Child trafficking in Belgium claims around hundred victims per year

Representatives from NGOs Sürya, PAG-ASA, and Payoke, alongside Belgian Justice Minister, Paul Van Tigchelt and UNODC and IOM representatives,

Inge Saris, Director, Payoke, speaking at the Blue Heart campaign launch in Antwerp, Belgium

“Most children are not ‘saved’, instead they fight to escape their situation. Payoke provides medical care, psychosocial and legal support to minors until they are independent and legal procedures are complete,” Saris continues.

Payoke uses risk assessment tools, hotlines, and training programmes to identify at-risk minors early.

Sürya intervenes early by working with front-line services to support sexually exploited children and youth, while PAG-ASA focuses on administrative and legal support for children, administrative and legal support, providing accommodation and psychosocial support once they reach adulthood.

As one of the minors explained to the juvenile judge: “My supervisor is an additional conscience, a sounding board where I can always go for advice. The continuity at Payoke was one of the most important protective factors that helped me escape that environment.”

 

National and international partnerships

Payoke, Sürya, and PAG-ASA work closely with each other and with local authorities, police services and ChildFocus, a Belgian foundation supporting missing children.

“ChildFocus directs both young people and parents to our service. Youth support or protection services as well as magistrates and police services can contact us 24/7,” notes Christian Meulders, Sürya’s Director.

The three organisations are part of the “national reorientation mechanism”, coordinated by the Belgian Justice Ministry, and partner with the police, social inspection, the public prosecutor’s service and the Immigration Office.

Payoke and PAG-ASA collaborate with LaStrada International, addressing trafficking in Europe, while Sürya provides training in Luxembourg.

 

Make human trafficking visible

The Smurfs are official partners of the campaign to help raise awareness

As part of UNODC’s Blue Heart Campaign, over 20 Belgian cities will illuminate town halls in blue on 30 July, and Brussels statue, Manneken Pis, will wear a tailor-made costume. The Belgian campaign promotes a multilingual website “stop human trafficking” and a hotline (078 055 800) for trafficking victims to get information or contact specialised centers.

“Many child victims are not yet reported,” warns PAG-ASA’s Director De Hovre. “More awareness-raising is needed by the Belgian federal and regional authorities

Sürya Director Meulders calls for “genuine commitment to addressing sexual exploitation through national campaigns.”

 

Urgent needs

Stable funding, comprehensive research, partner training, and targeted policies are crucial. Investments in shelters to prevent child trafficking are essential.

“These children need a safe place away from the networks and people who exploited them, away from their smartphones and social networks that risk plunging them back into exploitation,” De Hovre concludes.

 

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Source link : https://unric.org/en/child-trafficking-in-belgium-a-challenge-to-tackle/

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Publish date : 2024-07-29 07:00:00

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