Extreme poverty, stretched child protection structures and large internal displacements caused by armed conflicts, natural disasters, food insecurity and epidemics puts children at increased risk of sexual exploitation.
This briefing paper has been compiled using information included in the Out of the Shadows Index and the ECPAT Country Overview for the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)(in French), written in collaboration with local partner organisation BNCE-RDC.
The Out of the Shadows Index, developed by the Economist Intelligence Unit, measures how nations are addressing child sexual abuse and exploitation. Data released for the first 60 countries demonstrate that governments, the private sector and civil society need to do more to protect children from sexual violence and meet the commitments they made to Target 16.2 of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.
The Index was calculated by assessing legislation, policies and responses by national governments. It covers critical issues that underpin child sexual exploitation and abuse, including education, reproductive health, victim support, law enforcement and risks from the online world. The Index also addresses environmental factors such as the safety and stability of a country, social protections, and whether norms permit open discussion of the issue. It also focuses on the engagement of businesses in the technology and travel/tourism sectors in fighting child sexual abuse and exploitation.
ECPAT Country Overviews comprehensively present all the existing, publicly available information, and a detailed analysis of the legal framework for the sexual exploitation of children in a country. They provide an assessment of achievements and challenges in implementation, counteractions to eliminate the sexual exploitation of children and they suggest concrete priority actions to advance the national fight against this crime.
According to ECPAT’s Terminology Guidelines, child sexual abuse refers to sexual activities committed against children, by adults or peers and usually involves an individual or group taking advantage of an imbalance of power. Force may be used, with offenders frequently using authority, power, manipulation, or deception.
Child sexual exploitation involves the same abusive actions. However, an additional element must also be present – exchange of something (e.g., money, shelter, material goods, immaterial things like protection or a relationship), or even the mere promise of such.
The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) is ranked 60th out of 60 countries by the Out of the Shadows 2019 Index on the response to child sexual abuse and exploitation, with a score of 26.4. The country is placed at the bottom of the ranking behind Burkina Faso (28.6) and Pakistan (28.6).
DRC’s position on the Index can be explained by several factors, including its incomplete legal, policy and institutional frameworks to prevent and combat the sexual exploitation of children, a lack of hard data on the prevalence of these crimes as well as important practical deficiencies in access to justice and recovery for children who have been subjected to sexual exploitation. DRC’s complex and unstable national environment exacerbates children’s vulnerabilities to these crimes in many ways. For example, extreme poverty, stretched and under-resourced social and legal protection structures and large internal displacements caused by armed conflicts, natural disasters, food insecurity and epidemics – including both COVID-19 and Ebola in recent years.
While limited, some steps towards combating the sexual exploitation of children in DRC deserve attention. For example, in 2019, the government set up a new specialised public body, the Agency for the Prevention and the Fight against Trafficking in Persons, and civil society organisations, though often with extremely limited financial resources, are initiating actions to raise awareness of the sexual exploitation of children, including online.
The Out of the Shadows Index assessed DRC as having an unstable environment, with a score of 36/100 on the instability indicator which looks at a range of social and political risks. Indeed, poor governance underlies the deep and complex humanitarian crises affecting mainly the eastern DRC for decades.
Chronic poverty is a pervasive problem in DRC, which frequently underpins children’s vulnerability to sexual exploitation. In 2018, nearly 73% of the Congolese population lived below the international poverty line. Vulnerability to sexual exploitation for children living in poverty is aggravated by low access to education, child labour and overstretched social protection structures.
Although no official government data exists, nearly 70,000 children were estimated to be in street situations in DRC, according to a 2018 report from the United Cities and Local Governments of Africa. The report indicated that common reasons that children are homeless include bereavement, violence and abuse, accusations of witchcraft and stigmatization regarding disability. To survive, they resort to theft, begging or active participation in their own exploitation through survival sex. Academic and NGO research in DRC has shown that children working near mining areas or as domestic workers are also at risk of being sexually exploited or abused.
DRC has the largest internally displaced population in Africa, amounting to 5.7 million people, including 3.34 million children as of September 2021. The high level of food insecurity across the country is a recurring problem in DRC, with 27.3 million people estimated to be affected from February to July 2021, contributing to such massive internal displacement. The United Nations has reported that internally displaced girls may be forced into harmful survival strategies such as child marriage or sexual exploitation in prostitution.
Child trafficking for sexual purposes and forced marriages are also linked to persistent armed conflict, mainly in eastern DRC and the Kasai region. In 2020, the Kivu Security Tracker counted, in the provinces of North Kivu, South Kivu, Ituri and Tanganyika, nearly 122 armed groups motivated by interethnic rivalries and the control of economic and mineral resources. Such a complex context explains why DRC scored 0/100 for the Index’s indicator on armed conflict.
From January 2018 to December 2020, the UN had identified 763 children, including three boys, who suffered sexual violence committed by armed groups and the national armed forces. Girls abducted or recruited by armed groups were considered vulnerable to trafficking for sexual purposes and forced marriage. The sexual violence against boys recruited by armed groups or in detention is likely to be underestimated due to stigma associated with it and barriers to their accessing of services.
Child, early and forced marriage in DRC remains widespread due to poverty, gender norms and armed conflicts. In 2018, 29% of Congolese women aged 20 to 24 had been married or in an informal union before the age of 18, and 8% of them were married before turning 15. In DRC, child marriages are often religious or traditional unions without civil registration. In 2016, the DRC Family Code was amended to raise the minimum age of marriage for girls from 15 to 18.
Positively, the Criminal Code explicitly criminalises forced marriage but this is limited to instances committed by individuals with parental authority or guardianship over the person concerned, and does not apply to crimes perpetrated by other people such as the members of armed groups. Girls from rural areas and poor households are particularly vulnerable to child, early and forced marriage. To a lesser extent, but still significant, 6% of Congolese men from 20 to 24 years in 2018 also reported being married/in an informal union before they turned 18.
In the context of poverty, families are often forced to misconceive child marriage as a respite from severe financial hardships, including through the customary practice of dowry. Nevertheless, child marriage can simply maintain poverty since it is usually associated with girls discontinuing their education and early pregnancy. In 2018, 52% of teenage girls from the poorest households, within the age eligible for secondary school, were not enrolled. During the COVID-19 pandemic, UNICEF documented an increase in the number of teenage girls forced into marriage in the east of the country after the closure of schools in March 2020. When schools reopened in October 2020, a marked decline in girls’ school attendance was evident.
DRC has ratified the main international and regional instruments on child rights, including the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child. At national level, a set of codes and laws have been adopted on children’s rights and sexual violence. The child protection law adopted in 2009 sets a comprehensive legal framework for children’s rights, and covers some forms of the sexual exploitation of children, but despite its adoption, significant shortcomings remain in the legal framework on this issue. For example, the legal definition of trafficking is not in line with international standards, the criminalization of the sale of children for sexual purposes is not explicitly discernable, and a range of online forms of child sexual exploitation are unaddressed.
There have been promising recent steps in the formal response to trafficking in DRC. In 2019, the Agency for the Prevention and the Fight against Trafficking in Persons, a specialised body within the office of the President of the Republic, was created and developed the first Strategic Plan to combat trafficking in persons (2020-2024). This plan sets guidance to improve institutional cooperation, professional training and the collection of data on trafficking. However, the plan does not directly address child trafficking for sexual purposes.
Furthermore, the law has inadequacies for addressing child trafficking for sexual purposes. To address this crime, prohibitions fragmented across different provisions must be drawn on. In particular, criminal provisions of DRC do not provide a comprehensive definition of what constitutes trafficking of children for sexual purposes that is in line with the international standard set forth by the UN Trafficking Protocol. Moreover, the information available does not allow for assessment of whether and how relevant laws are ever applied by courts in addressing trafficking. Such gaps explain why DRC only scored 0/100 for the legal indicators on the trafficking of girls and boys.
While the Internet penetration rate in DRC is one of the lowest in the world at just 12.5% in 2019, across Africa, Internet use has increased dramatically in recent years with the spread of smartphones. In 2020, there were 45.5 mobile phone subscriptions per 100 DRC inhabitants, almost three times more than in 2009. The 2009 Child Protection Act and the Penal Code criminalize child sexual abuse material, but makes no reference to related conduct (e.g. producing, sharing, possessing) committed in the online environment.
There are also no legal provisions covering other forms of online child sexual exploitation such as the grooming of children for sexual purposes via Internet and communication technology, live streaming of child sexual abuse and online sexual extortion. This context explains why DRC ranked 0/100 on the Index’s indicator on the legislation specific to online grooming.
A draft bill on cybercrime was tabled at the Parliament on 7 February 2020, but no public information was available on its content by October 2021. In addition, in 2018, an online reporting platform for online child sexual abuse, operated by the Internet Watch Foundation, was created. Although currently there is extremely limited data about how DRC children are affected by online child sexual exploitation, the creation of this reporting platform is a step in the right direction.
DRC does not have a national action plan dedicated to combating the sexual exploitation of children, but it has adopted a National Strategy to combat gender-based violence in 2019 and a Strategic Plan to combat trafficking in persons (2020-2024), which cover some forms of sexual exploitation of children. The 2009 law on child protection requires the creation of the National Council for the Child, a body tasked with implementing the national policy on children’s rights, but it was not operational by October 2021.
Children in DRC who are subjected to sexual exploitation face multiple obstacles in accessing justice and recovery support – such as the costs of legal proceedings, few functioning courts throughout the country, ineffective free legal assistance and the absence of public psychosocial support services.
In the DRC, the lack of specialized courts dealing with children prevents them from accessing justice. Indeed, only 16 children’s courts as provided for in the Child Protection Law were operating in 2021. This is particularly problematic for children living in remote areas. In such cases, mobile courts are sometimes set up to deal with civil and criminal cases in remote areas, but their costs remain high.
Children’s access to justice is hampered by economic barriers such as mandatory court fees, including to open a case. The Code of Criminal Procedure provides that free legal aid throughout the justice process should be available after obtaining a “certificate of indigence” which can exempt children from poor households from some of the above fees, but in practice, this exemption is not always offered to victims.
In addition, while there is a “free consultation office” within the bar association of each province, that is responsible for providing free legal advice to victims, these have patchy coverage with limited public funding. Although the 2020 National Strategy to Combat Gender-Based Violence provides for the creation of a fund to support access to justice and legal clinics throughout the country, these measures were not fully operational by October 2021. Thus, legal clinics run by Congolese civil society organizations play a key role, but their action remains constrained by limited financial and human resources.
Finally, Article 69 of the Code of Criminal Procedure only provides for the general possibility for victims to receive compensation to be paid by offenders. However, even in the rare cases where victims are granted compensation by courts, major shortcomings exist in the enforcement of such directives. Hence, DRC scored 0/100 for the indicator on access to financial remedy and reparations, because the government does not have additional compensation schemes to cover situations where offenders are unable to cover costs.
Under the Child Protection Law, children who have experienced sexual exploitation in DRC are entitled to “special protection”, including state guardianship, foster care and other child welfare mechanisms. However, a 2018 assessment by the Bureau International Catholique de l’Enfance stressed that these services are not provided by government. The available services are run by civil society organizations that struggle with funding shortages.
In the absence of publicly managed and funded specialized services to support children who have been subjected to sexual exploitation, some NGOs such as “Female Solidarity for Integrated Peace and Development” or the Panzi Foundation have set up a few “one stop centers” for victims of sexual violence which provide medical, legal, psychosocial and socio-economic assistance in the same venue. However, these services are rare across the country and depend on funding from international donors that can be unpredictable.
Since 2017, the Panzi Foundation has also been implementing the “Save The Girl” project which facilitated the opening of four emergency shelters in Bukavu specifically dedicated to providing legal, psychosocial and socio-economic support to girls aged from 10 to 14 who have been sexually exploited in establishment-based prostitution. In 2018, 37 girls were supported by these shelters. While the recovery services available in the DRC mainly provide assistance to women and girls survivors, the media have reported that in 2020, the hospital of the Panzi Foundation has also supported boys who have suffered from sexual violence and exploitation.
While the role of civil society in DRC is crucial to reach children in need and sensitize communities to the risks of the sexual exploitation of children, NGOs regularly struggle to find the financial resources they need to operate. Moreover, professionals in direct contact with children who have experienced sexual exploitation do not have access to training or guidance. DRC scored 0/100 on the Index’s indicator related to the availability of professional support and guidance for support welfare workers. Rare initiatives exist that partner local media and civil society in sharing knowledge about the sexual exploitation of children.
In DRC, civil society organizations focused on combatting child sexual exploitation struggle with funding limitations that constrain the extent of their awareness-raising and support actions. In December 2020, a roundtable was launched by ECPAT International and the Bureau International Catholique de l’Enfance, enabling discussions among the government and civil society on measures to combat the sexual exploitation of children. Similarly, in March 2020, the African Children and Youth Network for Human Rights organized a workshop aimed at training social workers on the online child sexual exploitation in Bakavu.
Moreover, NGOs are also the sole entities to operate support services for children vulnerable to sexual exploitation. Operating without public funding, the capacity of NGOs is insufficient to meet the needs of all children who have experienced sexual exploitation.
In DRC, local radio programs remain the main channels used by civil society to sensitize communities to children’s rights. In March 2021, the Agency for the Prevention and Fight against Trafficking in Persons launched a training for journalists to increase their knowledge on trafficking and how to sensitively cover these crimes.
The role of the media is a key solution given the low awareness of child sexual exploitation, in particular due to the lack of awareness of relevant legislation and policy. Media in DRC can be instrumental in promoting the public engagement of children, thus, since 2013, UNICEF has been implementing the “Child Reporters” program, in partnership with the Ministry of Gender, Family and Children, through which children produce radio, TV or online contents to sensitize the population on children’s rights issues, including the harm of child marriage. According to UNICEF, from 2013 to 2018, there were 830 child reporters.