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ETA partners with local NGOs, childâprotection agencies, lawâenforcement bodies, and tech companies to adapt its model to each context. | Pillar | What It Looks Like | |------------|------------------------| | Prevention & Awareness | ⢠Schoolâbased curricula on digital safety (e.g., âSafe Clicksâ workshops) ⢠Community theatre & radio dramas that debunk myths about âonline strangersâ ⢠Training for parents, teachers, and religious leaders | | Rescue & Protection | ⢠24âhour multilingual hotline (phone + WhatsApp) that receives ~1,800 calls/month ⢠Rapid response teams that work with police to locate and extract victims ⢠Safeâhouse network (10+ shelters) providing medical, psychological, and legal support | | Rehabilitation & Reintegration | ⢠Traumaâinformed counselling (individual & group) ⢠Education scholarships and vocational apprenticeships (e.g., tailoring, IT, culinary arts) ⢠âAfterâCareâ mentorship programmes that pair survivors with trained adult mentors | | Justice & Advocacy | ⢠Legal aid for victims navigating the criminal justice system ⢠Policy briefs that push for stronger antiâtrafficking laws (e.g., mandatory sentencing, victimâcentred testimony) ⢠Regional forums that bring together ASEAN governments, NGOs, and tech platforms | | Research & Data | ⢠Annual âAsia Child Exploitation Reportâ that maps trends, hotspots, and emerging threats (e.g., liveâstreaming porn) ⢠Partnerships with universities for longitudinal studies on survivor outcomes ⢠Dataâsharing agreements with tech firms to track and remove exploitative content quickly | 5. Impact Highlights (2021â2024) | Metric | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 (YTD) | |------------|----------|----------|----------|----------------| | Hotline calls received | 1,420 | 1,620 | 1,850 | 970 (JanâSept) | | Victims rescued & placed in safeâhouses | 312 | 368 | 425 | 210 | | Survivors completing education/vocational programmes | 142 | 189 | 237 | 122 | | Policy changes influenced (national laws, protocols) | 2 | 3 | 5 | 2 | | Community outreach sessions delivered | 68 | 81 | 96 | 44 | | Research reports published | 1 | 2 | 3 | 1 (inâpress) |
1. Who They Are Exploited Teens Asia (ETA) is a nonâgovernmental organization (NGO) headquartered in Hong Kong that works across the AsiaâPacific region to combat child sexual exploitation (CSE), trafficking, and the broader abuse of vulnerable children and teenagers. Established in 2011 by a coalition of childârights advocates, social workers, and former lawâenforcement officers, ETA blends onâtheâground protection work with policy advocacy, research, and survivorâcentered services. 2. Core Mission & Vision | Mission | To prevent, protect, and empower children and teenagers who are at risk of, or have experienced, sexual exploitation and trafficking in Asia. | |-------------|------------------------------------------------------------| | Vision | A region where every child can grow up free from sexual exploitation, with access to safety, justice, and opportunities for a dignified life. | 3. Geographic Reach | Country / Territory | Key Activities | |------------------------|---------------------| | Hong Kong (Head Office) | Coordination hub, policy work, survivor support | | Philippines | Streetâoutreach, safeâhouse management, legal aid | | Thailand | Hotline operation, digitalâplatform monitoring, community education | | Cambodia | Rehabilitation centres, vocational training for survivors | | Indonesia | Schoolâbased prevention programmes, research on online exploitation | | Vietnam | Capacityâbuilding for local NGOs & lawâenforcement | | Myanmar (pilot) | Mobile outreach in conflictâaffected border areas | Exploited Teens Asia
Note: Numbers are rounded; ETA tracks impact through a secure, anonymised data system to protect privacy. | Story | What Happened | Outcome | |-----------|-------------------|-------------| | âMinaâs Escapeâ â Philippines | A 14âyearâold girl contacted the ETA hotline after being lured into âonline modeling.â ETAâs rapid response team coordinated with local police to rescue her from a brothel in Manila. | Mina now lives in a safeâhouse, receives counselling, and is enrolled in a governmentâsponsored highâschool program. | | âDigital Shieldâ â Thailand | ETA partnered with a major socialâmedia platform to develop an AIâdriven detection tool for liveâstreamed sexual abuse. The tool flagged 2,300 illicit streams in the first six months. | 1,750 of those streams were taken down within 24 hours; 12 traffickers were arrested. | | âSecond Chanceâ â Cambodia | A group of 18 survivors participated in a culinaryâarts apprenticeship at a partner hotel. | All participants completed the programme; 14 have secured permanent employment, providing financial independence and a new identity beyond exploitation. | 7. Challenges & Emerging Threats | Challenge | Why It Matters | ETAâs Response | |---------------|--------------------|--------------------| | Online liveâstreaming exploitation | Realâtime abuse is harder to detect, can be broadcast globally in seconds. | Invested in AIâbased monitoring, collaborates with telecoms for rapid takedown, trains âdigital first responders.â | | Crossâborder trafficking routes | Perpetrators exploit porous borders, especially in conflict zones. | Works with ASEAN border agencies, runs mobile outreach units in border towns, shares intelligence across countries. | | Stigma & cultural silence | Victims often fear shame, leading to underâreporting. | Communityâbased dialogue programmes, survivorâled storytelling, safeâspace peer groups. | | Funding volatility | Reliance on donor cycles can interrupt longâterm support. | Diversifies income streams (socialâenterprise cafĂŠs, corporate CSR, crowdfunding) and builds an endowment fund. | | Legal gaps | Some jurisdictions lack clear definitions of child sexual exploitation online. | Advocacy for harmonised ASEAN legal frameworks, capacityâbuilding for prosecutors and judges. | 8. How You Can Support ETA | Option | What It Entails | Impact | |------------|---------------------|------------| | Donate | Oneâoff or recurring contributions (US $25 â one survivorâs counselling for a month). | Directly funds safeâhouse operations, legal aid, and educational scholarships. | | Volunteer | ⢠Hotline volunteer (remote) ⢠Field volunteer (safeâhouse, outreach) ⢠Professional proâbono (counsellors, lawyers) | Enhances capacity, reduces staff burnout, expands service reach. | | Corporate Partnership | ⢠CSR sponsorship of a specific programme (e.g., âDigital Shieldâ) ⢠Inâkind donations (technology, furniture) ⢠Employeeâvolunteering days | Enables scaling of highâimpact projects, brings expertise from the private sector. | | Advocacy | ⢠Sign petitions for stronger antiâtrafficking laws ⢠Share ETAâs research on social media ⢠Host awareness events in your community | Amplifies public pressure on policymakers and raises community vigilance. | | Fundraise | Organise runs, webinars, or art auctions with ETAâs branding kit. | Generates new donor pools and spreads the message to new audiences. | Who They Are Exploited Teens Asia (ETA) is
Whether you choose to donate, volunteer, or simply spread the word, every action contributes to breaking the cycle of exploitation across Asia. Website: https://exploitedteensas.org Email: info@exploitedteensas.org Phone: +852 2868 7777 (24âhour hotline) Prepared by an independent researcher based on publicly available information up to April 2026. Core Mission & Vision | Mission | To
All contributions are taxâdeductible in Hong Kong and many other jurisdictions; ETA provides transparent annual financial statements on its website. | Resource | Type | Link / How to Access | |--------------|----------|--------------------------| | Annual Report 2023â2024 | PDF (financials, impact data) | https://exploitedteensas.org/annualâreportâ2024 | | Asia Child Exploitation Report (2023) | Research brief (trends, policy gaps) | https://exploitedteensas.org/research/2023âreport | | SafeâClick Curriculum | Teacher guide (downloadable) | https://exploitedteensas.org/resources/safeâclick | | Hotline (24/7) | Phone: +852 2868 7777 WhatsApp: +852 6000 5555 | Immediate assistance for atârisk youth | | Volunteer Portal | Online application & training modules | https://exploitedteensas.org/volunteer | | Corporate Partnerships Kit | PDF outlining sponsorship tiers | https://exploitedteensas.org/corporateâpartnerships | 10. Quick FAQ | Question | Answer | |--------------|------------| | Is ETA a government agency? | No. ETA is an independent, nonâprofit NGO, though it works closely with government bodies and international organisations (UNICEF, IOM, ASEAN). | | Can I donate anonymously? | Yes. ETA accepts anonymous gifts via bank transfer or through its secure online portal. | | How does ETA protect survivor privacy? | All data are encrypted, stored on a HIPAAâlevel server, and accessed only by authorised staff. Survivors are assigned pseudonyms in public reports. | | Do they operate outside Asia? | The core focus is AsiaâPacific, but ETA collaborates with global partners on research and crossâborder cases. | | How can I verify that my donation is used responsibly? | ETA publishes audited financial statements annually, and donors receive a detailed impact report showing how funds are allocated. | 11. Closing Thought Child sexual exploitation remains one of the most hidden, complex violations of human rights in the 21st century. Exploited Teens Asia demonstrates that a blend of survivorâcentred services, dataâdriven advocacy, and community empowerment can make a tangible differenceârescues lives, restores futures, and pushes societies toward stronger protection for their most vulnerable members.