1.
The Committee considered the second periodic report
of the Dominican Republic on articles 1 to 15 of the
Covenant (E/1990/6/Add.7) at its 29th and 30th meetings,
held on 19 November 1996, and adopted, at its 50th meeting,
held on 3 December 1996, the following concluding observations.
A. Introduction
2.
The Committee expresses its appreciation to the State
party for its report and welcomes the appearance before
it of the Permanent Representative of the Dominican
Republic to the United Nations Office at Geneva. The
Committee, however, notes with regret that the Government
of the State party neither provided written replies
to the Committee's list of issues (E/C.12/1995/LQ.7)
made available to it in January 1996, nor sent an expert
delegation to present its report as it had promised
to do at the Committee's fourteenth session in May 1996,
when requesting the postponement of the consideration
of its report to the fifteenth session. Consequently,
the Committee was obliged, in accordance with its method
of work, to consider the second periodic report of the
Dominican Republic without the benefit of a dialogue
or the participation of an expert delegation. Nevertheless,
the Committee notes the statement by the Permanent Representative
of the Dominican Republic to the United Nations Office
in Geneva that, although she was unable to take an active
part in the dialogue with the Committee, she would communicate
to her Government the principal additional subjects
of concern identified by the Committee in the course
of its deliberations.
3.
The Committee notes with dissatisfaction that the report
submitted by the Government of the State party was,
like the initial report, not prepared in accordance
with its revised general guidelines (E/C.12/1991/1).
It also notes that information contained therein is
incomplete and of a purely legal nature, without any
reference to the situation concerning the practical
realization of the rights set forth in the Covenant,
and that the suggestions and recommendations formulated
by the Committee in its concluding observations and
adopted at its eleventh session in November 1994 have
not been addressed in the present report. It further
notes, with regret, the lack of information of a general
character which the State party was supposed to have
provided in a "core document", which it has
similarly failed to submit.
4.
The Committee feels that the failure of the State party
to respond to the list of issues and to send a delegation
with competence to engage in a dialogue with it during
this fifteenth session shows, on part of the State party,
a consistent pattern of disregard for its obligations
under the Covenant and an unwillingness to cooperate
with the Committee.
5.
In this connection, the Committee wishes to express
its gratitude to the non-governmental organizations,
both national ("Ciudad Alternativa" and COPADEBA)
and international (Habitat International Coalition and
International Women's Rights Action Watch) for the detailed
and carefully documented information they have made
available to it in relation to the Dominican Republic's
report. In particular, the Committee draws the attention
of the State party to the document "The Dominican
Republic: An independent report submitted to the UN
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights by
the International Women's Rights Action Watch".
B. Positive aspects
6. The Committee notes with satisfaction, from the information
available to it from other sources, that the Government
has repealed Decree No. 358-91, the application of which
had previously negatively affected the realization of
the right to adequate housing, and that it has provided
a solution to the cases of eviction pronounced under
previous governments.
7.
The Committee further appreciates the information that
the Government has undertaken a thorough review of the
public health sector and is preparing a reform of the
Health Code.
8.
The Committee further appreciates the attempts being
made in the Chamber of Deputies to recognize domestic
violence as a public health issue and thus to discourage
gender violence as a matter of public policy.
C. Factors and difficulties impeding the implementation
of the Covenant
9.
The Committee notes that the slow evolution towards
democracy and the rule of law in the Dominican Republic
has inhibited the strengthening of democratic institutions,
the modernization of the machinery of government and,
consequently, the effective implementation of the Covenant.
10.
The Committee also observes that economic difficulties
characterized by, inter alia, an increasing number
of impoverished people (60 to 65 per cent of the population
live below the poverty line) and the landless rural
population, the high level of unemployment, especially
in the cities, and the persistent large-scale emigration
of skilled and semi-skilled workers out of the country
have had a constraining influence on the implementation
of the Covenant in the country.
D. Principal subjects of concern
11.
In relation to article 2 of the Covenant, the Committee
observes that the Dominican Republic has done very little
to promote public awareness of the rights set forth
in the Covenant . The Committee has been informed that
abuses by the police and other security services persist.
12.
The Committee notes with regret that, although in law
United Nations human rights treaties become part of
Dominican law upon ratification, in practice the judiciary
does not apply these international treaties.
13.
The Committee is particularly concerned about the exploitation
of Haitians, and their unacceptable living conditions
in the bateyes. In this connection, it
has no reason not to accept the veracity of various
reports which emphasize the dire predicament of workers
in the bateyes, especially women workers
whose presence there is not administratively recognized
and who therefore become vulnerable to extreme exploitation
(their wages are 50 per cent lower than mens) and are
often deprived of their rights and the most basic health
and social services. Both men and women in the bateyes,
as well as Haitian workers in other sectors of the economy,
live in perpetual insecurity and they constitute the
principal national group in the Dominican Republic who
are subject to deportation in inhuman conditions, often
at the whim of employers who take advantage of the State's
inaction to exploit the vulnerability of this group.
14.
The Committee takes note of information from various
sources concerning the arbitrary confiscation of identity
cards called "cedulas" and the illegal deportation
of persons of Haitian origin born in the Dominican Republic
during the 1995-1996 presidential campaign. This information
stresses the insecurity prevailing with regard to nationality
of Dominican citizens of Haitian origin. It thus appears
necessary to adopt clear legislation on nationality,
which would procure legal security to persons of Haitian
origin born in the Dominican Republic and to their children;
which would require the authorities to register births
without discrimination; and which would allow Haitians
to obtain Dominican nationality through naturalization
under the same conditions as other foreigners.
15.
The Committee is informed that Black Dominicans are
often subject to the same arbitrary police and administrative
discrimination as temporary Haitian workers. Groups
representing Blacks in the Dominican Republic also claim
that the State violates their cultural rights by allowing
the police and local communities to suppress Afro-American
or African-identified cultural practices. They also
assert that discrimination of this kind is encouraged
at the public schools and by employers in both the public
and private sectors.
16.
The Committee also notes with concern that, according
to information received from various sources, there
is no mechanism for lodging complaints against the arbitrariness
or corruption of some judges and that there is no appellate
procedure for challenging the discriminatory application
of a law, an executive decree or a decree of the court.
17.
The Committee notes with great concern that state expenditures
on education and training as a proportion of public
expenditure are less than half their average in Latin
America.
18.
The Committee notes with concern that large-scale emigration
of Dominicans has been going on for many years and has
had and will continue to have a harmful effect on the
Dominican economy, since a great part of the emigrants
are skilled workers. The State party will have to take
measures in the educational and socio-economic fields
to stem the out-flow of skilled workers.
19.
The Committee notes with alarm that, 30 years after
the first industrial park was established in a free
trade zone in the Dominican Republic, unacceptable working
conditions and abuses against workers rights under articles
6, 7 and 8 of the Covenant continue.
20.
The Committee notes with concern the inhuman and archaic
prison system, whereby members of the family of an accused
person, who has run away may be imprisoned without trial
in his place as a guarantee for the absentee-accused
until he hands himself over to the prison authorities;
and whereby prisoners are supposed to buy their own
meals at weekends, when the prison authorities stop
providing any meals to the prisoners.
21.
The Committee is concerned to note the persistent rise
of "sex tourism" in resort areas, and the
spread of AIDS, which is one of the country's greatest
health problems.
22.
The Committee is particularly concerned that the enjoyment
by women of economic, social and cultural rights is
undermined, inter alia by: a traditional and
persistent male dominated society; the failure to ensure
that single women heads of household benefit from the
agrarian reform or the Government's housing programme;
the absence of any administrative mechanism that allows
women to file complaints in cases of discrimination
by the Dominican Agrarian Institute; the failure of
the Government to protect women workers from discrimination
or arbitrary dismissal related to pregnancy, including
failure to discourage employers from the practice of
pregnancy testing; and failure to develop and promote
family planning services. The Committee is also concerned
that, despite the very high rate of hospital births
in the Dominican Republic, the rate of maternal mortality
is unacceptably high; common law marriages are not legally
recognized, although 60 per cent of all marriages are
of this nature and, consequently, in cases of separation,
abandonment or the death of the male bread-earner of
the family a woman frequently loses everything and finds
it difficult to acquire a cedula or collateral, without
which she cannot obtain agricultural credit, housing
or employment.
23.
The Committee wishes to voice its serious concern about
the continuing problem of violence against women and
the insufficient attention paid to the problem by governmental
institutions.
24.
The Committee expresses its concern about the issue
of limited access to safe drinking water for the rural
population and those living in deprived urban areas,
the higher incidence of infant mortality in certain
socio-economic groups, the deplorable situation of persons
with disabilities, the prevalence of endemic diseases,
the problem of the inadequacy of social welfare and
security, the persisting housing shortage and the inadequacy
of access to health care.
25.
The Committee also calls attention to the various concerns
it has expressed to the State party since its fifth
session (1990) in relation to the continuous violation
of the right to adequate housing and regrets the fact
that it has received an entirely unsatisfactory and
inadequate response from the State party in this respect.
The Committee reminds the State party of the significance
it attaches to the right to adequate housing and thus
to the adoption of measures by the State party to recognize,
respect, protect and fulfil that right.
E. Suggestions and recommendations
26.
The Committee invites the State party to confirm publicly
its commitment to implement its binding human rights
treaty obligations. It strongly calls upon the Government
of the State party to honour its obligations under the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights, particularly through maintaining the proper
direct and constructive dialogue with the Committee
called for in the Covenant. The Committee proposes to
adopt finally its concluding observations in relation
to the State party at its sixteenth session. For that
reason the Committee decides that these concluding observations
will be considered "preliminary", pending
further consideration of the report based on a dialogue
with representatives of the State party at its sixteenth
session.
27.
In view of the consistent failure of the State party
to meet its reporting obligations under the Covenant
and to respond to successive requests for information
made by the Committee over a number of years, the Committee
urges the State party to attach the utmost importance
to responding to the matters raised in the present concluding
observations.
28.
The Committee further recommends that the State Party
provide it with written replies to its concluding observations
adopted at its eleventh session (E/C.12/1994/15), in
particular with regard to its request that the State
party invite representatives of the Committee to visit
the Dominican Republic; the written list of issues drawn
up with respect to the third periodic report(E/C.12/1995/LQ.7);
information contained in the document "The Dominican
Republic: An independent report submitted to the UN
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights by
the International Women's Rights Action Watch".
29.
The Committee requests the State Party to submit the
information in the preceding paragraph by 15 February
1997 in order to allow the Committee to consider that
information at its sixteenth session, to be held from
28 April to 16 May 1997.
30.
The Committee strongly recommends that the specific
information requested above be presented to the Committee
at its sixteenth session by an expert delegation.
31.
The Committee encourages the State party to widely disseminate
the Concluding observations adopted by the Committee
following the consideration of the State partys second
periodic report.