16-year-old Mane Hakobyan from the Armenian Newsroom reports on new government measures to improve digital protection for young people

A fifth of Armenians aged 12–17 have experienced digital sexual abuse of some kind.
24 April 2026
Armenia to strengthen child online safety after new data
Representatives of the Armenian government, UNICEF and civil society groups met in Yerevan, the Armenian capital, in early March to address risks to children in the digital space. The event presented a new national study, ‘Disrupting Harm in Armenia’, and called for stronger coordination between state institutions, educators and technology actors to improve child protection online.
The study, published in December 2025, highlighted the scale and impact of online abuse. Children who experience digital sexual abuse are significantly more likely to suffer severe psychological distress, with the report indicating a sharply increased risk of suicidal ideation.
One in 20 children in Armenia aged 12–17 experienced tech-facilitated sexual abuse in the previous year.
More than 71% of cases happened online, primarily through social media and messaging platforms. Higher risks were identified on apps popular in Armenia such as Snapchat, TikTok, Instagram and particularly Telegram.
More than half of the victims did not tell a soul because they were scared of judgement, shame and concerns related to family ‘honour’.
The study also challenged the common assumption that threats come primarily from strangers, finding that in 57% of cases the perpetrator was someone known to the child, such as a peer or acquaintance.



