Workshop 2 – Cyberviolence: non-consensual dissemination of intimate images (NCDII)

  4 June 2025

  EN – FR – ES

  16h00 - 17h30 - CET+1

 Agenda

   Room 11

With digital communication becoming central to relationships across all age groups, the consensual sharing of intimate images has grown more common. However, alongside this shift, cases of the non-consensual dissemination of intimate images (NCDII) have risen sharply, disproportionately impacting women and girls. While often termed “sextorsion”, NCDII covers different types of conduct that is primarily a violation of privacy rights.  

While several countries have made notable strides in strengthening laws and policies to combat NCDII, gaps remain, particularly in ensuring swift action by service providers to remove harmful content and prevent revictimization, and by criminal justice authorities to investigate such offences. GREVIO’s General Recommendation No. 1 on the digital dimension of violence against women recognises NCDII as falling within the scope of sexual harassment as defined by the Istanbul Convention. Moreover, NCDII is to be made a criminal offence under Article 5 of the EU Directive on  combating violence against women and domestic violence of 2024 and under Article 16 of the new UN Convention against Cybercrime.

The purpose of this workshop is to identify and promote evidence-based good practices for addressing NCDII, focusing on legislative frameworks, investigative challenges, and strategies for public-private cooperation in content removal and survivor support.

 

Questions for discussion:

  • Why should NCDII be recognised as a standalone offence in national legislation? What impact could this have on victims’ access to justice, and on the effectiveness of law enforcement responses?
  • What are the legal and practical nuances that matter most when drafting or applying legislation on NCDII? How do elements like definitions, consent, intent, and platform obligations influence real-world outcomes?
  • What investigative approaches have proven most effective in NCDII cases? Are there lessons from other areas – such as online child sexual exploitation and abuse (OCSEA) – that could inform better coordination, evidence collection, or victim support in these cases?
Moderator and rapporteur
Nathan Whiteman
Nathan Whiteman Director / Principal Legal Officer, Cybercrime, Child Abuse Policy and Engagement Section (CCAPES), Attorney-General's Department
Hania El Helweh
Hania El Helweh
Speakers
Anne-Marie Le Bel
Anne-Marie Le Bel Senior Legal Counsel, Department of Justice
Bertha Nayelly Loya Marin
Bertha Nayelly Loya Marin Head of the Global Cybercrime Program for UNODC
Catherine Van de Heyning 
Catherine Van de Heyning  Focal point prosecutor on cyberviolence, Cybercrime Division, Public Ministry of Antwerp
Guido Valenti Argüello
Guido Valenti Argüello Chief of Staff, Undersecretariat for Criminal Policy Ministry of Justice and Human Rights, Argentina
Jean-Christophe Le Toquin
Jean-Christophe Le Toquin Co-founder, Operations, STISA – Survivors & Tech Solving Image-Based Sexual Abuse
Nueebu Leyii Mikko
Nueebu Leyii Mikko Assistant Chief State Counsel, Cybercrimes Unit, Federal Ministry of Justice, Nigeria
More information

  If you have any questions related to this workshop, please contact the Octopus Conference Secretariat