Tag: Leena Kejriwal

  • Urgent: Protecting our kids from predators demands immediate awareness

    Urgent: Protecting our kids from predators demands immediate awareness

    Mumbai: In the digital age, the rapid expansion of technology has brought about both unprecedented opportunities and disturbing challenges. One such disconcerting challenge is the emergence of child predators, individuals who exploit the innocence and vulnerability of children for their own sinister motives. Child predators exploit various platforms, from social media networks to online gaming communities, to manipulate and groom young victims into engaging in harmful activities.

    As a society, it is imperative that we confront this grave issue head-on, understanding the methods predators employ and taking collective action to protect our most vulnerable members – our children. In this discussion, we will delve into the unsettling world of child predators, examining their tactics, the impacts on victims and families, and the measures that can be taken to prevent and combat their activities.

    Qissé Films in partnership with MISSING, an NGO working on child trafficking prevention, has released a PSA (Public Service Announcement) that aims to create awareness and drive conversations around child online safety.

    Conceptualized by Qissé Films and MISSING, the film features the narrative of two young children from different backgrounds and how they get exploited by strangers who pose as friends on social media. It showcases how easily they fall prey to online traffickers even from the perceived safety of their homes. The film ends with a cautionary message of introspecting who you are really talking to online. It shockingly reveals that these predators target children as young as nine years and shares a WhatsApp number that can be reached out for anyone seeking help.

    The PSA is supported by NCPCR (National Commission for Protection of Child Rights) and Cyber Peace. It is playing across PVR theatres in the country.

    Indira Aditi Rawat, the director of the film, says, “Having worked with non-profits focused on children for many years, I was clear that the film should avoid sensationalism or melodrama and maintain authenticity. The narrative journey should be simple and show how ordinary conversations can lead to distressing situations for children who are isolated from their parents when spending time on their devices.”

    Luv Kalla and Richa Maheshwari, Founders of Qisse Films, say, “We’ve all had worried conversations about our children spending more and more unsupervised time online. To make the online space safer for our kids, we need to get these conversations out of the living rooms and to the public forums. We at Qissé are glad to be able to create a film and aid MISSING, who are doggedly working to raise awareness, educate and push for policy initiatives to create a safe online environment for our children.”

    Leena Kejriwal, Founder Missing Link Trust and strident advocate for anti-child trafficking and child safety, says “Our children in India face the highest risk of online abuse in the world, with a child being either abused or going missing every 10 minutes. Films play a powerful role in building public awareness, which is the first step in prevention. Qissé’s impactful film will help us prevent online abuse by building awareness about the alarming statistics and beginning a dialogue about the issue with parents, children, schools and the community at large. There is an urgent need for the public to get involved and help build a safer online world for our children.”

    The helpline WhatsApp chat number is 60030 60040, and it aims to provide 24/7 information and assistance to parents and children grappling with this issue.

    Indiantelevision.com in conversation with Leena Kejriwal, Founder – Missing Link Trust on the research done by them, the messaging and much more…..

    On why this messaging is important now

    India unfortunately leads the world in child abuse statistics. Every 10 minutes an Indian child either goes missing or is abused. From 2017-2020, 24 lakh CSAM cases were reported from India. This number increased to 56 lakhs in 2022, registering a six per cent increase from 2021.

    The restrictions of movement and social distancing measures during COVID-19 pushed the whole world and their children online. The children came online way faster than we expected and there was no basic education or systems of digital hygiene and cyber civic sense in place.  A study conducted by McAfee reported that children in India are among the youngest to reach mobile maturity and report the highest exposure to online risks. Children in India aged 10 to 14 appear to adopt mobile more quickly than nearly all their peers worldwide.

    Sex abuse and exploitation have now been recognized as a social issue and then a criminal justice issue. The pandemic caused a further escalation by shifting the abuse from offline to online spaces and left our children vulnerable in their very homes. The need for awareness about the issue amongst the children, parents and society at large is becoming critical, to keep our children safe. MISSING is continuously working to raise awareness to address this alarming social issue of child sexual abuse & exploitation. We have taken up the mission of online child safety, through the public service announcement (PSA). The PSA aims to raise awareness about the perils of child trafficking and educate the public on its prevention. These PSA films will enable us to create a dialogue and to reach our target audience directly.

    The CTA of this film is our Online Child Safety Desk which is a WhatsApp chatbot available at 6003060040, which is created by us for children and parents.

    On Missing garnering info on missing children

    Our founder Leena Kejriwal was drawn to the issue as early as 2000 and for over a decade she worked with friends and NGOs in the red-light district like Urmi Basu of New Light in Kalighat, Srabani Roy of South Kolkata Humari Muskaan in Bowbazar and others. It was years of engagement that made her realize the importance of public engagement. The public which is the most important stakeholder in the issue, was far away from most of the anti-trafficking conversations. Since then, she has been working with experts- educationists, cyber security experts and child rights experts who understand the depth of the issue and its nuances.

    Since we started the Missing Awareness and Safety School program (MASSp) in 2018, we have had direct conversations with students, parents, teachers and caregivers and realized that we have garnered many insights from our interactions and research with them. Our M&E gives us deep insights into the choices children make and what drives them to risqué behaviour.

    On the PVR collaboration

    Missing started as a public art campaign and public advocacy has been a crucial agenda for all our work. We created our first PSA in 2016. We have an award-winning game and comics, and we are constantly looking at reaching our target audiences through our multiple assets. PVR collaboration is the next most natural direction for engaging the public because anybody from a 10-year-old to an 80-year-old is PVR INOX’s target audience, including children, young adults, parents, caregivers, guardians and every member of society. Hence a PVR cinema space is a powerful space for raising mass awareness. PVR INOX Cinemas with its 17000 halls and access to 20 million viewers will help in taking the PSA to its target beneficiaries – the public.

    On the film being screened on all PVR screens and the message reaching to larger audience

    Stop Online Stalkers (#SOS) needs all the help it can get to be prompted on every screen and in conversation. There is no issue more urgent as our children’s online safety needs to be prioritized. This cannot be done by just one section of the community. It has to be a collective effort of multiple stakeholders who have access to the public screen. Parents, schools, cyber safety officials, policymakers, the government and most important of all, the public. You and me. We need to join hands on child safety and the #SOS campaign.

    On Missing talking to schools and parents to educate them on how to ensure the safety of their children in cyberspace

    Our motto is why wait for a child to be trafficked to save them. We work on prevention. The first step to prevention is education and awareness. We have been conducting our Missing Awareness and Safety School program (MASSp) since 2017. We conduct it for adolescents from the age group of 13-18 and the entire program is one of its kind, audio visual, geography agnostic and all our assets are embedded within it. We talk about cybersafety within our program.

    Within our #SOS campaign too, we have the #SOS Forum which is ongoing right now in cities across the country, where students are engaging in dialogues with us, other issue experts, policy makers, cyber safety officials and government agencies. Concerned parents are invited to join #SOSMums and raise their awareness as well as their voices on this issue on social media.

  • MPL launches #SaveOurMissingGirls campaign, teams up with Missing Link Trust for a role play game

    MPL launches #SaveOurMissingGirls campaign, teams up with Missing Link Trust for a role play game

    Mumbai: Mobile and skill gaming platform (MPL), in collaboration with Missing Link Trust, has launched a campaign called #SaveOurMissingGirls to raise awareness about human trafficking. The campaign was announced on the eve of the United Nations’ World Day against Trafficking in persons. It aims to spread awareness of the dark world of human trafficking through a role-playing game.

    As a part of this week-long campaign starting on 30 July, MPL has invited people to take a pledge by giving a missed call to the number 9099306000 and show their support towards ending this menace that impacts millions of lives every year.

    Human trafficking is the second largest organised crime in the world and the numbers are alarmingly increasing across the world and in India. According to a Dasra report, nearly 1827 women are trafficked every hour on an average in India, resulting in almost 16 million women being victims of sex trafficking every year. 40 per cent of these victims are adolescents and children.

    The UN’s theme this year for World Day Against Human Trafficking is ‘use and abuse of technology’ in human trafficking, and MPL has chosen gamification as the technology-led path to sensitise the general public and potential victims about human trafficking and ways to prevent it.

    Missing, developed by Missing Link Trust, an NGO which combines art and technology to create mass awareness around sex trafficking, was onboarded on MPL recently. The interactive game, wherein the gamer assumes the role of a trafficked girl in India, is designed to allow players to experience what a missing person goes through when she is trafficked into the inhumane and cruel world of prostitution, a world into which millions of girls are lost every year. Gamers have to make smart choices at each step of the game to be able to get out of the trap set by traffickers.

    MPL country head for India Namratha Swamy said, “Technology has a big role to play in the prevention of human trafficking, and we believe online gaming can be an interesting way to sensitise people and raise awareness about eradicating human trafficking. One of the key objectives of the #SaveOurMissingGirls campaign is to use games to make more people alert. We have received an overwhelming response from MPL’s users to Missing ever since its launch on our platform.”

    “The Missing game comes under the genre of ‘Games for Change’ by tackling the first ‘P for Prevention’ of the United Nation’s four Ps against trafficking. We think this campaign, along with our collaboration with the MPL platform, with a strong 90 million, will be a game-changer in ensuring a wide reach for the game and making millions of people aware of the menace,” said Missing Link Trust founder Leena Kejriwal.

    Several celebrities and influencers such as Durjoy Datta, Ravinder Singh, and Trendulkar have extended their support to the campaign by joining the conversation on social media. NGOs like CyberPeace Foundation, Impulse, and Digital Empowerment Foundation, among others, also supported the initiative to show their solidarity towards the cause.