CRC 31st Session: Role of private sector in providing services



UNITED NATIONS
Press Release

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xxxxxxxxxxCOMMITTEE ON RIGHTS OF CHILD HOLDS A GENERAL DISCUSSION ON THE 
ROLE OF THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN PROVIDING SERVICESxxxxxxxxxx

CRC
31st session
20 September 2002
High Commissioner for Human Rights Says
Non-State Providers Could Have a Positive
or Negative Impact on the Rights of the Child

The Committee on the Rights of the Child today held a day of general
discussion on the question of "the private sector as service provider
and its role in implementing child rights", which was opened by
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Sergio Vieira de
Mello.

In his opening statement, Mr. Vieira de Mello said that the topic
that the Committee had selected was indeed timely. Today, a wide
range of actors were involved in providing the services necessary for
the realization of fundamental rights. Non-governmental organizations
(NGOs), private foundations, local, regional as well as national
governments, local and multinational businesses were all increasingly
involved in partnerships aimed at improving the quality of life of
children in many countries, he said.

The High Commissioner noted that on the one hand, one had seen
positive examples of private corporations providing badly needed
investment in water supply infrastructure to provide access to
drinking water in areas where previously children were unable to
enjoy even that most basic of needs. On the other hand, one had also
watched with concern as in some countries, public health clinics
previously located in poor communities were forced out of those areas
because they were suddenly dependent on user fees, which poor
families could not afford. Non-state service providers could have
both a negative or positive impact on the rights of children, he
added.

Committee Chairperson Jacob Egbert Doek stressed that the private
sector was an important actor in the implementation of the rights of
children in many countries. There was a growing concern among human
rights committees and special rapporteurs about the growing trend of
privatization not only of State-run commercial enterprises but also
of the provisions for basic needs like water, health and education.

Paul Hunt, Member of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights and UN Special Rapporteur on the right to health, said that
international human rights law was neither for, nor against, the
privatization of service provision. International human rights law
was interested in the destination -- the full realization of all
human rights -- and was less interested in the road by which that
destination was reached.

Following a separate discussion by two working groups, it was
recommended that Governments should retain the sole responsibility in
ensuring the realization of the rights of the child, even if the
private sector was involved in providing services. State
accountability was a fundamental obligation that could not be left to
self-regulation of non-State actors. The establishment of a code of
conduct for the non-State actors was emphasized; however the need for
its monitoring was also highlighted. Speakers argued that
self-regulation by the private sector should not be enough without
State regulations.

The purpose of the general discussions held by the Committee is to
foster a deeper understanding of the contents and implications of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child as they relate to specific
topics.

The Committee is scheduled to examine the initial report of the
Seychelles when it reconvenes at 10 a.m. on Monday, 23 September.

Statements

SERGIO VIEIRA DE MELLO, United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights, said that the topic the Committee had selected, the private
sector as service provider and its role in implementing child rights,
was indeed timely. Today, a wide range of actors were involved in
providing the services necessary for the realization of fundamental
rights. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs), private foundations,
local, regional as well as national governments, local and
multinational businesses were all increasingly involved in
partnerships aimed at improving the quality of life of children in
many countries.

Mr. Vieira de Mello said that no organization, whether it was an NGO
or international agency working in humanitarian crises, or a
corporation or foundation providing services where they were in short
supply, could afford to lose sight of the central commitments to the
child -- and his or her human rights. The issue the Committee would
be seeking to shed light on was not whether the provision of services
by public or private actors was "better". The question was how one
could ensure that appropriate services were provided to all children
in conformity with the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Mr. Vieira de Mello continued to say that although the one-day
discussion could not provide a clear answer to that question, it was
crucial that the Committee develop its thinking on that issue. It was
the Committee, as the international body overseeing the
implementation of the Convention, that should ensure that States
parties were finding effective means to realize a child's right to
health and education; that juvenile detention services promoted each
child's reintegration into society; and that a child who was deprived
of a family received the special protection and assistance to which
he or she was entitled.

The High Commissioner said that the day of general discussion would
address a variety of services which were already being delivered by
many different actors. On the one hand, one had seen positive
examples of private corporations providing badly needed investment in
water supply infrastructure to provide access to drinking water in
areas where previously children were unable to enjoy even that most
basic of needs. On the other hand, one had also watched with concern
as in some countries, public health clinics previously located in
poor communities were forced out of those areas because they were
suddenly dependent on user fees, which poor families could not
afford. Non-state service providers could have both a negative or
positive impact on the rights of children.

JACOB EGBERT DOEK, Chairperson of the Committee on the Rights of the
Child, stressed that the private sector was an important actor in the
implementation of rights of children in many countries. The human
rights community regularly welcomed the positive role of
non-governmental organizations in the promotion and the
implementation of human rights and rightly so. But at the same time,
there was a growing concern among human rights committees and special
rapporteurs about the growing trend of privatization not only of
state-run commercial enterprises but also of the provisions for basic
needs like water, health and education. It was necessary to reaffirm
the State party's responsibility to ensure that -- despite the
privatization -- the obligations under the human rights treaties were
being implemented.

PAUL HUNT, Member of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights and UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health, speaking on
the subject of "the international human rights treaty obligations of
States parties in the context of service provision", said that
international human rights law was neither for, nor against, the
privatization of service provision. International human rights law
was interested in the destination -- the full realization of all
human rights -- and was less interested in the road by which that
destination was reached, provided that the road chosen was consistent
with democratic principles; was respectful of the interdependence and
indivisibility of all human rights; and that it did lead towards the
destination.

Mr. Hunt said that international human rights law imprecisely defined
international social rights, such as the rights to housing, food and
health. Further, those rights did not have a deep legal tradition to
draw upon as a way of "fleshing-out" what they meant. In his view, it
was the responsibility of the international human rights community to
remedy that situation. They should also gradually and carefully
elaborate the contours and content of those international social
rights that were enshrined in the International Bill of Rights and
other major international human right rights instruments, such as the
Convention on the Rights of the Child. But in the absence of a deep
legal tradition in those rights, that would be a very difficult task.

Sharing the experience of the Committee on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights, Mr. Hunt said that the Committee's General Comment
14 on the right to health had set out more fully than any other
document the Committee's understanding of the nature and scope of
States' obligations under the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights. Health services were among those services
that were subject to private sector investment. The same or similar
points applied to the rights to food and education. But he hoped that
a specific focus on the right to health would shed light on generic
issues around States' obligations in the context of service
provision.

Discussion and Suggestions

JOHN HILARY, Save the Children United Kingdom, on the behalf of the
first working group on "contracting out services for children", said
that Governments should retain sole responsibility not only for
ensuring the realization of rights but also for the policy choices as
to the presence of and increased involvement of the private sector.
Service delivery by public and private actors could not be considered
to be equivalent.

He said that conditionality of World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) loans, World Trade Organization (WTO) agreements and
negotiations and donor conditionalities, among other things, had
restrictive effects on Governments' ability to meet their obligations
under the Convention. The Committee should take into consideration
those restrictions in its general recommendation.

Mr. Hilary said that accountability was a fundamental State
obligation and could not be left to self-regulation. It required both
national and international level regulation for all stages of private
sector involvement, both through sector-specific codes and through
overarching principles. The issue of corruption should be considered
as a violation of child rights because of the services undelivered to
children.

AGNES CALLAMARD, Humanitarian Accountability Project, on behalf of
the second working group which discussed "private service providers",
said the working group attempted to respond to the question on how
the private service providers took into account the provisions of the
Convention when conceptualizing, implementing and evaluating their
programmes. A question was also raised if mechanisms existed or could
be put in place to support and ensure the observance of a
rights-based approach by private service providers.

Ms. Callamard said that the working group stressed the need for
self-regulation by non-State actors working in areas where
Governments were not able to react or Government actions were absent.
The first thing the group emphasized was the establishment of a code
of conduct for the non-State actors. Self-regulation should be the
guiding principle for the actions by the non-State service providers.
However, the implementation of the code of ethics should also be
monitored. Through the development of self-regulation and a code of
conduct, international non-governmental organizations could
contribute a lot in providing standard services similar to that of a
State. The collective development of a code of conduct was also
essential in the field of services provided by the non-State actors.

JACOB EGBERT DOEK, the Committee Chairperson, said that States
parties should be able to monitor the work of the private sector with
whom they had contractual agreements to carry out the services.
However, there was a concern that some States parties did not have
the capacity to monitor the situation.

The Chairperson said that child participation in the work of the
Committee was not an easy task. However, a number of non-governmental
organizations were working with the Committee by supplying it with
relevant reports.

There should also be transparency in the work of non-governmental
organizations (NGOs), non-State actors and States, Mr. Doek said. The
role of specialized UN agencies should also be stressed, although
they were not reporting to the Committee. Next to the States parties'
responsibilities, the role of non-State partners and non-governmental
organizations should be further strengthened.

A representative of the World Bank, said that the Bank had been
contributing to the rights of the child through programmes it was
supporting, of which 200 projects dealt specifically with child
rights. The Bank had also funded educational projects which aimed at
putting each child in school and strengthening the educational system
of a country.

Another speaker from an NGO said that not all self-regulation
measures contributed much to resolve some of the problems where the
State was unable to discharge its responsibility. State regulation
was necessary in many areas, for example baby food -- an area which
could not be left to the private sector without any official
regulation.

Other speakers also focused on the issue of service provision by the
private sector, particularly in the field of education and health
involving the rights of the child.

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