CERD 68th session: Committee considers report of Lithuania



UNITED NATIONS Press release
22 February 2006

The Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination has
considered the second and third periodic reports of Lithuania on its
implementation of the provisions of the International Convention on
the Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination.

Oskaras Jusys, Under-Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of
Lithuania, introducing the report, said that Lithuanian legislation
prohibited racial and national discrimination, and such
discrimination was punishable in the courts. Minorities formed a
relatively small, and not always very visible, part of the Lithuanian
population. The State, however, recognized that minority groups were
a huge asset and had contributed greatly to the country's
development, and therefore saw it as its task to make those groups
feel at home in Lithuania. 

In preliminary remarks, Nourredine Amir, the Committee Expert who
served as country Rapporteur for Lithuania, recalled that he had
found Lithuanian legislation to be among the most progressive that
the Committee had ever examined, and that it was a shining example
for other countries in this field. The resolution of social problems
was not just a matter of time, but also a matter of resources and
cooperation, he noted.

During the discussion, which took place over two meetings, Committee
Experts also raised further questions on a variety of issues
regarding minority groups, including the Roma; racist attitudes in
the media; details of pending cases of discrimination before
Lithuanian courts; statistics on intermarriage between minority
groups and ethnic Lithuanians; how the quota for foreign workers was
established; the situation of those without documents regarding
access to health care, especially emergency health care; and the
definition which Lithuania used for both ethnic and national
minorities. 

**The Committee will present its written observations and
recommendations on the second and third periodic reports of
Lithuania, which were presented in one document, at the end of its
session, which concludes on 10 March.
When the Committee reconvenes at 3 p.m. this afternoon, it is
scheduled to begin consideration of the initial to sixth periodic
reports of Bosnia and Herzegovina (CERD/C/464/Add.1).

*Report of Lithuania *

The second and third periodic reports of Lithuania, presented in one
document (CERD/C/461/Add.2), note that Lithuania is a country with
only a small minority population, mostly concentrated in its urban
centres, particularly in and around the municipality of Vilnius. Some
83.5 per cent of Lithuanians are of Lithuanian ethnic heritage. By
far the largest minority group is that of Polish ancestry, which
makes up 6.7 per cent of the population. Other ethnicities present in
Lithuania include groups from countries of the former Soviet Union,
including Russia, Belarus, Ukraine and Germany. There are also
persons of Jewish, Tartar, Latvian and Roma ancestry, which each
represent 0.1 per cent of the population. 

In the period from 2000 to 2003, following the presentation of
Lithuania's initial report, numerous basic laws have been passed in
connection with the implementation of articles 2 to 7 of the
Convention, including new codes of civil and criminal law; a new
labour code; a new version of the Law on Courts, which guarantees
equality before the law regardless of a person's sex, race, origin,
ethnicity, language or on other grounds; a new version of the Law on
Education, which ensures equal access to education by all as well as
providing for the education in and teaching of the languages of
national minorities and the native-language studies of persons
belonging to national minorities; and the Law on Equal Treatment,
which prohibits any direct or indirect discrimination on the grounds
of a person's age, sexual orientation, state of health, race, ethnic
origin, religion or opinions and provides instruments for
implementing the principle of equal treatment, among others. 

As the most disadvantaged social group, the Roma has been the target
of numerous social programmes to improve their social situation and
to integrate them into the Lithuanian population, as well as to
preserve and encourage the practice of their language, customs and
traditions. 

Presentation of Report 

OSKARAS JUSYS, Under-Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of
Lithuania, said the report, which was submitted in 2004, incorporated
information from a large number of State and municipal institutions,
as well as non-governmental organizations. Lithuania did not have a
single body to deal with racial discrimination because that was the
task of all State institutions. Lithuanian legislation prohibited
racial and national discrimination, and such discrimination was
punishable in the courts. Minorities formed a relatively small, and
not always very visible, part of the Lithuanian population. The
State, however, recognized that minority groups were a huge asset and
had contributed greatly to the country's development, and therefore
saw it as its task to make those groups feel at home in Lithuania.
Lithuania's recent accession to the European Union, one of the basic
tenets of which was respect for fundamental human rights, would
undoubtedly benefit the situation of everyone in the country,
including members of the minority community. 

Additional progress had been made since the report was submitted,
including the drafting of a new programme to integrate the Roma, the
establishment of an Equal Opportunities Ombudsman in 2005, mandated
to consider complaints of discrimination on racial or national
grounds, and the continuation of assistance programmes for refugees.
Mr. Jusys noted that Roma often did not take advantage of the many
programmes, such as language classes, provided for them, as it seemed
that they did not seek to integrate into Lithuanian society, but
rather hoped to move on to richer countries. While legislation
existed to eradicate discrimination, attention was also drawn to
efforts by non-governmental organizations to implement projects that
promoted tolerance, which the Government welcomed. Promotion of
tolerance was also part of Lithuania's education programme. The
eradication of discrimination was closely linked to the promotion of
a culture of tolerance. Laws themselves were not enough; they had to
be accompanied by the promotion of tolerance throughout society. The
principle of non-discrimination on racial or ethnic grounds was a
constitutional principle in Lithuania and one that the State was
determined to apply.

Response by Delegation to Written Questions Presented in Advance

With regard to the application of the Convention and other
multilateral instruments in the Lithuanian legal system, the
delegation stated that in at least one case, an applicant had relied
on the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Racial
Discrimination in a situation where racial discrimination was
alleged, and that authority had been accepted by the court. That
said, Lithuanian courts were inclined to rely mostly on domestic law
rather than on the direct application of international instruments,
probably because they were simply more familiar with it, given the
large number of multilateral treaties to which Lithuania was a party.
Noting that there had been no successful criminal prosecutions for
racial discrimination in the reporting period, the delegation said
that that was because of the difficulty to prove that the act in
question was racially motivated. Such crimes, if proved, bore heavy
punishments under Lithuanian law, which provided for heavier
penalties for crimes with negative motivations. New legislation was
being drafted on hate crimes.

The issue of Roma people had been addressed in several different
sections of the report, the delegation said. In that regard, it
should be noted that the problem of social issues that they faced
were only taken up recently, given that it had not been addressed
under the Soviet regime, which was when most of the Roma had settled
in Lithuania. There were only about 2,500 Roma in Lithuania, but they
did not form a homogenous group. Some of them spoke Lithuanian and
had been in Lithuania for a long time, while others had not and were
not at all integrated into society. Most Roma lived mainly in major
urban centres, particularly in and around Vilnius. Despite their
concentration in urban centres, however, it was difficult for the
Government to engage meaningfully with the Roma as a large number of
their leaders had left the country over the past few years.
Admittedly, this group probably faced the greatest challenges to
integration within Lithuanian society. It was for that reason that
the Roma had been targeted for special assistance. In 2000 a
five-year programme was launched to help address their situation and
the Roma benefited from various social benefits, including financial
aid, education for their children and housing. The municipality of
Vilnius, in particular, had undertaken a number of initiatives
including mobile consultation services for the Roma population that
disseminated information on social benefits that were available to
them, including subsidized housing. Currently 40 Roma families lived
in subsidized housing as a result of that programme. 

Regarding social services for minorities and foreigners, the
delegation said that all social services were provided for those who
were in Lithuania legally. Social services were provided for those
who had the status of asylum-seekers and refugees, and those groups
benefited from additional social protections and benefits.

With respect to the question raised by the Committee on the
ratification of ILO Convention 169, the delegation said that
Lithuania did not have any indigenous or tribal peoples, and thus
there was no real need to ratify this instrument. Nevertheless,
Lithuania ensured the right of all to pursue secondary education in
their national language of origin and the accession to the UNESCO
Convention against Discrimination in education was currently being
discussed.

Oral Questions Raised by the Rapporteur and Committee Experts

NOURREDINE AMIR, the Committee Expert who served as country
Rapporteur for Lithuania, began by reviewing the issues the Committee
had singled out for attention by Lithuania in the Committee's
previous concluding observations on the initial report, asking
whether there had been consultations with minorities on education
programmes that targeted them; what was being done to better the
situation of Roma, as the most disadvantaged social group; the lack
of information on the rights of those temporarily residing on
Lithuanian soil, especially asylum-seekers and refugees who had been
the subject of discrimination in the past; and the issue of racial
statements and the incitement of racial violence by politicians.
Overall, he was very impressed by the way in which Lithuania had
addressed each of those issues in the present report. He was
interested to know, however, with regard to inflammatory racial
statements by politicians, why the Ombudsman on Equal Opportunities
had neither received any complaints in that regard, nor had any
complaints been lodged against civil servants. Indeed, since 1995 not
a single case of racial discrimination had been brought before the
courts. 

Mr. Amir noted that amendments to the law on asylum-seekers made in
2002 sought to address the gap in the legal status of those
foreigners on Lithuanian soil, including the provision of temporary
assistance permits. In the legislative sphere, numerous new
legislative initiatives had been taken, including a new civil code, a
new penal code, criminal code and civil procedure. In the
administrative sphere, he commended the new administrative body that
directed policy on minorities living in Lithuania, the Council of
National Communities, as well as the establishment, in 2003, of the
Standing Group of Experts, to protect the over 3 million people that
made up the minority population. 

One issue that had not been addressed by the report, Mr. Amir pointed
out, was Lithuania's non-ratification of Article 14 of the
Convention, which would allow Lithuanians to bring discrimination
complaints directly before the Committee. He urged the delegation to
accede to that article. He also noted that the Durban Declaration and
Programme of Action had not been mentioned in the report.

Overall he considered Lithuania a shining example, not just for
Europe, but for the whole world. Their report should be used as a
model.

Other experts asked questions on a variety of issues regarding
minority groups, including the Roma; racist attitudes in the media;
details of pending cases of discrimination before Lithuanian courts;
statistics on intermarriage between minority groups and ethnic
Lithuanians; how the quota for foreign workers was established; the
situation of those without documents regarding access to health care,
especially emergency health care; and the definition which Lithuania
used for both ethnic and national minorities. 

Response by Delegation to Oral Questions

With regards to why the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action
had not been specifically mentioned in the report, the delegation
affirmed that the obligations and activities to address
discrimination that had been outlined in the report were all in line
with the Declaration and Programme and that the Government was
mindful of the commitments undertaken at Durban. Regarding criticisms
of the research techniques employed in drafting the sociological
study, "Profiles of tolerance in Lithuania" carried out under the
National Human Rights Action Plan, the actual research had been
carried out by a private company using its own techniques. None of
that, however, should overshadow the benefit of that study. While it
was true that there was not a single state authority to address
racial discrimination, there were three controllers' offices that
dealt with some of these issues, including the Parliamentary
Controller to deal with abuse of power by state officials, the
Children's Rights Ombudsman and the Equal Opportunities Ombudsman.

Regarding the distinction between national and ethnic minorities, the
delegation said the draft law on national minorities defined a
national minority as persons belonging to a group which had a
national country and ethnic minorities as those that did not, such as
Tartars. 

Concerning the perhaps vague language in paragraph 19, which dealt
with Lithuanian-Polish relations, and which had been construed by
experts as indicating tension between the two States, the delegation
said that the language may have been vague, but the intention had
been just the opposite. It had been meant to show how closely the two
States worked together. Indeed, the only outstanding issue between
the two States involved disputes between experts on how to write the
Polish names in Lithuania and Lithuanian names in Poland, as those
countries used different alphabets.

In addition to the programmes that had already been described
targeting the integration of the Roma population, the delegation drew
attention to a large-scale project that was being planned, in
conjunction with the European Union, to address the integration of
the Roma into the labour market. Among the technical programmes
currently in place to aid the Roma was an education class that was
attended by 20 Roma children which would increase their chances of
finding employment. A small museum on Roma history and culture was
planned. While there was no official data on mixed families in the
Roma community, as it was such a small community and had such great
interaction with the State, the delegation could state informally
that there were 10 such marriages in Lithuania.

With regards to the issue of trafficking in persons, the delegation
said Lithuania had a programme to prevent trafficking in persons.
There had been amendments to the Penal Code which had widened the
scope of the law on this issue and increased punishment for the
culprits – now, trafficking in children could be punished by up to 15
years in prison. 

Preliminary Remarks

NOURREDINE AMIR, the Committee Expert who served as country
Rapporteur for Lithuania, recalled that he had already outlined his
evaluation of the situation in Lithuania in his initial statement at
the beginning of the examination of the report, and that it would
therefore be redundant to do so again here. He did want to highlight
once again, however, that he had found Lithuanian legislation to be
among the most progressive that the Committee had ever examined, and
that it was a shining example for other countries in this field. The
resolution of social problems was not just a matter of time, but also
a matter of resources and cooperation, he concluded. * *** */For use
of the information media; not an official record/





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