CRC 35th session: Committees concludes session



UNITED NATIONS
Press Release

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xxxxxxxxxxCOMMITTEE ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD
CONCLUDES THIRTY-FIFTH SESSION
xxxxxxxxxx

30.01.2004

Adopts Conclusions on Reports of Indonesia, Guyana, Armenia, Germany,
the Netherlands (including Aruba), India, Papua New Guinea, Slovenia
and Japan

The Committee on the Rights of the Child concluded today its
thirty-fifth session and issued its conclusions and recommendations
on the situation of children in Indonesia, Guyana, Armenia, Germany,
the Netherlands (including Aruba), India, Papua New Guinea, Slovenia
and Japan whose reports on efforts to comply with the Convention on
the Rights of the Child were considered this session.

The conclusions and recommendations were contained in the Committee's
final report for the three-week session, which was adopted today by
the Committee's 18 independent Experts.

After considering the report of Indonesia, the Committee welcomed,
among other things, the ongoing democratization process and the
inclusion of human rights issues, including the human rights of
children, in laws and policies. The Committee recommended, among
other things, that the State party strengthen measures to ensure
quick and safe repatriation of all separated children to Timor-Leste,
and take measures to prevent and to end the violence affecting
children's lives and rights, especially in areas such as Aceh, the
Maluku and West Papua.

With regard to the report of Guyana, the Committee welcomed, among
other things, the establishment of the Ministry for Amerindians
Affairs led by a woman of Amerindian descent. The Committee
recommended, among other things, that the State party raise the age
of the minimum sexual consent and the minimum age of criminal
responsibility to an internationally acceptable one; and continue to
strengthen measures aimed at increasing enrolment rates in primary
and secondary education and to further increase attempts to bring
dropouts back to school and other training programmes.

Responding to the report of Armenia, the Committee welcomed the
amendments of 2002 and 2003 to the Children's Rights Act and the
adoption in 2003 of the National Plan of Action for the Protection of
Children's Rights in Armenia to be implemented from 2004 to 2015. The
Committee, among its recommendations, urged the State party to raise
the minimum age for marriage for girls so that it became equal to the
minimum age set for boys, and adopt specific legislation and take
other measures to prevent violence against children in all
circumstances, including corporal punishment.

Following its consideration of the report of Germany, the Committee
welcomed, among other things, the adoption of the law of nationality
and citizenship of 15 July 1999, and the ratification, in 2001, of
the 1993 Hague Convention on Protection of Children and Cooperation
in respect of Inter-country Adoption. It recommended, among other
things, that the State party strengthen awareness-raising campaigns
with the involvement of children in order to prevent and combat child
abuse and to accelerate the elimination of child poverty, notably to
eliminate the differences between the eastern and western part of the
country.

With regard to the report of the Netherlands (including Aruba), the
Committee welcomed efforts to improve coordination of policy through
inter alia the establishment of a Youth Commissioner in the
Netherlands in 2004 and noted with appreciation that the State party
had met the United Nation's target of allocating at least 0.7 per
cent of GNI to official development assistance. It recommended, among
other things, that the State party ensure that there was a clearly
defined policy on child abuse and neglect, and to develop a National
Plan of Action against Commercial Sexual Exploitation for both the
Netherlands and Aruba.

Responding to the report from India, the Committee welcomed, among
other things, the adoption of the Constitution Act of 2002 providing
for free and compulsory education to all children between 6 and 14
years. Among its recommendations on the report, the Committee urged
the State party to strengthen its efforts to raise awareness about
HIV/AIDS among adolescents, particularly among those belonging to
vulnerable groups and among the population at large; establish
special education programmes for disabled children and promote
community-based programmes for the prevention of child labour.

Concerning the report of Papua New Guinea, the Committee welcomed,
among other things, the adoption of the Juvenile Courts Act in 2003
and the establishment of the first juvenile court in the nation's
capital, Port Moresby. The Committee recommended, among other things,
that the State party strengthen efforts to combat discriminatory
attitudes towards children with disabilities, particularly amongst
children and parents, and promote their participation in all aspects
of social and cultural life, and ensure safe drinking water and
adequate sanitation to all.

Following its consideration of the report of Slovenia, the Committee
welcomed, among other things, the adoption of legislative and other
measures aiming at improving the integration of children with special
needs into regular forms of education, including the Guidance for
Children with Special Educational Needs Act in 2000. The Committee
recommended, among other things, that the State party intensify its
efforts to combat negative stereotypes of and discrimination against
Roma and children belonging to other minorities in the State party,
and to strengthen its efforts to identify, prevent and combat
trafficking in children for sexual and other exploitative purposes.

In response to the report of Japan, the Committee welcomed, among
other things, the adoption of the Law on Punishing Acts related to
Child Prostitution and Child Pornography and on Protecting Children
of 1999 and of the Child Abuse Prevention Law of 2000. Among its
recommendations, the Committee urged the State party to undertake all
necessary proactive measures to combat societal discrimination and
ensure access to basic services, in particular for girls, children
with disabilities, children of migrant workers and refugee and
asylum-seeking children.

This was the third meeting of the Committee with the expanded
membership of 18 instead of 10 independent Experts. If approved by
the General Assembly, the Committee will hold a two-chamber
simultaneous meeting in October 2004.

The Committee's next session will be held from 17 May to 4 June 2004.
Scheduled for consideration are reports of Liberia, Myanmar,
Dominique, France, El Salvador, Panama, Rwanda, Democratic People's
Republic of Korea, and Sao Tome and Principe.


Final Conclusions on Country Reports

After considering the second periodic report of Indonesia, the
Committee welcomed, among other things, the participatory process
through which the report was drafted, including the involvement of
non-governmental organizations and universities; the ratification of
a number of human rights instruments such as the Convention against
Torture (1998), the Convention of the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination (1999), and the ILO Conventions No. 138 on minimum age
for admission to employment and No. 182 on the worst forms of child
labour in 1999 and 2000 respectively; the ongoing democratization
process and the inclusion of human rights issues, including the human
rights of children, in laws and policies; and the adoption of laws
and the establishment of various mechanisms aimed at protecting and
promoting the rights of children.

The Committee acknowledged that the challenges faced by the State
Party, such as internal armed conflicts, terrorism, and the
particular nature of the geographical configuration of the State
party comprising over 17,000 islands were factors which impeded the
implementation of the Convention.

The Committee recommended, among other things, that the State party
review the age limits set by different legislation affecting children
to ensure their conformity with the principles and provisions of the
Convention; ensure that no discrimination based on sex remained;
adjust all national and regional laws relating to birth registration,
and implement a comprehensive strategy in order to achieve 100 per
cent birth registration by 2015; strengthen measures to ensure quick
and safe repatriation of all separated children to Timor-Leste;
ensure universal access to primary health care; strengthen measures
to achieve universal and free primary education; take immediate steps
to ensure that all displaced and refugee children and their families
had access to basic health and education services, and that all their
rights contained in the Convention were protected; take measures to
prevent and to end the violence affecting children's lives and
rights, especially in areas such as Aceh, the Maluku and West Papua;
and that the State party develop and implement legislation adequately
protecting child victims of sexual exploitation, including
trafficking, pornography and prostitution.

With regard to the initial report of Guyana, the Committee welcomed,
among other things, the establishment of the Ministry for Amerindians
Affairs led by a woman of Amerindian descent; the constitutional
reform and the passage of Bill No. 6 of 2001 that provided for the
establishment of constitutional commissions, including the Commission
of the Rights of the Child; and the ratification of ILO Convention
No. 138 concerning the Minimum Age for admission to Employment in
1998 and ILO Convention No. 182 concerning the Prohibition and
Immediate Action for the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child
Labour in 2001.

The Committee noted that the increasing debt burden, wide spread
poverty, racial tension and political instability have impeded
progress to the full realization of the children's rights enshrined
in the Convention. It also noted that a large number of children were
leaving in remote areas to reach.

Among the Committee's recommendations were that the State party raise
the age of the minimum sexual consent, and the minimum age of
criminal responsibility to an internationally acceptable one;
expressly prohibit corporal punishment by law in the family, schools
and other institutions; ensure that the National Policy on the Rights
of People with Disabilities addressed children's rights, taking into
account the provision for non-discrimination, accessibility to all
services including public buildings and transportation; reduce
mortality rates by improving prenatal care and preventing
communicable diseases; continue to strengthen measures aimed at
increasing enrolment rates in primary and secondary education and to
further increase attempts to bring dropouts back to school and other
training programmes; ensure that pregnant teenagers were given an
opportunity to complete their education; continue and strengthen its
efforts to assist street children; and that Guyana take all necessary
measures to protect Amerindian children against discrimination and to
guarantee their enjoyment of all rights recognized in the Convention.

After considering the second periodic report of Armenia, the
Committee welcomed a number of positive developments in the reporting
period, including amendments of 2002 and 2003 to the Children's
Rights Act, which strengthened the protection of the rights of the
Convention in national legislation; the adoption of the Human Rights
Procurator Act; the adoption in 2003 of the National Plan of Action
for the Protection of Children's Rights in Armenia to be implemented
from 2004 to 2015; the adoption in 2003 of the Strategic Programme to
Overcome Poverty to be implemented from 2004 to 2015; and the
approval of the National Strategy to Combat HIV/AIDS in 2002.

Among factors and difficulties impeding the implementation of the
Convention, the Committee noted that the State party continued to
face serious economic, social and political challenges posed by the
transition to a market economy, including increased unemployment and
poverty, and the unresolved conflict over Nagorny Karabakh.

Among its recommendations, the Committee urged the State party to
take further measures to ensure effective national coordination of
activities in the field of children's rights and that adequate
support was given to local authorities for implementation of the
Convention; raise the minimum age for marriage for girls so that it
became equal to the minimum age set for boys; ensure that effective
mechanisms to review, monitor and follow up adoption of children were
established; adopt specific legislation and take other measures to
prevent violence against children in all circumstances, including
corporal punishment; reinforce its efforts to reduce the number of
teenage pregnancies and combat HIV/AIDS and other sexually
transmitted diseases; increase efforts to improve and facilitate the
integration of refugees into Armenian society; ensure the effective
implementation of the minimum age for admission to employment, set at
age 16 in the Labour Code, and of other provisions prohibiting heavy
and hazardous work for children under 18; undertake a national study
on the nature and extent of sexual exploitation of children; and that
the State party adopt and ensure the effective implementation of the
National Programme to Combat Trafficking, which was currently under
consideration.

Following its consideration of the second periodic report of Germany
, the Committee welcomed, among other things, the adoption of the law
of nationality and citizenship of 15 July 1999; the amendment of the
Law on Family Matters (Reform zum Kindschaftsrecht) of 16 December
1997; the ratification, in 2001, of the 1993 Hague Convention on
Protection of Children and Cooperation in respect of Inter-country
Adoption; and the ratification, in 2002, of the ILO Convention No.
182 Concerning the Prohibition and Immediate Action for the
Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labour.

Among its recommendations, the Committee urged the State party to
take all appropriate measures to ensure that the general principle of
the best interests of the child was appropriately integrated in all
legislation and budgets; take all necessary measure for a full
implementation of the new legislation of the law on parental custody;
fully and effectively apply the Hague Convention to all children
abducted to Germany; undertake a comprehensive study on violence,
more particularly, on sexual abuse and violence; strengthen
awareness-raising campaigns with the involvement of children in order
to prevent and combat child abuse; undertake a study on the extent
and nature of female genital mutilation practiced in the state party
or abroad on girls who live in Germany; accelerate the elimination of
child poverty, notably to eliminate the differences between the
eastern and western part of the country; ease refugee family
reunification requirements and procedures, in particular for the 1951
Convention refugee families; pursue its efforts to combat sexual
exploitation and trafficking in children; and that Germany ensure
that street children were provided with adequate nutrition, clothing,
housing, health care and educational opportunities.

After reviewing the second periodic report of the Netherlands and the
initial report of Aruba, the Committee welcomed efforts to improve
coordination of policy through inter alia the establishment of a
Youth Commissioner in the Netherlands in 2004; efforts to improve the
participation of youth in policymaking; and legislative reform aimed
at improving implementation of the Convention. The Committee also
noted with appreciation that the State party had met the United
Nation's target of allocating at least 0.7 per cent of GNI to
official development assistance.

The Committee urged the State party to make every effort to address
those recommendations from the concluding observations of the initial
report that had not yet been implemented and to address the ones
contained in the present concluding observations.

Among its recommendations, the Committee suggested that the State
party take the necessary measures for the establishment of an
ombudsman for children in both the Netherlands and Aruba; frequently
evaluate, and if necessary revise, the regulations and procedures in
the Netherlands with respect to the termination of life upon request
in order to ensure that children, including newborn infants with
severe abnormalities, enjoy special protection; ensure that there was
a clearly defined policy on child abuse and neglect; expand education
possibilities for children with disabilities in Aruba; expedite
efforts to address non-attendance and the school drop out rate;
develop a National Plan of Action against Commercial Sexual
Exploitation for both the Netherlands and Aruba; strengthen the
capacity of police in the Netherlands and Aruba to receive and
investigate complaints of trafficking and sexual exploitation in a
child-sensitive manner; and undertake an in-depth study of
trafficking and sexual exploitation of children in Aruba, including
the possible existence of sex tourism.

After its consideration the second periodic report of India, the
Committee welcomed, among other things, the adoption of the
Constitution Act, 2002 providing for free and compulsory education to
all children of the age of 6 to 14 years; the adoption of the 2003
amendment of the Pre-conception and Pre-natal Diagnostic Techniques
(Prohibition of Sex Selection) Act, 1994; the launch of a national
programme for formation of Women's Self-Help Groups which had an
important impact for children's rights; and the expansion of primary
school.

The Committee acknowledged that the very large number and the high
rate of population growth were major impediments in the
implementation of the Convention. In addition, extreme poverty;
massive inequality of social status; and the persistence of deeply
discriminatory attitudes as well as the impact of natural disasters
represented serious difficulties in the fulfillment of all of the
State party's obligations under the Convention.

Among its recommendations, the Committee urged the State party to
promote respect for the views of children within the family, schools,
institutions, as well as in judicial and administrative procedures;
to take legislative measures and to amend outdated legislation to
prohibit all forms of physical and mental violence, including sexual
abuse of children in the family, schools and in institutions;
strengthen its efforts to raise awareness about HIV/AIDS among
adolescents, particularly among those belonging to vulnerable groups
and among the population at large; establish special education
programmes for disabled children; that India reinforce its efforts to
provide support and material assistance to economically disadvantaged
families and to guarantee the right of children to an adequate
standard of living; strengthen its efforts to progressively ensure
that girls and boys, from urban, rural and least developed areas,
have equal access to educational opportunities; hire more qualified
teachers and provide them with more opportunities for training;
consider acceding to the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of
Refugees and its 1967 Protocol; and promote community-based
programmes for the prevention of child labour.

Following its consideration of the initial report of Papua New Guinea
, the Committee welcomed the adoption of the Juvenile Courts Act in
2003 and the establishment of the first juvenile court in the
nation's capital, Port Moresby; the amendments to the Criminal Code
and the Evidence Act in 2002 entering into force in 2003, which had
improved the legal framework of the protection of children against
sexual abuse; the adoption of a National Health Plan 2001-2010 and
the adoption of specific policies such as the Village Health
Volunteers (2000) and the Policy and Expanded Programme on
Immunization (2003); and the establishment of a National AIDS Council
and the adoption of the HIV/AIDS Management and Prevention Act 2003.

The Committee acknowledged the challenges faced by the State party,
namely the internal armed conflict, the vulnerability to natural
disasters and the geographical nature of the country as well as the
existence of more than 800 local languages in use for impeding the
full implementation of the provisions of the Convention.

Among other things, the Committee recommended that the State party
strengthen efforts to combat discriminatory attitudes towards
children with disabilities, particularly amongst children and
parents, and promote their participation in all aspects of social and
cultural life; formulate a strategy which included appropriate
teacher training, to ensure that all children with disabilities have
access to education, and wherever possible they were integrated into
the mainstream education system; improve training efforts of local
midwifes promoting safe deliveries; address the issue of malnutrition
and micronutrient deficiencies though education and promotion of
healthy feeding practices, including breast feeding; ensure safe
drinking water and adequate sanitation to all; integrate respect for
the rights of the child into the development and implementation of
its HIV/AIDS policies and strategies on behalf of children infected
and affected by HIV/AIDS; reform its national education system which
addressed the key issues of participation and quality of education;
and ensure that no children were involved in armed conflict and that
every ex child soldier is properly rehabilitated and integrated in
the society.

Following its consideration of the second periodic report of Slovenia
, the Committee welcomed, among other things, the recent official
withdrawal of the State party's reservation to article 9, paragraph
1, of the Convention; the ratification in 2002 of the Hague
Convention on Protection of Children and Cooperation in Respect of
Intercountry Adoption of 1993; the adoption of legislative and other
measures aiming at improving the integration of children with special
needs into regular forms of education, including the Guidance for
Children with Special Educational Needs Act in 2000; and the adoption
of new legislation defining the rights of asylum seekers and
refugees, including the Aliens Act and the Asylum Act of 1999, and
the additions to the Law on the Temporary Refugee Status (ZZat-A) of
2002; and the ratification in 2001 of Convention No. 182 of the
International Labour Organization on worst forms of child labour.

Among its recommendations, the Committee urged the State party to
establish either a deputy ombudsperson, a section within the Human
Rights Ombudsman's Office, or a separate children's ombudsperson,
supported with sufficient human and financial resources; intensify
its efforts to combat negative stereotypes of and discrimination
against Roma and children belonging to other minorities in the State
party; continue and strengthen its efforts to address the problem of
child abuse; take all measures to ensure that discipline in schools
was upheld in a manner that respects the human dignity of the child;
strengthen its efforts and programmes to prevent suicide among young
people; continue and further strengthen measures to combat poverty,
including special measures targeted at single parent families and
Roma; take measures to address the high drop-out rate in secondary
education; take further measures to ensure that asylum seekers and
refugee children were granted equal access to services, including
healthcare; strengthen measures to address the problem of drug abuse
among children; and strengthen its efforts to identify, prevent and
combat trafficking in children for sexual and other exploitative
purposes.

After considering the second periodic report of Japan, the Committee
welcomed, among other things, the adoption of the Law on Punishing
Acts related to Child Prostitution and Child Pornography and on
Protecting Children of 1999 and of the Child Abuse Prevention Law of
2000; the establishment of a National Plan of Action against
Commercial and Sexual Exploitation of Children in 2001; its largest
donation of official development assistance (ODA) in absolute
figures, and the fact that a considerable amount of that assistance
was allocated to social development including health and education;
and the ratification of ILO Convention no. 138 concerning the Minimum
Age for Admission to Employment in 2000 no. 182 concerning the
Prohibition and Immediate Action for the Elimination of the Worst
Forms of Child Labour in 2001.

Among the Committee's recommendations were that the State party raise
the minimum age of marriage for girls to that of boys, and the
minimum age of sexual consent; amend its legislation in order to
eliminate any discrimination against children born out of wedlock;
undertake all necessary proactive measures to combat societal
discrimination and ensure access to basic services, in particular for
girls, children with disabilities, children of migrant workers and
refugee and asylum-seeking children; prohibit corporal punishment in
institutions and the home; strengthen complaints mechanisms for
children in institutions and schools; strengthen its system for
monitoring domestic and inter-country adoptions; ratify and implement
the 1993 Hague Convention on Protection of Children and Cooperation
in Respect of Inter-country Adoption; undertake a study of adolescent
health with a view to developing a comprehensive adolescent health
policy; amend legislation in order to allow children under 18 to
access medical counselling; undertake an in-depth study of youth
suicide and its causes; and amend legislation on sexual exploitation
and abuse to ensure equal protection for boys and girls.


Committee Membership

The Convention requires that the members of the Committee have a high
moral standing and recognized competence in the field of children's
rights. The following Experts, elected by the State parties to serve
in their personal capacity, have been elected to the Committee:
Ibrahim Abdul Aziz Al-Sheddi (Saudi Arabia), Ghalia Mohd Bin Hamad
Al-Thani (Qatar), Joyce Aluoch (Kenya), Saisuree Chutikul (Thailand),
Luigi Citarella (Italy), Jacob Egbert Doek (the Netherlands), Kamel
Filali (Algeria), Moushira Khattab (Egypt), Hatem Kotrane (Tunisia),
Lothar Friedrich Krappmann (Germany), Yanghee Lee (Republic of
Korea), Norberto Liwski (Argentina), Rosa Maria Ortiz (Paraguay), Awa
N'Deye Ouedraogo (Burkina Faso), Marilia Sardenberg Goncalves
(Brazil), Lucy Smith (Norway); Marjorie Taylor (Jamaica), and Nevena
Vuckovic-Sahovic (Serbia and Montenegro).

Mr. Doek is the Chairperson. Ms. Aluoch, Ms. Chutikul and Ms.
Sardenberg Goncalves are Vice Chairpersons, and Ms. Khattab is the
Rapporteur.



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