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Keeping children safe from online sexual exploitation

Wednesday, March 06, 2013   by: SooToday.com Staff

OPP NEWS RELEASE

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Keeping children safe from online sexual exploitation

Ontario Provincial Police making sure that parents and teachers have access to important resources

ELLIOT LAKE - Children and youth are increasingly living out a large proportion of their daily lives online - whether using technology to communicate with friends, seek entertainment, or learn and broaden their knowledge about the world around them. 

However, just like the offline world, parents and teachers need to be fully aware of the risks children and youth may encounter while using the Internet. 

The Provincial Police (OPP) wants Ontarians to know about the comprehensive Internet safety resources and tools available through the Canadian Centre for Child Protection. 

These tools are there to help parents (and teachers) make sense of the challenges with raising children and youth in an ever-changing technological world.

“In this ever-changing technological world, children and youth are able to connect to the Internet with relative ease, exposing them to risks and harms that can be difficult to keep up with,” says Inspector Scott Naylor, Manager, OPP Child Sexual Exploitation Unit. “The protection of children online is all of our responsibility. The Canadian Centre for Child Protection resources provide parents, educators and communities with current information about children’s online activities and what we can do to make the Internet a safer place for our children and youth.”


The Canadian Centre for Child Protection, a national charitable organization dedicated to the personal safety of all children, will be launching new e-parenting safety sheets addressing issues and concerns parents may be facing right now with regard to their adolescent’s online safety.

This includes valuable information on protecting youth from online luring, the growing issue of sexting, as well as how to talk to your child about healthy relationships and appropriate boundaries.

“We all have an important role to play in the online protection of children,” says Lianna McDonald, executive director, Canadian Centre for Child Protection. “We know that for parents and teachers it can be hard to even know where to begin - and this is why, in partnership with the OPP, we want to make sure that Canadians are aware of the important educational resources we have to offer to better protect children.”

Recognizing that educators also play a critical role when it comes to teaching children important personal safety strategies that will help reduce online victimization, the Canadian Centre will also be distributing over a million Internet safety materials to schools across Canada free-of-charge.

The OPP also encourages parents and teachers alike to visit The Door That’s Not Locked website, a comprehensive resource with age-specific Internet safety information.

This includes material about the online activities that are popular with children of different age groups, the potential risks children face when using certain technologies and safety strategies to address those concerns.

About the Canadian Centre for Child Protection

The goal of the Canadian Centre for Child Protection (www.protectchildren.ca) is to reduce child victimization by providing programs and services to the Canadian public.

Its four national programs include Cybertip.ca Canada’s tipline to report the online sexual exploitation of children; MissingKids.ca, a national missing children resource and response centre; Kids in the Know, an interactive child personal safety program for children in Kindergarten to Grade 9; and Commit to Kids, a program to help child-serving organizations create safer environments for the children in their care and reduce their risk of sexual abuse.

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Note: Comments that appear on the site are not the opinion of SooToday.com. Keep discussions civil and on topic. Refrain from obscenity and don't post anything that your grandmother would be ashamed to read. Those who do not abide by these guidelines will have their membership revoked without notice. If you see an abusive post, please click the link beside the post to report it.
crashed13 3/6/2013 12:00:14 PM Report

Never seen someone reach through the computer screen and sexually assault someone before.

Once a kids age 12 the hope is there brain will kick in to prevent things like this.
Bad Dawg 3/6/2013 12:13:44 PM Report

they want us to protect against exploitation.... its still assault.
tcowen 3/6/2013 3:17:28 PM Report

Internet & Ritalin do not make for very good baby sitters..
bigG47 3/6/2013 3:47:58 PM Report

Crashed13 . . . You should engage your brain , BEFORE you open your mouth! Apparently, you are still crashed!
newcon 3/6/2013 9:53:09 PM Report

Pardon my intestinal effervesance. How can we say that we're trying to protect our children when we as a country violate the sanctity of marriage by permitting same sex unions and encourage same sex entanglement???Can't people see the long term reprecussions that this deviant scourge will have on our children? And if anybody thinks for one moment that this backwards lifestyle is not the new liberal/progressive agenda then they are not paying attention to what is happening out there. Get that vote from all special interest "MINORITY" groups regardless of moral principle or lack thereof.
43kidsandgrowing 3/7/2013 11:19:12 PM Report

Are you kidding. Sorry to say this...but CHILDREN SHOULDN'T BE ON THE INTERNET IN THE FIRST PLACE. Children shouldn't have a cell phone, an I-pod or access to the internet in any way, at their leisure in the first place. It's the parents fault. Where are your heads at??? Duh!!!
Comments
6
Please sign in to post a response
Note: Comments that appear on the site are not the opinion of SooToday.com. Keep discussions civil and on topic. Refrain from obscenity and don't post anything that your grandmother would be ashamed to read. Those who do not abide by these guidelines will have their membership revoked without notice. If you see an abusive post, please click the link beside the post to report it.
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