A German national council set up to battle sexual violence against children and youths met for the first time on Monday in Berlin. The committee, which is the first of its kind, will spend the next 18 months developing concepts and policy for the prevention of child abuse.

The constituent meeting saw around 40 representatives come together from politics, economics, civil society as well as experts in the field and those affected by the issues under discussion. The council is expected to deliver its findings and lay out the next steps by summer 2021.

Read more: Child sex abuse at German campsite: How authorities failed the victims

The parliamentary commissioner for the prevention of abuse, Johannes-Wilhelm Roerig, said on Monday that it is now clear that thousands of children in Germany are victims of sexual violence every year, citing the recent case of more than 40 children abused in a campsite in the city of Lügde.

'Abuse cannot be tolerated any longer'

"We must work on the assumption that one or two children in every school class are victims of abuse — this magnitude of abuse cannot be tolerated any longer," Roerig said.

Although it has been widely praised as a necessary initiative, the council has received some criticism for its time frame. Lawmaker Nadine Schoen of Chancellor Angela Merkel's ruling CDU party pointed out that "there are lots of ideas on the table already."

"There needs to be a campaign as soon as possible to raise awareness of the issue to the public," she said on Monday.

In November, police uncovered online chat rooms which traded videos of sexual violence against children.

Watch video 02:55 Share German child abuse inquiry Send Facebook google+ Whatsapp Tumblr linkedin stumble Digg reddit Newsvine Permalink https://p.dw.com/p/3GBgQ German commission calls for end to silence on child abuse

ed/ng (KNA, dpa)

Each evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.