1. The Committee
continued its consideration of Peru's third periodic report (CCPR/C/83/Add.1
and HRI/CORE/1/Add.43/Rev.1) at its 1547th and 1548th meetings, on 31
October 1996 (CCPR/C/SR.1547 and 1548), and addressed questions left
pending after the initial consideration of the report at its fifty-seventh
session, at which urgent issues had been examined. In the light of its
further consideration of the report, it adopted the following observations
and recommendations at its 1555th meeting (fifty-eighth session), held
on 6 November 1996:
A. Introduction
2. The Committee
welcomes the State party's third periodic report and is gratified by
the continuation of the dialogue initiated with the delegation. However,
the Committee regrets that the report does not contain sufficient reliable
information on current legal provisions in Peru relating to a number
of the rights covered in the Covenant or on the actual observance of
human rights.
B. Factors and difficulties affecting the implementation of the Covenant
3. The Committee
is aware that Peru has been affected by terrorist activities, internal
disturbances and violence. In the Committee's view, although the State
has both the right and the duty to adopt vigorous measures to protect
its population against terrorism, such measures must not violate the
rights protected by the Covenant.
C. Positive aspects
4. The Committee
notes with satisfaction that the Constitutional Court and the Ombudsman's
Office have commenced activities and that units specializing in constitutional
matters and the rights of women have been set up within the Ombudsman's
Office. It also takes a positive view of the establishment of the National
Register of Detainees and Persons Sentenced to Custodial Sentences and
the organization of training courses for lawyers and administrative
personnel with the aim of improving the administration of justice.
5. The Committee
also welcomes the establishment of the Standing Commission on the Rights
of Women and of other organs designed to foster equality among men and
women in Peru. It further notes the announcement of the establishment
of the Ministry of Women and Human Development and expresses the hope
that the Ministry will make a valuable contribution to ensuring that
women in Peru fully enjoy the human rights enshrined in the Covenant.
In the same connection, it appreciates Peru's ratification of the Inter-American
Convention on the Prevention, Punishment and Eradication of Violence
against Women.
6. The Committee
welcomes with satisfaction the State party's report on the establishment
of offices to provide advice and care in cases of violence and abuse
against children and adolescents and the programmes introduced to assist
children as part of the measures to solve the problem of displaced persons.
In this connection, the Committee commends the establishment of the
National Technical Commission on Displaced Populations and the other
measures being taken to solve the problems of displaced persons, and
welcomes the fact that, according to the Government, 56 per cent of
the peasant population have returned to their places of origin.
D. Principal subjects of concern
7. The Committee
regrets that the constitutional status extended to the Covenant by Peru's
1979 Constitution has been substantially diminished, thereby reducing
the protection previously enjoyed by individuals in Peru as regards
the rights enshrined in the Covenant.
8. The Committee
once again deplores the fact that Peru has ignored both the concerns
expressed by the Committee in the observations adopted when it concluded
its consideration of the first part of Peru's third periodic report
and the suggestions and recommendations made in those same observations,
arguing that Peru is entitled to give precedence to considerations of
security or domestic policy over its obligations under the Covenant.
The Committee considers that, in conformity with international law,
article 1 of the Covenant does not authorize the State to adopt a new
Constitution that may be incompatible with its other obligations under
the Covenant. The Constitution is part of the legal order of the State
and as such may not be invoked as grounds for exemption from compliance
with an international obligation freely entered into by the State.
9. The Committee
in particular deplores the fact that the recommendations relating to
the amnesty laws (CCPR/C/79/Add.67, para. 20) have not been followed
and that no effective remedy is available to allow the victims of human
rights violations by State agents to claim compensation. It also regrets
the lack of information on the fate of the recommendations made in paragraphs
22, 23 and 26 and the failure to respond to the recommendation made
in paragraph 24.
10. The Committee
takes note of the measures adopted by Peru to pardon persons convicted
of terrorism. Notwithstanding its satisfaction at the release of 69
persons, the Committee considers that the pardon does not provide full
redress to the victims of trials conducted without regard for due process
of law and repeats the recommendation made in paragraph 21 of its observations,
which includes the need to establish an effective mechanism, at the
initiative of the State, to revise all the convictions handed down by
the military tribunals in treason and terrorism cases.
11. The Committee
regrets the fact that Peru has not only failed to take measures in response
to the recommendation made in paragraph 25 of the observations, but
has on the contrary extended, only a few days before the second part
of the report was considered, the system of "faceless judges". The Committee
expresses its profound concern at this situation, which undermines the
judicial system and will again lead to the conviction of innocent persons
without a proper trial.
12. The Committee
appreciates the information provided by the State on communications
Nos. 201/1986, 203/1986, 263/1987 and 309/1988, which are still pending,
but regrets that the State's efforts have not led to proper redress
for the victims. At the same time, the Committee deplores the lack of
information on the observance of Act No. 23.506, ordering immediate
compliance with the Committee's observations through the procedure employed
to enforce judgements handed down by national courts against the State.
13. The Committee
regrets the lack of full and precise information on the legal status
of women and on their enjoyment of the rights enshrined in the Covenant,
particularly as regards their legal capacity, the frequency of violence
and sexual abuse against female detainees or prisoners, legal and practical
restrictions in the labour sphere and the impact of recent laws and
programmes designed to solve the problem of violence against women.
14. The Committee
expresses its concern about the existence of a number of provisions
of the Civil Code that discriminate against women, such as the difference
in the minimum age required for matrimony and the fact that single mothers
aged under 16 lack legal capacity to recognize their children. This
gives rise to problems of compatibility between Peruvian legislation
and articles 3, 23, 24 and 26 of the Covenant.
15. The Committee
notes with concern that the law still contains a provision exempting
a rapist from punishment if he marries his victim and another which
classifies rape as an offence prosecutable privately. The Committee
is also concerned that abortion gives rise to a criminal penalty even
if a woman is pregnant as a result of rape and that clandestine abortions
are the main cause of maternal mortality. These provisions not only
mean that women are subject to inhumane treatment but are possibly incompatible
with articles 3, 6 and 7 of the Covenant.
16. The Committee
notes with concern that when cases that might lead to a divorce are
heard (physical or mental ill-treatment, serious injury and dishonourable
conduct), the law instructs judges to take into consideration the education,
habits and conduct of both spouses, a requirement that might easily
lead to discrimination against women from the lower socio-economic strata.
17. In the
same connection, the Committee is concerned that in Peru socio-economic
criteria are used to group convicted and unconvicted prisoners and deplores
the lack of information on the exact significance of this policy, as
well as the lack, in general, of detailed information on conditions
of detention, to enable it to assess their compatibility with article
10 of the Covenant.
18. The Committee
remains deeply concerned about the power of the police to decide to
hold a person incommunicado for up to two weeks.
E. Suggestions and recommendations
19. The Committee
recommends that the necessary legal measures should be taken to ensure
compliance with the obligations to respect and guarantee the rights
recognized in the Covenant, in conformity with its article 2, paragraph
1.
20. The Committee
reiterates the need for Peru to consider adopting effective measures
in the fields referred to by the recommendations made in paragraphs
21, 22, 23, 24, 25 and 26 of the observations made on completion of
the consideration of the first part of the State party's third periodic
report.
21. Regarding
communications Nos. 202/1986, 203/1986, 263/1987 and 309/1988, the Committee
again draws Peru's attention to the fact that, by acceding to the Optional
Protocol, the State party has recognized the competence of the Committee
to determine whether there has been a violation of the Covenant and
that, in accordance with the provisions of article 2 of the Covenant,
the State party undertakes to ensure to all individuals within its territory
and subject to its jurisdiction the rights recognized in the Covenant
and to provide an effective and applicable remedy if a violation is
found to have occurred; accordingly, the Committee requests the State
to submit to it within 90 days information on the measures adopted to
implement the Committee's decisions.
22. The Committee
recommends that the provisions of the Civil and Penal Codes should be
revised in the light of the obligations laid down in the Covenant, and
in particular in its articles 3 and 26. Peru must ensure that laws relating
to rape, sexual abuse and violence against women provide women with
effective protection and must take the necessary measures to ensure
that women do not risk their life because of the existence of restrictive
legal provisions on abortion.
23. The Committee
recommends that the Government should adopt the legislation necessary
to allow political parties to operate effectively and democratically
and fully to implement the rights protected by articles 22 and 25 of
the Covenant.
24. The Committee
recommends that education programmes should be established for children
and for the community in order to develop a thorough understanding of
the principles of respect for human rights and of tolerance and of the
role these principles play in the development of a sound and stable
democracy.
25. The Committee
hopes that, in its next periodic report, Peru will include information
on the progress made to extend to women in Peru full enjoyment of the
rights enshrined in the Covenant, particularly in the spheres with which
the Committee is concerned (see paras. 13, 14, 15 and 16), together
with detailed information on how it is complying with the provisions
of article 10 of the Covenant.