CEDAW Publishes Findings On Dominican Republic, Gabon, Lebanon, Panama, Peru, Senegal, Uganda & Uzbekistan
GENEVA (28 February 2022) — The UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) on Monday issued its findings on the Dominican Republic, Gabon, Lebanon, Panama, Peru, Senegal, Uganda and Uzbekistan, the eight States parties that it reviewed during its latest session.
The findings contain positive aspects of each country's implementation of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, as well as the Committee's main concerns and recommendations. Some of the key highlights include:
Dominican Republic:
There
have been mass deportations of Haitian people, particularly
pregnant and postpartum women, some of whom were forcibly
separated from their children in the Dominican Republic. The
Committee urged the State party to suspend these
deportations immediately and issue permanent residence
permits to Haitian women whose children were born and raised
in the Dominican Republic. In addition, there are
significant obstacles faced by women of Haitian origin who
are undocumented or in an irregular migratory situation to
register the birth of children born to a Dominican father.
The Committee called on the Dominican Republic to remove all
legislative barriers to ensure all such children have access
to Dominican
nationality.
Gabon:
The Committee
remained deeply concerned about high pregnancy rates among
schoolgirls and the resulting incomplete secondary
schooling. It recommended that Gabon provide out-of-school
educational and parenting support to young mothers to help
them continue schooling or reintegrate into the school
system. Regarding child marriage, the Committee asked Gabon
to revise the provisions of the Civil Code to ensure the
minimum age of marriage is set at 18 years for both women
and men. It further requested Gabon to sensitize traditional
and religious leaders and parents on the harmful effects of
child marriage and
polygamy.
Lebanon:
As women
currently only represent 4.7% of parliamentarians and in
view of the upcoming legislative elections in May this year,
the Committee called on Lebanon to adopt the draft laws
introducing a minimum quota of 30% for women candidates on
the electoral lists of political parties, and require equal
media coverage to promote women’s equal participation in
political life. In addition, the Committee recommended that
the State party redress long-standing inequalities between
women and men by placing women at the centre of COVID-19
recovery
strategies.
Panama:
The Committee was seriously concerned about gender-based violence, including disappearance and rape, suffered by migrant women crossing the border through the Darien Gap (El Tapón del Darien) in Panama. The Committee urged Panama to take action to address women’s high risk of gender-based violence in the Darien Gap, and guarantee access to justice for women in the border areas. Concerning the low representation of women in the National Assembly, the Committee recommended that the State party take legislative measures to promote gender parity in local and general elections.
Peru:
Disadvantaged and marginalized groups of women and girls such as indigenous and Afro-Peruvian women, women with disabilities, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and intersex women, as well as refugee and migrant women, are facing multiple and intersecting forms of violence in all areas of their lives. The Committee, therefore, called on Peru to use temporary special measures to provide urgent redress for them. Concerning the country’s highly restrictive access to safe abortion, the Committee recommended that Peru legalize abortion in cases of rape, incest, threats to the life or health of the pregnant woman or severe foetal impairment, and decriminalize abortion in all other cases.
Senegal:
In light of the
persistent patriarchal norms that discriminate against women
in Senegal, the Committee called on the State party to
prohibit all harmful practices, including child marriage,
polygamous, levirate and sororate marriages, and female
genital mutilation, and to provide education programmes on
the negative impact of these practices. In addition, the
Committee recommended that Senegal take necessary measures
to accelerate women’s equal access to land, production
resources, capital and technologies, including for
small-scale businesses and climate change-resilient
agriculture.
Uganda:
The Committee
recommended that Uganda repeal legal provisions that are
discriminatory against women in the areas of marriage,
ownership of land, employment and protection from
gender-based violence against women. In addition, it called
on Uganda to intensify its efforts to ensure that harmful
practices, including “child sacrifice”, female genital
mutilation, polygamy and child marriages, are prohibited,
criminalized and ultimately eradicated, and that
perpetrators of such acts are prosecuted and
punished.
Uzbekistan:
The
Committee was concerned about the high incidence of
gender-based violence against women, especially the stark
increase in cases during the COVID-19 lockdown. It called on
Uzbekistan to ensure that protection and expulsion orders
are issued in a timely manner, and enforced effectively in
domestic violence cases. Concerning the low enrolment rate
of women and girls in secondary and higher education, the
Committee recommended that Uzbekistan address the root
causes of girls dropping out of schools, including child
marriage and early pregnancy, and ensure that young mothers
can return to school and obtain diplomas to gain access to
higher education.
The above findings, officially named as Concluding Observations, are now available online on the session webpage.