FTTSA calls for enhanced child protection strategy in relation to 2010

South Africa’s preparations to host the 2010 FIFA World Cup are well underway, with just under 400 days to go until the opening whistle blows. To date, the nation’s preparations have focused largely on infrastructure development and debates as to “who will benefit” economically from this important mega-event.

Accordingly, the South African government has initiated programmes to leverage 2010 opportunities for small, medium and micro enterprises (SMMEs) and to share financial gains with neighbouring countries including Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia and Swaziland.

“Yet South Africa’s plans to host the 2010 FIFA World Cup have yet to take into account, in any serious manner, the extent to which this massive event poses threats to vulnerable groups, most notably children,” says Jennifer Seif, the Executive Director of Fair Trade in Tourism South Africa (FTTSA).

FTTSA is South Africa’s leading sustainable tourism development and advocacy organization, providing technical assistance to government and the private sector through awareness raising, capacity building and the facilitation of the world’s first – and still only – tourism Fair Trade certification programme.

A study commissioned in 2008 by Molo Songololo, a Cape Town-based child advocacy organization, indicates a number of child risk factors associated with the 2010 FIFA World Cup, including:

  • Increased demand for child labour within South Africa, associated with souvenir selling, busking, domestic work in accommodation establishments and accelerated informal trading during the event;
  • Increased risks to street children, particularly in host cities Cape Town, Port Elizabeth, Durban and Johannesburg;
  • Increased demand for sex work including commercial sexual exploitation of children. This includes 2010 visitors who may inadvertently transact sex with minors (“situational offenders”);
  • Risks associated with school closures: many South African children who will be “unattended” during the event will likely flock to Fan Parks where an estimated 20 million fans are expected. Alcohol sales and lack of night transport are risks to children.
  • A spike in human trafficking associated with flexible border control intended to make it easy for tourists to enter and exit South Africa during the event. South African children are at risk of being trafficked within or out of South Africa, whereas children from the southern African region are at risk of being trafficked in/via South Africa, which is an internationally recognized trafficking “hot spot”.

“These risk factors are not self-evident,” says Seif. “Although school closures are intended to decrease traffic on South African roads during the event and make matches accessible to South African youth, an unintended consequence is that hundreds of thousands of school children may be more vulnerable to exploitation.”

FTTSA, along with leading child protection organisations, has called for an integrated approach to child protection during the FIFA 2010 World CupTM. This would include:

  • A public awareness campaign stressing the associated risks for children and the need to make protecting children “everyone’s business”;
  • Concerted training of law enforcement, volunteers and immigration officials;
  • A 24-hour call centre to manage reporting of exploitative behaviour as well as to provide assistance to victims of exploitation. This would entail building the capacity of existing call centres that do not currently operate on a 24-hour and/or national basis;
  • Empowering children at risk – so they know their rights and know how/where to report criminal or coercive behaviour.

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Article By Muzi Mohale
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