Children remind peers about online safety
Adhering to local
hygiene protocols and social distancing, children in some World Vision
communities in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao gathered to teach and learn about
online safety to prevent online abuses and sexual exploitation of children.
Using the hashtag
term “#MayForeverOnline”, children and youth leaders led the orientation about
online safety, reminding their peers to be extra careful when posting
information on the Internet and social media.
“The
#MayForeverOnline campaign is our way of reaching out and telling other
children and youth to be extra careful when posting information online because
anything we post online are there forever even if we deleted them from our
social media pages,” Francis, 21, World Vision’s
National Children’s Federation president, explains referring to the digital
footprints that leave trails on the Internet which can be used by other people
to steal personal information and take advantage of a child.
The children’s
campaign is in response to the growing population of Internet users in the
country. According to the Dateportal.com report entitled “Digital 2021: The
Philippines”, there are 73.91 million Internet and 89 million social media
users in the Philippines.
The same report also
showed that Filipinos spend an average of 4 hours and 15 minutes on social
media, making the Philippines as the top country with the most time spent on
the internet and social media. The leased obsessed with social media are the
Japanese, spending only 51 minutes online on average.
The growing trends in
social media usage also pose risks to children. A report of the International
Justice Mission (IJM), an international organization that protects
people in poverty from violence, showed the Philippines with 237 new referred cases of
online sexual exploitation of children (OSEC) between 2010-2017 compared with
three other leading countries: Mexico with 27 referred cases, Brazil with 19,
and India with 18. The country also has the largest known source of sexually
exploited children online.
IJM, World Vision and Compassion International,
another Christian child-focused organization, are currently working together to
prevent and end sexual exploitation of Filipino children in an advocacy
campaign called It Takes a World to End Online Sexual Exploitation of Children.
The main highlight of #MayForeverOnline campaigns are
the creative ways children answered two major questions: “What are the things
you don’t want to remain online forever?” and “What advice would you give to
other children about online safety?”
Children’s groups answered the questions in slogans,
games and colorful posters. In one slogan, a group of children reminded
everyone that “Children are not dolls. They have dignity and feelings to
preserve.” The children’s group from Bukidnon calls to stop malicious content
about children that are being posted online.
Another group of children from Leyte reminded other
children to be aware of children and youth are posting online to avoid being
cyberbullied. “Never post negative comments to avoid being bullied online,” the
children’s written reminder states.
A group of children from Camarines Norte, likewise,
wrote similar reminders, and advised children to “Treat Internet as Internet
not as diary.”
The National Children’s Month is held in the
Philippines every November. The month-long celebration commemorates the
country’s adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child by the United
Nations General Assembly in November 1989.
To know more about World
Vision, please visit https://www.worldvision.org.ph. You may also follow /worldvisionph on
Facebook and @worldvisionphl on Instagram for updates.
Comments
Post a Comment
Leave a comment