News

Sexual abuse: Safeguarding campaign after huge spike in self-generated images during lockdown

Online predators are specifically targeting pre-pubescent children – aged from around seven to 13 – and bullying, grooming, deceiving or exhorting them into producing and sharing sexual images or videos.

Self-generated images and videos accounted for almost half of the online child sexual abuse material reported to the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) last year. Covid-19 lockdowns have led to a huge spike in incidents.

The IWF works internationally to find and remove child sexual abuse content from the internet and has issued a stark warning after around 68,000 of the 153,369 reports in 2020 involved images and videos taken by the victims themselves.

What is more, this figure represents a 77 per cent increase since 2019, when the IWF reported 38,400 cases of self-generated images.

The analysis from the IWF raises particular concerns for girls aged 11 to 13, who were involved in more than 55,000 of the 68,000 cases of self-generated images and videos. There were also 8,231 cases of self-generated imagery involving seven to 10-year-olds.

Register now, read forever

Thank you for visiting SecEd and reading some of our content for professionals in secondary education. Register now for free to get unlimited access to all content.

What's included:

  • Unlimited access to news, best practice articles and podcast

  • New content and e-bulletins delivered straight to your inbox every Monday and Thursday

Register

Already have an account? Sign in here