COM/2006/0367

Children's rights form an integral part of the human rights that the EU is bound to respect under the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and its Optional Protocols, the Millennium Development Goals and the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR). In addition, the EU explicitly recognised children's rights in the European Charter of Fundamental Rights.

Children's rights are still far from being generally respected, and there are still cases of basic childhood needs not being met, such as the right to an adequate diet, basic medical care and education. Moreover, many children are put to forced labour, are victims of human trafficking, or are involved in armed conflicts as child soldiers.

The specific problems found in the EU include social exclusion of Roma children, child trafficking, child pornography on the Internet, and the administering to children of drugs not previously subjected to specific tests.

Building on its long-standing tradition and commitment with regard to human rights in general and children's rights in particular, the EU has the necessary weight to push children's rights to the forefront of the international agenda and to encourage specific attention to children's needs, drawing on Europe's values of social protection and on the other programmes it is implementing.

In this document, the European Commission proposes a strategy for protecting the rights of the child within the framework of the EU's internal and external policies. This strategy is based on the following specific objectives:

taking advantage of existing policies and instruments;
establishing the priorities of future EU action;
systematically taking the rights of the child into account in all EU external and internal policies ("mainstreaming");
ensuring efficient coordination and consultation mechanisms;
reinforcing competence and expertise on the rights of the child;
communicating more effectively on the rights of the child;
promoting the rights of the child in the field of external relations.

In order to attain these objectives, this strategy envisages a number of measures, namely:

setting up one single six-digit telephone number (beginning with 116) within the EU for child helplines, as well as a number for a hotline dedicated to missing and sexually exploited children;
support for the banking sector and credit card companies in combating the use of credit cards when purchasing sexual images of children on the Internet;
launching an Action Plan on Children in Development Cooperation;
publication of a consultation document with a view to identifying actions to be implemented in the future;
setting up a European Forum for the Rights of the Child and an online discussion platform;
involving children in the decision-making process;
development of a communication strategy on the rights of the child, helping both children and their parents to improve their knowledge of these rights.

The Commission is committed to allocating the resources needed for the measures proposed in this Communication and for future strategy. A progress report will be presented every year.

Date: 
Tuesday, 04 July 2006
Document Type: 
Regional Instruments
Document Title: 
Communication from the Commission - Towards an EU strategy on the rights of the child