1. The Committee considered the initial
report of Mauritius (CRC/C/3/Add.36) at
its 332nd, 333rd, and 334th meetings, held
on 3 and 4 October 1996 (see CRC/C/SR.332-334),
and, at its 343rd meeting, held on 11 October
1996, adopted the following concluding observations.
2. The Committee expresses its appreciation
of the report submitted by the Government
of Mauritius, as well as of the extensive
additional information provided in its written
responses to the list of issues (CRC/C.12/WP.6).
The Committee is encouraged by the frank
tone of the discussion, in which the high-level
delegation of the State party recognized
the need for improvement in certain areas
concerning children.
3. The Committee welcomes the oral and
written commitment of the Government of
Mauritius to withdrawing its reservation
to article 22 of the Convention.
4. The Committee takes note of the establishment
in 1990 by Act of Parliament, of the National
Children's Council, set up under the aegis
of the Ministry of Women's Rights, Child
Development and Family Welfare, and welcomes
the recent establishment of an interministerial
committee on child prostitution.
5. The Committee notes with satisfaction
the efforts made by the Government of Mauritius
in the field of law reform and especially
the adoption, in pursuance of the implementation
of the Convention, of the Child Protection
Act in November 1994.
6. The Committee welcomes the ratification
by the State party of ILO Convention No.
138 on the minimum age for admission to
employment (1973).
7. The Committee welcomes the willingness
expressed by the delegation to establish
an ombudsperson for the rights of the child
or another equivalent independent mechanism.
8. The Committee also notes with appreciation
that the Government of Mauritius has prepared
and implemented the National Programme of
Action for the Survival, Development and
Protection of Children in response to the
recommendations and goals enunciated in
the Declaration and Plan of Action adopted
by the World Summit for Children in September
1990.
9. The Committee is aware of the geographical
particularities of Mauritius. The Committee
also notes that the population of the State
party is mainly composed of immigrants from
various continents, with different ethnic
origins and cultural backgrounds.
10. The Committee is concerned that the
Convention is not an integral part of the
national legislation and that national laws
and regulations are not fully consistent
with the principles and provisions of the
Convention.
11. The Committee is concerned at the insufficient
attention paid, at both national and local
levels, to the need for an efficient monitoring
mechanism that could provide a systematic
and comprehensive compilation of data and
indicators on all areas covered by the Convention
and in relation to all groups of children,
especially those who are victims of child
abuse, ill-treatment or child labour or
the administration of juvenile justice,
as well as the girl child, children of single-parent
families and those born out of wedlock,
abandoned, institutionalized and disabled
children, and children who, in order to
survive, are living and/or working in the
streets.
12. With regard to the implementation of
article 4 of the Convention, the Committee
notes with concern the inadequacy of measures
taken to ensure the implementation of children's
economic, social and cultural rights to
the maximum extent of available resources.
The Committee is particularly concerned
at the insufficient measures and programmes
for the protection of the rights of the
most vulnerable children, especially children
who are victims of abuse, children of single
parents, children born out of wedlock, abandoned
children, disabled children, children living
in poverty and children who, in order to
survive, are living and/or working in the
streets. The Committee is also concerned
at the lack of disaggregated data in relation
to budgetary allocations for children.
13. The State party has not yet taken fully
into account in its legislation and policies
the general principles of the Convention:
non-discrimination (art. 2), the best interests
of the child (art. 3) and respect for the
views of the child (art. 12).
14. The Committee is concerned about the
insufficient measures taken to make the
principles and provisions of the Convention
widely known to adults and children alike,
in conformity with article 42.
15. The Committee is concerned that the
education system might not be consistent
with the provisions of the Convention regarding
the right to education. In this regard,
the Committee is deeply concerned at the
high school drop-out rates, especially at
the end of the primary education level,
and at the high rate of illiteracy. It is
also worried about the absence of supervision
of private schools. The Committee is concerned,
in addition, at the difficulties encountered
by disabled children in gaining access to
regular primary schools.
16. The Committee is concerned that the
provisions of the Penal Code relating to
protection against sexual abuse, which provide
no safeguard for the protection of boy victims,
are inconsistent with the principles and
provisions of the Convention.
17. Although the employment of children
is governed by the 1975 Labour Act which
prohibits the employment of children under
15, the Committee notes with deep concern
that the 1990 census confirms the existence
of working children, in particular on the
island of Rodrigues where child labour is
common.
18. The Committee is concerned by the reported
increase in child abuse, including infanticide,
domestic violence and child prostitution
and the lack of adequate measures for the
psycho-social recovery of child victims
of such abuse.
19. While noting with appreciation the
establishment of the National Adoption Council,
the Committee is concerned about the insufficient
safeguards to protect fully the rights of
children in the process of international
adoption.
20. The situation in relation to the administration
of juvenile justice and, in particular,
its lack of compatibility with articles
37, 39 and 40 of the Convention, as well
as other relevant international standards,
is a matter of concern to the Committee.
21. In the spirit of the Vienna Declaration
and Programme of Action, adopted by the
World Conference on Human Rights in June
1993, in which States were urged to withdraw
reservations to the Convention on the Rights
of the Child, the Committee wishes to encourage
the State party to take steps to withdraw
its reservation to article 22 of the Convention.
22. The Committee recommends that legislative
measures be undertaken to ensure that national
legislation conforms with the provisions
of the Convention. The Committee encourages
the State party to pursue its efforts to
strengthen the institutional framework designed
to promote and protect human rights in general
and the rights of the child in particular.
23. The Committee recommends that the State
party strengthen coordination between the
various governmental mechanisms involved
in children's rights, at both the national
and local levels, with a view to developing
a comprehensive policy on children and ensuring
effective evaluation of the implementation
of the Convention in the country.
24. The Committee also recommends that
the State party give priority attention
to the development of a system of data collection
and to the identification of appropriate
disaggregated indicators with a view to
addressing all areas of the Convention and
all groups of children in society. Such
mechanisms can play a vital role in systematically
monitoring the status of children and evaluating
progress achieved and the difficulties hampering
the realization of children's rights for
all groups. They can be used as a basis
for designing programmes to improve the
situation of children, particularly those
belonging to the most disadvantaged groups,
including disabled children, children born
out of wedlock, children ill-treated and
abused within the family, children who are
victims of sexual exploitation, and children
who are forced to live and/or work in the
streets in order to survive. It is further
suggested that the State party request international
cooperation in this regard.
25. The Committee encourages the State
party to consider the establishment of an
independent mechanism, such as an Ombudsperson
for the rights of the child.
26. The Committee encourages the Government
of Mauritius to pay particular attention
to the full implementation of article 4
of the Convention and to ensure adequate
distribution of resources at both central
and local levels. Budget allocations for
the implementation of economic, social and
cultural rights should be ensured to the
maximum extent of available resources and
in the light of the best interests of the
child.
27. The Committee recommends that the State
party launch a permanent information campaign,
for both children and adults, on the Convention
on the Rights of the Child. The Government
should consider incorporating the Convention
in school curricula and take appropriate
measures to facilitate access by children
to information produced for them. The Committee
suggests that the State party develop a
comprehensive training programme for professional
groups such as teachers, social workers,
doctors, law enforcement personnel and immigration
officers. Police officers must be specially
trained to deal with child abuse and neglect.
28. The Committee encourages the State
party to undertake a comprehensive study
on the impact of malnutrition on child development
in connection with school drop-out and child
labour, and to take all appropriate measures
to address this problem. International cooperation
could be requested to achieve this task
and consideration should be given to the
strengthening of cooperation with the International
Labour Organization and the United Nations
Children's Fund (UNICEF). It is also recommended
that the State party encourage and support
the establishment of day-care centres at
workplaces, to enable children of working
mothers to benefit from a healthy development.
29. The Committee recommends that a global
study on the quality of the education system
be made. In the light of article 2 of the
Convention, the Committee also recommends
that the State party take all necessary
measures to fight school drop-out and to
prevent child labour. Measures should be
taken to prevent a rise in discriminatory
attitudes or prejudice towards girl children
and children belonging to minority groups.
It is also suggested that sexual education
be included in school curricula. It recommends
that comprehensive studies be initiated
on these important issues to provide better
understanding of these phenomena and facilitate
the elaboration of policies and programmes
to combat them effectively.
30. The Committee also recommends that,
in order fully to protect the rights of
the child in adoption procedures, the State
party consider ratifying the Hague Convention
on Protection of Children and Cooperation
in Respect of Intercountry Adoption (1993).
31. In the light of articles 19, 34 and
35 of the Convention, the Committee encourages
the State party to take all appropriate
measures to prevent and combat ill-treatment
of children, including child abuse within
the family, corporal punishment, child labour
and the sexual exploitation of children,
including victims of sexual tourism. The
Committee also recommends that the Penal
Code be amended in the light of the Convention.
Further measures should be taken with a
view to ensuring the physical and psychological
recovery and rehabilitation of the victims
of abuse, neglect, ill-treatment, violence
or exploitation, in accordance with article
39 of the Convention.
32.
The Committee recommends that the State
party envisage undertaking a comprehensive
reform of the Juvenile Offender Act in
the
spirit of the Convention, in particular
articles 37, 39 and 40, and of other
United
Nations standards in this field, such as
the "Beijing Rules", the "Riyadh
Guidelines" and the United Nations
Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived
of their Liberty. Particular attention
should
be paid to considering deprivation of liberty
only as a measure of last resort and for
the shortest possible period, to protecting
the rights of children deprived of their
liberty, to due process of law and to the
full independence and impartiality of the
judiciary. Training programmes on the relevant
international standards should be organized
for all professionals involved with the
juvenile justice system. The Committee
also
recommends that the penal law be amended
so that adults having sexual intercourse
with boys under 16 be considered as a criminal
act. The Committee further suggests that
the State party consider seeking technical
assistance for this purpose from the High
Commissioner for Human Rights/Centre for
Human Rights and the Crime Prevention and
Criminal Justice Division of the United
Nations.
33. Finally, in the light of article 44,
paragraph 6, of the Convention, the Committee
recommends that the initial report and written
replies presented by Mauritius be made widely
available to the public at large and that
the publication of the report be considered,
along with the relevant summary records
and the concluding observations adopted
thereon by the Committee. Such a document
should be widely distributed in order to
generate debate and awareness of the Convention,
its implementation and monitoring within
the Government, the Parliament and the general
public, including concerned non-governmental
organizations.
Thirteenth session
CONSIDERATION OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES
PARTIES
UNDER ARTICLE 44 OF THE CONVENTION
Concluding observations of the Committee
on the
Rights of the Child: Mauritius
A. Introduction
B. Positive aspects
C. Factors and difficulties impeding
the implementation
of the Convention
D. Principal subjects of concern
D. Suggestions and recommendations