3 June 2005
CONSIDERATION OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES PARTIES UNDER ARTICLE 44 OF THE
CONVENTION
Concluding observations of the Committee on the Rights of the Child
NICARAGUA
1. The Committee considered the third periodic report of Nicaragua (CRC/C/125/Add.3)
at its 1042nd and 1043rd meetings (see CRC/C/SR.1042 and 1043), held on 27 May
2005, and adopted the following concluding observations at its 1052nd meeting
on 3 June 2005.
A. Introduction
2. The Committee welcomes the submission of the State party’s third periodic
report prepared in a participatory way as well as the timely responses to the
list
of issues, which allowed the Committee to have a better understanding of the
situation of children in the State party.
B. Follow-up measures undertaken and progress achieved by the State Party
3. The Committee welcomes:
a) the establishment, in 1999, of the National Council for Economic and Social
Planning (CONPES) aimed at advising the Government on a wide range of economic
and social policies, including the country’s development policy “Enhanced Economic
Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy” (ERCERP);
b) the creation of the National Council for the Comprehensive Care and Protection
of Children and Adolescents (CONAPINA), responsible for formulating and coordinating
implementation of the national policy for children, and which include among
its members a representative of children;
c) the entry into force of a new Criminal Procedure Code in 2002;
d) the entry into force of the Health Act in May 2002 (Ley General de Salud);
e) the establishment of the Ombudsman Office for Human Rights in June 1999 and
of a Special Ombudsman Office for Children, in 2000;
f) the creation of the National Commission on Violence against Women, Children
and Adolescents in 2000;
g) the following programmes and plans of actions:
- the National Plan of Action 2002-2011 for children and adolescents;
- the National Plan of Action 2001-2006 for the prevention of the domestic and
sexual violence;
- the National Strategic Plan of Action for the Prevention and Eradication of
Child Labour and Protection of Child Workers 2001-2005 with the setting-up,
in 2002, of the National Commission for the Eradication of Child Labour and
the Protection of Young Workers (CNEPTI), ;
- the National Education Plan 2001-2015.
4. The Committee also wishes to welcome the ratification of:
i) the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the
sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography on 2 December 2004
and of the Optional Protocol on children in armed conflict on 17 March 2005;
ii) the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially
Women and Children, supplementing the United Nations Convention against Transnational
Organized Crime 2000, on 12 October 2004;
iii) the 1999 ILO Convention No. 182 concerning the Prohibition and Immediate
Action for the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labour, on 6 November
2000;
iv) the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court 1998, on 8 September
2000;
v) the Inter-American Convention on the Return of Children on 20 October 2004;
vi) the Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights to abolish the death
penalty, on 24 March 1999
C. Factors and difficulties affecting the implementation of the Convention
5. The Committee notes that the State party is one of the poorest countries
in Latin America and that large part of the population lives below the poverty
line. The
Committee also notes that the country still suffers from the effects of the
1980s civil war and that it is often exposed to serious natural disasters, such
as hurricanes, floods, volcanic eruptions and earthquakes.
D. Main subjects of concern and recommendations
1. General Measures of Implementation (arts. 4, 42 and 44, paragraph 6 of the
Convention)
Committee’s previous recommendations
6. The Committee notes with satisfaction that some concerns and recommendations
(CRC/C/15/Add.108 of 24 June 1999) made upon the consideration of the State
party’s second periodic report (CRC/C/65/Add.4) have been addressed. However,
it regrets that other of its concerns and recommendations have been insufficiently
addressed, particularly those contained in §: 22 (the need to allocate substantial
financial resources for the benefit of children); 24 (the persistent disparities
between the Atlantic/Caribbean and Central/Pacific regions as well as between
urban and rural areas); 33 (need to reinforce measures and raise awareness to
prevent and combat cases of abuse and ill-treatment of children, including sexual
abuse, both within and outside the family); 34 (regional disparities in access
to health care, high rates of malnutrition in children under 5 and in school
age and low access to health care in rural and remote areas); 39 (children belonging
to indigenous groups); 40 (child labour and economic exploitation); 43 (conditions
of detention for children). The Committee notes that those concerns
and recommendations are reiterated in the present document.
7. The Committee urges the State party to take all necessary measures to address
those recommendations from the concluding observations of the second periodic
report that have not yet been implemented and to provide adequate follow-up
to the recommendations contained in the present concluding observations on the
third periodic report.
Legislation and implementation
8. While the Committee welcomes the fact that the direct application of the
Convention is constitutionally guaranteed under article 71 of the Constitution,
and the progress made by the State party in the legal, political and administrative
realms, it remains concerned that children are in general not considered and
treated as subjects of rights.
9. The Committee recommends that the State party increase its efforts to guarantee
the full implementation of the approved laws, policies and plans protecting
and promoting the rights of children and to promote attitudes and practices
fully respecting the child as a subject of rights.
National Plan of Action
10. While the Committee welcomes the National Plan of Action 2002-2011 for children
and adolescents, it notes that it lacks of adequate human and financial
resources for an effective functioning and that its activities are not sufficiently
taken into account by the authorities and institutions dealing with children
issues. The Committee also notes that several other specific plans of actions
and programmes (paragraph 3(g) above) have been adopted in the last years, but
does not have much information on their level of coordination with the National
Plan of Action for children and adolescents.
11. The Committee recommends that the State party implement the National Plan
of Action for children and adolescents with the aim of realizing the principles
and provisions of the Convention, and taking into account, inter alia, the Plan
of Action “A World Fit for Children” adopted by the General Assembly special
session in May 2002. The Committee also recommends that all the other programmes
and plans which may have impact on children are adequately coordinated with
the National Plan of Action for children and adolescents as well as the Code
on Children and Adolescents.
Coordination
12. The Committee welcomes the creation of the National Council for the Comprehensive
Care and Protection of Children and Adolescents, responsible for formulating
and coordinating implementation of the national policies for children.
13. The Committee recommends that the State Party give adequate support to the National Council for the Comprehensive Care and Protection of Children and Adolescents and enhance coordination –both at national and at local level - between the different governmental bodies responsible for the implementation of the Convention.
Independent Monitoring
14. The Committee notes that the Special Ombudsman for the Protection of Children
and Adolescents resigned recently following some changes in the institution
which would have allegedly undermined its autonomy and independence. In this
regard, the Committee is concerned that the Ombudsperson office could lose the
elements of objectivity and impartiality that are necessary for an effective
protection of children human rights.
15. In light of its General Comment No. 2 on national human rights institutions
and the Paris Principles (General Assembly resolution 48/134, Annex), the Committee
recommends the State party to ensure that the Special Office of the Ombudsman
remain an independent monitoring body for the implementation of the Convention
and that it is provided with adequate human and financial resources. The Committee
further recommends that the Special Office of the Ombudsman deals with complaints
from children in a child-sensitive and expeditious manner and provides remedies
for violations of their rights under the Convention.
Resources for children
16. The Committee notes the current effort of the State party, together with
other countries, to achieve debt relief, as well as the 2002 study undertaken
by
CEPAL (Comisión Económica para America Latina) and UNICEF, which reached the
conclusion that one of the major causes of poverty in Nicaragua is the unequal
distribution of the income. The Committee - also taking into account that the
social expenditure does not seem to be proportional to the economic growth reported
by the State party - expresses concern at the reported insufficient political
will to increase the budget for programmes and policies for children, who suffer
severely from the consequences of budgetary constraints and from the uneven
distribution of the income. In addition, the Committee is concerned that the
Free Trade Agreements currently under negotiation may negatively impact on the
allocation of budget for social services.
17. The Committee recommends that the State party, in accordance with article
4 of the Convention, increase budget allocations for the implementation of the
rights recognized in the Convention, ensure a more balanced distribution of
the income throughout the country and prioritize budgetary allocations to ensure
implementation of the economic, social and cultural rights of all children,
including those belonging to economically disadvantaged groups, such as indigenous
children, “to the maximum extent of….available resources and, where needed,
within the framework of international cooperation”. Furthermore, the Committee
recommends that the State party ensure that the Free Trade Agreements do not
negatively affect the rights of children, e.g. in terms of access to affordable
medicines, and that – if debt relief efforts are successful – it invest the
saved money for an adequate implementation of child rights and in other social
services.
Data collection
18. While the Committee welcomes the information that the State party is developing
a national information system with the support of UNICEF, it remains concerned
that so far insufficient data are available on the situation of children. The
Committee notes in this regard that the State party does not collect yet statistical
data on indigenous groups and other national or ethnic minorities.
19. The Committee recommends that the State party continue and strengthen
its efforts to develop a comprehensive system of collection of comparative and
disaggregated data on the implementation of the Convention, in particular by
providing adequate financial and other resources for the development and implementation
of the above mentioned national information system. The data should cover all
children below the age of 18 years and be disaggregated by those group of children
who are in need of special protection, including indigenous children and children
belonging to minority groups.
Training/dissemination of the Convention
20. While the Committee welcomes information provided in the report on the dissemination
of the Convention and human rights education in Nicaragua, it is concerned that
there is still lack of adequate access and information on human rights, including
the rights of the child, especially in the rural and remote areas.
21. The Committee recommends the State party to continue and strenghten its
efforts to disseminate the Convention throughout the country and to raise public
awareness, in particular among children themselves and parents, about its principles
and provisions.
22. Furthermore, the Committee encourages the State party to continue and strenghten
its efforts to provide adequate and systematic training and/or sensitization
on children’s rights of professional groups working with and for children, in
particular law enforcement officials, as well as parliamentarians, judges, lawyers,
health personnel, teachers, school administrators and others as required.
Co-operation with NGOs
23. The Committee notes with appreciation the involvement of non governmental
organizations, including children organizations, in several relevant activities,
including the preparation of the periodic report.
24. The Committee encourages the State party to continue, and where possible
strengthen, the fruitful and constructive collaboration with non governmental
organizations in the development and implementation of programs and activities
aimed at improving children’s rights.
2. Definition of the child (article 1 of the Convention)
25. While the Committee notes that the draft new Civil Code contains measures
aimed at solving this problem, it continues to be concerned at the current
discrepancies between the minimum legal age for marriage of boys and girls.
Furthermore the Committee considers that the minimum legal age for marriage
with parental consent is too low (15 for boys and 14 for girls). .
26. With reference to its previous recommendations, the Committee recommends
the State party to rapidly adopt and implement the draft new Civil Code in order
to increase the minimum age for marriage and set it at the same age for boys
and girls.
3. General Principles (arts. 2, 3, 6 and 12 of the Convention)
Non-discrimination
27. The Committee is concerned that the country’s adult-centred culture and
the high poverty levels concentrated especially in rural, indigenous and Caribbean
areas prevent the full enjoyment of rights by children belonging to vulnerable
groups, such as children with disabilities, indigenous children and children
living in rural or remote areas.
28. The Committee recommends that the State party increase its efforts to ensure
implementation of existing laws guaranteeing the principle of nondiscrimination
and full compliance with article 2 of the Convention, and adopt a proactive
and comprehensive strategy to eliminate discrimination on any grounds and against
all vulnerable groups throughout the country.
29. The Committee also request that specific information be included, in the next periodic report, on the measures and programmes relevant to the Convention on the Rights of the Child undertaken by the State party to follow up on the Declaration and Programme of Action adopted at the 2001 World Conference Against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance, also taking into account General Comment n° 1 on article 29(1) of the Convention (aims of education).
Respect for the views of the child
30. The Committee notes that both the Code on Children and Adolescents, and
the Parent-Child Relatives Act, contain provisions protecting the principle
of
respect for the views of the child, but it is concerned at the limited implementation
in practice, in particular in the family and in schools, of the right of the
child to express his/her views.
31. The Committee recommends that the State party continue to promote, facilitate and implement in practice, within the family, schools, other institutions as well as in judicial and administrative procedures, the principle of respect for the views of children and their participation in all matters affecting them, in accordance with article 12 of the Convention, with special attention at the development and implementation of programs related to child labour, street children, sexual exploitation and other situations where the children are involved.
4. Civil Rights and Freedoms (arts. 7, 8, 113-17 and 37(a) of the Convention)
Birth registration
32. While the Committee welcomes the massive campaigns for birth registration
undertaken, it continues to be concerned that there is still a lack of institutional
capacity in the Civil Registry System and that a quite consistent group of children
are still not legally registered due to administrative, legal and cultural causes.
33. The Committee reiterates its previous recommendation urging the State party
take all possible steps to ensure immediate registration of the births of all
children, and to promote and facilitate the registration of those children who
were not registered at birth, in light of article 7 of the Convention. In particular,
the State party should modernize and ensure the proper operation and maintenance
of the Civil Registry System, including by providing it with the necessary resources.
Torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
34. The Committee notes that torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishments are prohibited in the State party. However, the Committee is
concerned by allegations of instances of ill-treatment of children by law-enforcement
officials, especially in police establishments.
35. In light of article 37 (a) of the Convention, the State party should take
all necessary measures to address the causes and to prevent incidents of illtreatment
of children while in State care, including by adopting a prevention strategy
against institutional violence.
5. Family Environment and Alternative Care (arts. 5; 18 (paras. 1-2); 9-11;
19-21; 25; 27 (para.4); and 39 of the Convention)
Family care and parental responsibilities
36. While the Committee notes with appreciation that strengthening the family
is an important strategy within the national policy for the comprehensive care
of
children and adolescents, it is concerned that insufficient financial and other
resources have been provided for the implementation of this strategy. Furthermore,
while noting that various legislative initiatives are currently under debate
in this respect, the Committee is concerned at the lack of an appropriate and
comprehensive regulation of family relations, e.g. via a comprehensive Code,
as well as at the lack of specialized family courts.
37. The Committee recommends that the State party:
a) promote and support responsible parenthood, inter alia by providing families
with financial allowances when needed;
b) approve and implement appropriate regulations of family relations that reflect
and incorporate international standards ratified by the State party, such as
the Convention on the Rights of the Child, preferably by developing a comprehensive
Code;
c) establish specialized family courts with trained judges and other professional
involved, and ensure that family law practice is accessible to everybody and
that family law procedures are conducted without undue delay.
Alternative care and adoption
38. The Committee notes with concern the difficulties that some parents and
families encounter - such as unemployment, malnutrition and lack of adequate
housing - which may cause abandonment or abuse resulting in placement of children
in institutions or in adoption.
39. The Committee recommends that the State party undertake – in case where
a child is deprived of her/his family environment – maximum efforts to return
the child to the family of origin. If that action is not in the best interests
of the child, efforts should be undertaken to place the child in a family-type
form of alternative care, with preference for kinship care and to use institutional
placement only as a measure of last resort. In case adoption is in the best
interests of the child, preference should be given to domestic over inter-country
adoption, The Committee recommends in this regard that the State party ensure
that its legislation and practice regarding adoption is brought in line with
article 21 of the Convention and that it become a party to the Hague Convention
of 1993 on Protection of
Children and Cooperation in Respect of Inter-country adoption.
Violence, abuse, neglect and maltreatment
40. While the Committee welcomes the National Plan of Action 2001-2006 for the
prevention of the domestic and sexual violence and the fact that children victim
of abuses can directly file a complaint, it is concerned that domestic violence
and abuses on children is an increasing phenomenon in the society.
41. The Committee, reiterating its previous recommendation, urges the State
party to strengthen its efforts in order to address ill-treatment of children
within the family and reinforce the mechanisms monitoring the extent of the
forms of violence, injury or abuse, neglect, maltreatment or exploitation considered
by article 19, including within the family, schools, in institutional or other
care, of a welfare, educational or penal nature. The Committee also recommends
the State party to ensure adequate protection of children victim of abuses and
avoid re-victimization of children who are involved in legal procedures, inter
alia, by accepting
video taped testimony of children as admissible evidence in court.
42. Furthermore, the Committee encourages the State party to establish a toll free child helpline service, which would give easy access to children in need of care and protection to counselling and support, and to provide it with adequate means in order to be able to give appropriate follow-up to the requests made.
Corporal punishment
43. While the Committee notes that there is legislation in place prohibiting
all forms of violence against children, including corporal punishment, it expresses
concern that this legislation does not seem to be interpreted as prohibiting
all forms of corporal punishment and that corporal punishment is still widely
accepted in the society.
44. The Committee recommends that the State party introduce – and enforce where
applicable – legislation explicitly prohibiting all forms of corporal punishment
of children in the home, schools and all other institutions and forms of childcare.
The State party should also conduct awareness raising and public education campaigns
against corporal punishment and promote non-violent, participatory forms of
discipline.
6. Basic Health and Welfare (arts. 6; 18, para.3; 23; 24; 26; 27, paras 1-3
of the Convention)
Children with disabilities
45. While the Committee welcomes the measures taken for disabled children,including
the adoption of the Disabled Persons Act N° 202, it expresses concern about
the general situation of disabled children in the country, which continue to
face discrimination, and at the information that only a small percentage of
disabled children receive adequate support. Furthermore, the Committee express
concern that there is no specific allocation of resources for the care of children
with disabilities.
46. The Committee encourages the State party to actively pursue its current
efforts and to continue to:
a) ensure that policies and practice in relation to children with disabilities
take due regard of the Standard Rules on the Equalization of Opportunities for
Persons with Disabilities (General Assembly resolution 48/96) and of the Committee’s
recommendations adopted at its day of general discussion on “Children with disabilities”
(see CRC/C/69);
b) pursue efforts to ensure that children with disabilities may exercise their
right to education to the maximum extent possible and facilitate inclusion in
the mainstream education system;
c) undertake greater efforts to make available the necessary professional (i.e.
disability specialists) and financial resources, especially at the local level,
and to promote and expand community-based rehabilitation programmes, including
parent support groups;
d) strengthen public awareness campaigns to change negative public attitudes.
Health and standard of living
47. The Committee is extremely concerned about the persistence of a high degree
of poverty in the State party, especially in the Caribbean/Atlantic region and
in
rural areas, which create grievous gaps in access to health and health services
between rural and urban zones and the Caribbean/Atlantic region. Serious concern
is expressed at the State party’s information that about 2.38 millions of people
(out of a total of about 5.37 millions) are in a condition of poverty, while
15.1% of the population is in a situation of extreme poverty.
48. Furthermore, the Committee is concerned that:
a) only about 2/3 of the population have access to clean drinking water and
that there is a huge discrepancy between the rates of urban and rural population
having access to clean drinking water.
b) one out of every three children has some degree of chronic malnutrition and
that about 10% of them are said to suffer from severe malnutrition.
c) while the Committee notes the progress made in the reduction of infant and
child mortality, including the National Plan for the Reduction of Maternal,
Perinatal and Infant Mortality of March 2000, it continues to be concerned at
the level of infant and child mortality as well as at the high rate of maternal
mortality.
49. The Committee recommends that the State party:
a) take all possible actions to reduce poverty and equalize living conditions
throughout the country, and ensure access to basic goods and services, such
as clean and drinking water, especially in remote and rural areas;
b) ensure basic health care and services to all children throughout the country
and urgently address the problem of malnutrition, with special emphasis on rural
and remote areas;
c) strengthen its efforts to urgently tackle the grievous issue of infant, child
and maternal mortality throughout the country.
HIV/AIDS
50. While the Committee welcomes the enactment of the Act N° 238 on the Protection
and Defence of Human Rights in presence of HIV/AIDS, as well as the Strategic
National Plan against HIV/AIDS, it is concerned that antiretroviral treatment
is not yet guaranteed to the newborn from seropositive mother and that post-natal
care is not provided to the seropositive mother. Furthermore, the Committee
is concerned that the presence of HIV/AIDS is particularly high in frontier
and harbour zones and that the potential of its spread represents a high, latent
risk, despite the fact that official data show a low number of cases.
51. The Committee recommends that the State party:
a) increase its efforts to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS, taking into account
the Committee’s General Comment No. 3 on HIV/AIDS and the rights of the child
and the International Guidelines on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights (E/CN.4/1997/37);
b) strengthen its measures to prevent mother-to-child transmission, inter alia,
through coordination with the activities aimed at reducing maternal mortality;
c) guarantee antiretroviral treatment to newborn from HIV/AIDS seropositive
mother as well as post natal monitoring of seropositive women;
d) pay particular attention to children infected by HIV/AIDS or who have become
orphans due to the death of HIV/AIDS parents, through providing adequate medical,
psychological and material support and by involving the community;
e) strengthen its efforts by conducting campaigns and programmes to raise awareness
about HIV/AIDS among adolescents, particularly among those belonging to vulnerable
groups as well as the population at large, so as to reduce discrimination against
children infected and affected by HIV/AIDS;
f) ensure the provision of adequate financial and human resources for the effective
implementation of the HIV/AIDS Strategic National Plan;
g) seek further technical assistance from, inter alia, the UN Joint Programme
on HIV/AIDS and UNICEF.
Adolescent health
52. The Committee is concerned at the high rate of teenage pregnancies and at
the lack of adequate sexual and reproductive health services. In this regard,
the Committee is also concerned at the information that the authorities reportedly
prohibited in 2003 the publication of a manual elaborated by experts on sexual
education and reproductive health (“Manual for Life”).
53. In the light of the Committee’s General Comment on adolescent health and development in the context of the Convention (CRC/GC/2003/4), the Committee recommends that the State party ensure access to reproductive health services to all adolescents and immediately adopt a manual on sexual education and reproductive health which would take into account the above-mentioned General Comment of the Committee.
7. Education, Leisure and Cultural Activities (arts. 28, 29 and 31 of the
Convention)
54. The Committee is concerned about :
a) the still low literacy rate (76.7 % of adult and 86.2% of children in 2002);
b) socio-economic and regional disparities - e.g. between urban and rural areas
and between the Central/Pacific and Caribbean/Atlantic regions- in the access
and enjoyment of the right to education, including lack of facilities in isolated
and remote areas.
c) the lack of adequate training of teachers, teachers’ low salaries which may
lead to loss of motivation, high turnover rates, migration abroad and little
interest in professional development.
55. Furthermore, the Committee expresses concern at lack of adequate resources
for education and at the information that annually, an average of more than
850,000 children between 3 and 16 years of age remain outside the school system,
and that only a small part of enrolled children complete the six years of primary
schooling.
56. The Committee encourages the State party to:
a) increase the efforts to eliminate discrepancy in access to education between
urban and rural areas and between the Central/Pacific and Caribbean/Atlantic
regions;
b) emphasize the quality of education and devote more resources to education
in the national budget;
c) strengthen measures aimed at increasing enrolment and completion rates and
reduce drop-out rates in pre-primary, primary and secondary education;
d) consider expanding the years of compulsory education with a view to eliminating
the existing gap between the legal age for access to work and for compulsory
education;
e) expand public provision of early childhood education and raise awareness
amongst parents about the value of early childhood education;
f) strengthen efforts at teacher training, address the issue of teachers’ salaries
and expand recruitment of qualified ones;
g) include human rights education as part of the curriculum;
h) provide more demand driven technical and vocational training and organize
vocational counselling for children;
i) provide opportunities for children outside schools and working children so
that they can get as much education as possible by specific programs tailored
to their life conditions;
j) ensure the provision of adequate financial and human resources for the effective
implementation of the educational programmes and expand scholarship and other
programmes of assistance to students;
k) seek technical assistance from UNESCO and UNICEF.
57. Furthermore, the Committee expresses concern at the information that the
majority of public schools require students to pay a “voluntary quota” for their
inscription fee, which added to the expenses incumbent on families for clothing,
food, school supplies and transportation, make education of children for poor
families virtually impossible.
58. In light of article 28 of the Convention, the Committee recommends that
the State party ensure primary education for all children free of costs – including
payment of “voluntary quota” and/or school books or other school material -
and provide support to families with financial problems for an adequate educational
development of their children.
8. Special Protection Measures (arts. 22; 30; 38; 39; 40; 37 (b)-(d); 32-36
of the Convention)
Children of migrant families
59. The Committee is concerned at the high number of families migrating abroad
and at the possible negative consequences resulting from this phenomenon on
the full enjoyment by children of their rights
60. The Committee recommends that the State party carry out a comprehensive
study on the situation of children of migrant families with the aim to developing
adequate strategies to ensure their protection and the full enjoyment of their
rights.
Economic exploitation, including child labour
61. The Committee expresses concern at the information that child labour has
increased consistently in the last years due to, inter alia, migration from
the
countryside and intensification of poverty.
62. The Committee further notes that the domestic legislation does not seem
to contain provisions punishing sale and trafficking of children for the purpose
of
economic exploitation.
63. The Committee recommends the State party to:
a) undertake a survey of the number of children working, including as domestic
servants and in the agricultural sector, in order to design and implement comprehensive
strategies and policies to prevent and combat economic exploitation;
b) secure the prohibition of the sale and trafficking of children for the purpose
of economic exploitation;
c) ensure the implementation of legislation fully covering art. 32 of the Convention,
and ILO Conventions No. 138 and No. 182,
d) ensure the implementation of the National Strategy Plan for the Prevention
and Eradication of Child Labour and Protection of Young Workers (2001-2005);
e) undertake raising awareness campaigns to prevent and combat the economic
exploitation of children;
f) seek technical assistance from the International Programme on the Elimination
of Child Labour (IPEC/ILO) and UNICEF, among others.
64. The Committee is also concerned that the National Commission for the Eradication
of Child Labour and the Protection of Young Workers (CNEPTI),
which is the coordinating body between the Government, the NGOs and the organizations
of employers and workers, lack the necessary financial resources for carrying
out its monitoring activities for the eradication of child labour.
65. The Committee recommends that the State party takes all feasible measures
- including by providing it with the necessary financial and human resources
- in order to enable CNEPTI to carry out its important functions.
Street children
66. The Committee is concerned at the growing number of street children living
in the State party, especially in Managua, as well as at the increasing emergence
of street youth gangs (pandillas) in the country, of which over 100 are believed
to operate in the capital Managua.
67. The Committee recommends that the State party:
(a) carry out a comprehensive study to assess the scope, nature and causes of
the presence of street children and youth gangs (pandillas) in the country in
order to develop a comprehensive policy for their prevention and reduction;
(b) provide street children with recovery and social reintegration services
and provide them with adequate nutrition, housing, necessary healthcare and
educational opportunities; and
(c) seek assistance from, inter alia, UNICEF.
Substances abuse
68. The Committee is concerned at the endemic abuse of substances among street
children and members of youth gangs (pandillas)
69. The Committee recommends the State party to establish programmes to prevent
and combat substance abuse by street children and members of youth gangs (pandillas),
including the provision of psycho-social assistance for addicts. The Committee
also recommends that the State party seek technical cooperation, among others,
from WHO and UNICEF.
Sexual exploitation and trafficking
70. While welcoming the measures taken by the State party to combat and raise
awareness about the problem of sexual exploitation and trafficking in persons,
the Committee is concerned at the information that a consistent number of children
are victims of sexual violence, pornography, remunerated sexual activity and
sexual tourism in Nicaragua and that sexual abuse and exploitation in its various
forms, including trafficking, pornography and sexual tourism, have not been
classified yet as crimes in the Penal Code.
71. The Committee recommends to the State party to:
a) rapidly adopt the proposed new Nicaraguan Penal Code which classifies as
a crime sexual exploitation in its various forms;
b) undertake a study on the sexual exploitation of children in order to assess
its scope and causes, enable effective monitoring of the problem and develop
measures and programmes, including social reintegration programmes, to prevent,
combat and eliminate it;
c) approve and implement a national plan of action against sexual exploitation
and trafficking of children, taking into account the Declaration and Agenda
for Action and the Global Commitment adopted at the 1996 and 2001 World Congress
against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children;
d) train law enforcement officials, social workers and prosecutors on how to
receive, monitor, investigate and prosecute complaints, in a child-sensitive
manner that
respects the privacy of the victim;
e) seek technical assistance from among others, UNICEF and ILO.
72. The State party is also encouraged to become a party to the Inter- American
Convention on International Traffic in Minors and to the Inter- American Convention
on the Return of Children. Furthermore, the State party is encouraged to consider
becoming a party to the United Nations International Convention on the Protection
of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families.
Administration of juvenile justice
73. While the Committee notes some progress in the juvenile justice system in
the country, including the creation of a number of juvenile criminal courts
in the main departmental capitals, it is concerned at the insufficient human
and financial resources that are devoted to a proper administration of juvenile
justice, including the appropriate implementation of the Code on Children and
Adolescents, as well as at remaining gaps on issues of defense, prosecution,
and the definition and implementation of measures or sanctions alternative to
deprivation of liberty for persons below 18. Furthermore, it is also concerned
about:
a) the fact that no special places for deprivation of liberty exist for persons
below 18 in conflict with the law;
b) the poor conditions of detention – especially in police detention centers-
including inappropriate cell space and lack of sufficient light and ventilation,
inadequate hygienic standards and overcrowding;
74. The Committee reiterates its previous recommendation that the State party
bring the system of juvenile justice fully in line with the Convention, in particular
articles 37, 40 and 39, and with other United Nations standards in the field
of juvenile justice, including the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for
the Administration of Juvenile Justice (the Bejing Rules), the United Nations
Guidelines for the Prevention of Juvenile Delinquency (the Riyadh Guidelines),
the United Nations Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived of Their Liberty
and the Vienna Guidelines for Action on Children in the Criminal Justice System;
and the
recommendations of the Committee made at its day of general discussion on juvenile
justice (CRC/C/46, § 203-238). In this regard, the Committee recommends the
State party in particular to:
a) allocate sufficient resources and increase the efforts in order to adequately
implement the Code on Children and Adolescents in all departments, including
by creating juvenile courts throughout the country;
b) take all necessary measures to establish separate detention facilities for
persons below 18, in accordance with articles 111 and 214 of the Code on Children
and Adolescents and with article 37 (c) of the Convention;
c) ensure that deprivation of liberty is used only as a measure of last resort
and improve the conditions of detention of persons below 18 –especially in police
detention centers- notably by complying with the international standards as
to surface area, ventilation, fresh air, natural and artificial light, proper
food, drinking water and hygienic conditions;
d) investigate, prosecute and punish any case of mistreatment committed by law-enforcement
personnel, including prisons guards, and establish an independent child-sensitive
and accessible system for the reception and processing of complaints by children;
e) ensure that children deprived of their liberty remain in regular contact
with their families while in the juvenile justice system, notably by informing
parents when their child is detained;
f) provide training for penitentiary staff on children’s rights and special
needs;
g) request technical assistance in the area of juvenile justice and police training
from, inter alia, OHCHR and UNICEF.
Children belonging to indigenous groups
75. The Committee notes with concern that, despite constitutional recognition
of indigenous customary rights, indigenous communities still suffer from institutional
neglect, historic abandonment and indiscriminate pillaging of natural resources,
especially in the Caribbean region.
76. The Committee recommends the State party to pursue measures to effectively address the gap in life opportunities of indigenous children, and take adequate measures in order to provide protection for the rights of indigenous children as protected in the Constitution taking due account the recommendations adopted by the Committee on its Day of General Discussion on the rights of indigenous children in September 2003.
9. Follow-up and dissemination
Follow-up
77. The Committee recommends the State party to take all appropriate measures
to ensure full implementation of the present recommendations, inter alia, by
transmitting them to the members of the Council of Ministers or the Cabinet
or a similar body, the Parliament, and to provincial or State Governments and
Parliament, when applicable, for appropriate consideration and further action.
Dissemination
78. The Committee further recommends that the third periodic report and written
replies submitted by the State party and related recommendations (concluding
observations) it adopted be made widely available, including through Internet
(but not exclusively), to the public at large, civil society organizations,
youth groups, and children in order to generate debate and awareness of the
Convention, its implementation and monitoring.
10. Next report
79. The Committee underlines the importance of a reporting practice that is
in full compliance with the provisions of article 44 of the Convention. An important
aspect of States' responsibilities to children under the Convention includes
ensuring that the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child has regular
opportunities to examine the progress made in the Convention's implementation.
The Committee appreciates the State party’s performance in this regard and invites
the State party to submit its fourth periodic report, which should not exceed
120 pages (see CRC/C/148), by 3 November 2007 as foreseen by the Convention.