United
Nations: One in every three young people have reported been a victim of
cyberbullying, according to a survey conducted by the UN Children's Fund in 30
countries.
More than 170,000
people between the ages of 13 and 24 participated anonymously in the UNICEF
poll, which showed that one in five young people had skipped classes due to
internet bullying and violence.
Unicef released the
report on Wednesday, the Efe news reported.
According to a
majority of respondents, social networks including Facebook, Instagram,
Snapchat and Twitter are the most commonplace sites on which cyberbullying
occurs.
"All over the
world, young people -- in both high and low-income countries -- are telling us
that they are being bullied online, that it is affecting their education, and
that they want it to stop," Unicef Executive Director Henrietta Fore said
in a statement.
According to the
survey, some 32 per cent of respondents believed that governments should be
responsible for ending cyber bullying, while 31 per cent said it should be done
by the youths themselves and 29 per cent pegged the responsibility to end the
scourge on internet companies.
Unicef stressed that
cyberbullying is already a global phenomenon that is not limited just to
developed countries.
Thus, 34 per cent of
respondents in sub-Saharan Africa said they had been a victim of this type of
abuse.
The survey's findings
challenge the widespread notion that cyberbullying among classmates was an
exceptional problem mainly affecting high-income students.
Some 39 per cent said
they knew of private online groups within the school community where children
shared information about peers for the purpose of bullying.
The survey was carried
out using a digital platform and involved young people from very different
countries and regions such as Bangladesh, France, Bolivia, Brazil, Ghana, Iraq,
Mali, Romania, Ukraine and Vietnam.
"Connected
classrooms mean school no longer ends once a student leaves class, and,
unfortunately, neither does schoolyard bullying," Fore said.
In response, Unicef
is calling for the implementation of policies to protect students, national
helplines to support those affected, social networks to improve ethical standards
and training for teachers and parents to prevent and adequately respond to
cyberbullying.
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