Explicit sex education website for seven-year-olds under fire

A sex education website with very explicit drawings has come under fire after children as young as seven were taught about fellatio, a "two fingers oral sex technique" and a "deep cave" sex position.

The bizarre website called "Alles over seks" ("Everything about sex") was launched by Sensoa, an expert centre for sexual health in the Belgian region of Flanders.

On the website, the organisation describes and illustrates explicit aspects of sex, ranging from birth control and STDs to different sexual positions and sex toys.

A sex education website has been slammed for being too explicit. Photo: Australscope
A sex education website has been slammed for being too explicit. Photo: Australscope

In a very explicit way, oral sex techniques such as the "twist and shout" method, the "V-finger technique" and the "deep cave sex position" are explained to Belgian youngsters.

The hummingbird technique is explained as: "Make with your tongue rapid 'flappy' movements over the penis, just like the wings of a hummingbird. You can apply this technique everywhere, from the testicles to the tip of the penis."

The website was originally meant for 15-year-olds but was also recommended to children as young as seven in Belgian schools.

The website was originally meant to be for 15-year-olds but it's been recommended for kids as young as seven in Belgian schools. Photo: Getty Images
The website was originally meant to be for 15-year-olds but it's been recommended for kids as young as seven in Belgian schools. Photo: Getty Images

According to Belgian media, the website was recommended in the "Youth Guide", a children's advice guide supported by the Flemish government and distributed across primary schools in the region.

Frederic Leire, father of two children aged seven and nine, said his children got the guide at school. He said he was shocked when he saw how explicit the website is.

"I would even call it perversities,” Leire said.

"It is great that such a website exists, but I don't think that children will ask questions like how many sex positions there are and if they need drugs for sexual pleasures."

The umbrella organisation of Catholic Education was also shocked about the website, which said the sex education website was too technically focused and did not detail the relational aspect.

Spokeswoman Marijke van Bogaert said: "It is up to the parents to talk about this with their children.”

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