UN CRC: Findings On Cambodia, Canada, Chile, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, Djibouti, Greece, Iceland, Kiribati, Somalia, Zambia
GENEVA (9 June 2022) - The UN Child Rights Committee (CRC) has issued its findings on Cambodia, Canada, Chile, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, Djibouti, Greece, Iceland, Kiribati, Somalia and Zambia, the States parties that it reviewed during its latest session.
The findings contain positive aspects of each country's implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child and its Optional Protocols, as well as the Committee's main concerns and recommendations. Some of the key highlights include:
Cambodia
The Committee
raised concern over the lack of compulsory education in
Cambodia and a draft law proposing segregated classes for
children with disabilities. The Committee recommended that
Cambodia provide free and compulsory primary education for
all children for at least nine years, and amend the draft
law to guarantee the right of all children with disabilities
to inclusive education. The Committee was particularly
concerned about the high level of sexual exploitation and
abuse of children. It urged the State party to ensure the
effective investigation of and intervention in all cases of
sexual exploitation and abuse of children in and outside the
home, and in the digital environment, including cases
involving grooming.
Canada
The
Committee was gravely concerned about reports of unmarked
graves found on the sites of former residential schools for
Indigenous children across Canada. It urged Canada to
strengthen measures to investigate the death and
disappearances of thousands of girls, provide justice to
families of victims and survivors, and implement the
National Inquiry’s calls for justice. The Committee was
also concerned that the country’s child welfare system
continues to fail to protect Indigenous children and
adolescents from violence. It called on Canada to develop
and implement a national strategy to prevent all forms of
violence against all children and ensure a monitoring
mechanism is in place.
Chile
The
Committee was deeply concerned with the use of force and
sexual violence by Chile’s national law enforcement police
during demonstrations, including the social uprising in
2019, in which more than 1,000 children were affected. It
called on Chile to carry out independent and thorough
investigations to bring the perpetrators to justice and
adopt comprehensive reparation programmes for child victims
of the social uprising. The Committee also expressed concern
about cases of deaths and abuse of children under the care
of State institutions. It urged Chile to compensate past and
present victims, and end institutional violence in
alternative residential
care.
Croatia
Regarding
discrimination against children in Croatia, the Committee
called on the State party to strengthen public education
campaigns to address negative social attitudes towards
children of ethnic minorities, particularly Serbian minority
and Roma children, children with disabilities, refugee
children, migrant and asylum-seeking children, and LGBTI
children. The Committee was also concerned about
insufficient healthcare services and inclusive education for
children with disabilities. It requested Croatia to take
immediate measures to provide community or family-based
healthcare to children with disabilities. It also urged
Croatia to ensure that all children with disabilities have
access to inclusive education in mainstream
schools.
Cuba
The Committee expressed serious concerns about the severity of sentences imposed on children who were found guilty of exercising their rights to freedom of peaceful assembly in the July 2021 protests. It urged Cuba to review, through appeals, the heavy sentences imposed on these children and review the country’s legislation to ensure that children can effectively exercise the right to freedom of association and peaceful assembly. In addition, regarding the alternative care system in Cuba, the Committee was concerned about separating children from parents considered financially insolvent. It asked Cuba to ensure that financial and material poverty should never be the sole justification for removing a child from parental care.
Cyprus
To address the inadequate support for child victims of all forms of violence, the Committee recommended that Cyprus strengthen its professional capacity to provide child-friendly and comprehensive support such as trauma-focused therapy. The Committee was also concerned about asylum-seeking, refugee and migrant children who have been separated from their families as a result of forced returns. It requested Cyprus to end the practice of forced returns, uphold the principle of non-refoulement in border management and ensure that children have access to asylum procedures and legal and humanitarian assistance.
Djibouti
The Committee was deeply concerned that child marriage and female genital mutilation remained highly prevalent in Djibouti. It urged the State party to raise awareness of the harmful traditional, cultural and religious patterns that perpetuate child marriage, and take measures to end the practice of forcing victims of rape to marry their perpetrators. It also asked Djibouti to intensify efforts to eliminate female genital mutilation. The Committee was also concerned by the plight of children living in the streets. It asked the State party to develop a comprehensive strategy to address the situation of these children, reintegrate them with families, or settle them in an alternative care setting.
Greece
The Committee was
seriously concerned about Greece’s policy of immigration
detention of children for identification purposes. It called
upon the State party to stop placing children in immigration
detention and ensure the immediate transfer of
asylum-seeking children and their families out of detention
centres. The Committee was also concerned about the
persisting discrimination against Roma children, children
with disabilities, and asylum-seeking and refugee children.
It asked Greece to identify measures to ensure all these
children have effective access to food, healthcare,
education, and a decent standard of
living.
Iceland
The Committee
recommended that Iceland effectively investigate all
violence cases against children, including neglect and
sexual abuse and in the digital environment. The Committee
also expressed concerns about rising rates of depression
among children and long waiting lists for seeking mental
health services. It recommended that Iceland strengthen its
mental health services for children and provide a sufficient
number of qualified medical professionals, such as child
psychologists and
psychiatrists.
Kiribati
Concerning the high level of abuse of children, particularly in cases of domestic violence and violence in schools, the Committee recommended that Kiribati continue strengthening community-based child protection systems and establish mechanisms to ensure mandatory reporting of all cases of sexual exploitation or abuse of children. Regarding the adverse impacts of global climate change and natural disasters, such as seawater flooding and salinization of drinking water, on children’s rights, the Committee called on the State party to specifically address the impacts of climate change on children, especially on their rights to life, survival and development, health, adequate housing and safe drinking water and sanitation.
Somalia
The Committee was seriously concerned about the grave violations against children by all parties to conflicts, including abductions, rape and recruitment and use of children. It urged Somalia to immediately cease all such violations and protect children in line with its obligations under international humanitarian and human rights law. The Committee noted that in some federal states of Somalia, a child is defined as anyone aged below 15. It recommended that Somalia amend its legislation to ensure that all laws and regulations define a child as a person under 18 years of age and prohibit marriage with a boy or a girl under 18.
Zambia
In response to Zambia’s legislation that recognises the customary marriages of children after they reach puberty, the Committee urged the State party to amend its Marriage Act in compliance with the provisions under the Constitution and remove all exceptions that allow the marriage of anyone under 18 years of age. In addition, the Committee was concerned that the minimum age of criminal responsibility is still set at eight years old, and children are not guaranteed free legal representation in courts. The Committee called upon the State party to expedite the functioning of its Children’s Courts/Family Courts, promptly raise the legal age of criminal responsibility to at least 14, and provide independent legal aid to children.
The above findings, officially named Concluding Observations, are now available online on the session webpage.