History

ECPAT UK is the UK national representative of ECPAT International, a global network of children's rights organisations in over 70 countries.

The ECPAT storyECPAT was set up in Bangkok in 1990 as a campaign to End Child Prostitution in Asian Tourism (what ECPAT originally stood for). This initial focus and the desire for global attention on these issues culminated in the World Congress against the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children held in Stockholm, Sweden, 27 – 31 August 1996. The Congress was co-organised by ECPAT, UNICEF and the NGO Group for the Convention on the Rights of the Child. It concluded with the unanimous adoption of the Stockholm Declaration and the Agenda for Action to which 122 States committed themselves to.

At the Congress it was agreed that ECPAT should have a wider mandate encompassing children sexually exploited in pornography and trafficking all over the world. From a campaign focusing on children in Asia it had grown into a global movement. The ECPAT network now consists of over 72 member groups in 65 countries. The Secretariat of ECPAT International is located in Bangkok.

A second follow-up World Congress was held in Yokohama, Japan, in 2001. At this event governments were asked to report on their achievements and also reaffirm promises made at the Stockholm World Congress. The UK Government sent a delegation and reported on new laws and policies introduced since the Stockholm Congress and announced the development of a new National Plan of Action against the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children.

How ECPAT UK began

ECPAT UK was established in 1994 as The Coalition Against Child Prostitution in Tourism with a mandate to campaign against child sex tourism and lobby for laws and policies to protect children and prosecute British nationals who sexually abuse children abroad. In 1997, as a result of these campaigns the UK Government introduced new legislation to prosecute UK nationals for abusing children abroad. The ‘Coalition’ became the UK national representative of the international ECPAT network in 1997 and in July 2004 became a UK registered charity.

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Copyright © ECPAT UK 2012.

Charity number: 1104948. Company Ltd by Guarantee: 5061385.
Grosvenor Gardens House, 35-37 Grosvenor Gardens, London SW1W 0BS.
Tel +44 (0) 20 7233 9887. Fax: +44 (0) 20 7233 9869. info@ecpat.org.uk

 
 

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Latest updates

Anti-Trafficking Monitoring Group assesses trafficking prevention in the UK

The Anti-Trafficking Monitoring Group (ATMG), of which ECPAT UK is a member, has released a new report that examines trafficking prevention in the UK in accordance with the UK Government’s obligations…

Children trafficked for cannabis cultivation need protection not prosecution

1 May 2012
High numbers of children, largely from South East Asia, are trafficked to the UK to work in cannabis farms, robbed of their freedom and subject to violence and hazardous conditions. Therefore,…

Romanian family jailed over trafficking of seven-year-old girl





 
 

Jailed: Traffickers Aurel-Ilie Zlate (l) and Alexandra Oaie (r) (c) Metropolitan Police Service

 
20 April 2012
The jailing of four…

ECPATUK: New training dates added to our Introduction to Child Trafficking course for all practitioners working with children: http://t.co/HVB8JEsO

ECPATUK: RT @DebsBeadle: Just completing Gold Youth Achievement Award with @ECPATUK Youth Group member gaining valuable life skills @UKYouth

ECPATUK: @ECPAT UK Director Christine Beddoe on @BBCLondon949 speaking to @VanessaOnAir about vulnerable Roma children being forced to beg in London

ECPATUK: RT @DebsBeadle: Just completing Gold Youth Achievement Award with @ECPATUK Youth Group member gaining valuable life skills @UKYouth

ECPATUK: @ECPAT UK Director Christine Beddoe on @BBCLondon949 speaking to @VanessaOnAir about vulnerable Roma children being forced to beg in London

ECPATUK: New training dates added to our Introduction to Child Trafficking course for all practitioners working with children: http://t.co/HVB8JEsO

ECPATUK: See how @ECPATUK has contributed to documentaries and programmes on trafficking and exploitation:http://t.co/BGmEVJq5