
President
Bush has ratified the Optional Protocol to the Convention
on the Rights of the Child on the Sale of Children, Child
Prostitution and Child Pornography 2000.
On
25 May 2000, acting without a vote, the United Nations
General Assembly adopted the Optional Protocol to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child on the Sale of
Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography, which
requires State Parties to prohibit these activities. Each
State party is required to ensure the full coverage of
certain acts and activities under its criminal or penal
law, whether the offences are committed domestically or
transnationally, or on an individual or organized basis.
The offences include, among other things, offering,
delivering or accepting a child for the purpose of sexual
exploitation, transfer of its organs for profit, or its
engagement in forced labor, and producing, distributing,
disseminating, or possessing child pornography.
The
Optional Protocol requires State Parties to prohibit the
sale of children, child prostitution and child
pornography.
According to the Optional Protocol, “sale of children”
is any act or transaction whereby a child is transferred
by any person or group to another for remuneration or any
other consideration. “Child prostitution” means the
use of a child in sexual activities for remuneration or
any other form of consideration. “Child pornography”
is any representation, by whatever means, of a child
engaged in real or simulated explicit sexual activities or
any representation of a child’s sexual parts for
primarily sexual purposes.
Each
State Party is also required to ensure the full coverage
of certain acts and activities under its criminal or penal
law, whether the offences are committed domestically or
transnationally, or on an individual or organized
basis. The offences include: offering, delivering or
accepting, by whatever means, a child for the purpose of
sexual exploitation of the child, transfer of its organs
for profit, or its engagement in forced labor; and
improperly inducing consent, as an intermediary, for the
adoption of a child in violation of the applicable
international legal instruments on adoption. Other
offences include offering, obtaining, procuring or
providing a child for child prostitution; and producing,
distributing, disseminating, importing, exporting,
offering, selling or possessing child pornography for the
above purposes.