children, child pros- titution and child pornography, United Nations document E/CN.4/1997/95 (1997) (following the World Congress, pro- posing that “consultation and information services . . . be established in countries of origin as a preventative measure for children likely to fall victim to trafficking”); General Assembly resolution 51/66 of 31 January 1997, Traffic in Women and Girls. 168 Optional Protocol on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography, supra note 150, art. 2. 169 Ibid., art. 3. In addition, article 3(a)(ii) includes “Improperly inducing consent, as an intermediary, for the adoption of a child in violation of applicable international legal instruments on adoption” as another act in the context of the sale of children that should be made criminal under the Optional Protocol. 170 Ibid., art. 8(1)(a). 171 Ibid., art. 8(1)(f). 172 Ibid., art. 8. 173 See also International Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic of Women of Full Age, League of Nations Treaty Series, vol. 150, p. 431; entered into force on 24 August 1934, art. 1 (similarly banning traffic in women “even with [their] own consent”). |
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