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Informativa ai sensi dell’art. 13 del Codice in materia di protezione dei dati personali
I Tuoi dati personali saranno da noi trattati manualmente, con mezzi informatici e telematici per per iscrivere il tuo indirizzo e-mail alla nostra newsletter (trattamento che necessita del Tuo consenso), che ti informerà sulle nostre attività, sulle campagne in corso, sui nuovi progetti e sulle iniziative a sostegno dell’infanzia e adolescenza. Inoltre, con il tuo espresso consenso, potrai ricevere tali informazioni anche sul tuo numero di telefono cellulare, via SMS. Per il ricevere la newsletter via e-mail è strettamente necessario il conferimento dei dati nel modulo di iscrizione in homepage; il mancato rilascio di tali informazioni rende impossibile l´iscrizione alla newsletter. I dati non saranno diffusi né trasferiti all’estero. Infine, Ti ricordiamo che per far valere i Tuoi diritti previsti dall’articolo 7 del Decreto Legislativo 30 giugno 2003, n. 196 (tra i quali, Ti ricordiamo il diritto di accesso ai dati, il diritto di aggiornamento, rettifica o cancellazione dei Suoi dati, oppure il diritto di opporsi al trattamento dei dati) oppure per modificare i consensi rilasciati, puoi rivolgerti al Titolare del Trattamento, scrivendo a SOS il Telefono Azzurro Onlus, Ufficio Privacy, per posta all’ indirizzo di Viale Monte Nero 6 – 20135 Milano, oppure via e-mail all’indirizzo info@116-000.it.

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Prevention

When a child is missing: prevention and safety education

When a child is missing, the public opinion soon starts asking a long list of questions on how quick the identification photos are displayed, on the timeliness of the search for a missing child on the territory, on the coordination among the police force, on the strictness of the convictions for the person responsible for such a violence and yet on the support given to the victim.

However, dealing with missing children does not mean just “finding” a missing one. Today, is more and more obvious and shareable at an international level that the phenomenon of the missing children and teenagers can and has to be prevented. That is why one should do the utmost, even in the light of the often dramatic consequences that a child experiences when he is removed from his family.

In order to understand how parents and the most important point of reference can help a child to feel safe it is necessary to clear the ground from some of the commonplaces.

Video 116000

Missing Children Europe

[media id=6 width=470 height=353]

The network of Missing Children Europe

Missing Childre Europe

Missing Children Europe (MCE) is the European Federation for Missing and Sexually Exploited Children.As an umbrella organisation, it represents 28 Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) active in 19 Member States of the European Union and Switzerland. All MCE Members deal with cases of missing and/or sexually exploited children at grass-root level, and work in the field of prevention and support for victims and their families. Telefono Azzurro is a member of this Federation, and works with the network of organizations that are part of it.

Story

The formal creation of the Federation took place in 2001 in the European Parliament in the presence of its President Nicole Fontaine and European Commission Vice-President António Vitorino. These two EU institutions acknowledged from the beginning the added value of a Europe-wide network representing Non-Governmental Organisations working on a nationalor regional level to tackle child disappearance and sexual exploitation in all its forms.

Mission

The overall mission of MCE is to:

  • ensure that in every EU Member State, the basic requirements in dealing with missing and sexually exploited children are met;
  • stimulate European and transnational cooperation to cope with the growing cross-border nature of the problem;
  • extend the level of its Members’ activities to a highly standardised operational level;
  • assist its Members in dealing with national authorities to achieve speedy, efficient and accurate implementation of binding
    European legislation in relation to missing and sexually exploited children.

In order to fulfill its mission, the General Secretariat of Missing Children Europe undertakes all activities necessary to:

  • share best practices among its Members;
  • develop European tools to combat the disappearance
    and sexual exploitation of children;
  • cooperate with the Washington-based International Centre
    for Missing and Exploited Children (ICMEC) and with any
    other relevant international organisation.

Missing Children Europe promotes full respect for, and compliance with, the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and takes
Articles 6, 9 and 34 as the relevant framework for its activity.

 

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