A compilation of extracts from ngo reports to the Committee on the Rights of the Child relating to violence against children This document is an annex to the publication


BRUNEI DARUSSALAM Middle East and North Africa No report available on CRIN. BULGARIA



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BRUNEI DARUSSALAM


Middle East and North Africa

No report available on CRIN.


BULGARIA


Europe and Central Asia

No report available on CRIN.



BURKINA FASO


West & Central Africa

CRC Session 06, April 1994

Mouvement Burkinabé des droits de l'homme et des peuples – French


www.crin.org/docs/resources/treaties/crc.6/Burkina_Faso_NGO_Report.pdf

[…]


Au niveau pratique, même si des mesures ont été prises sur le plan des textes et qui favorisent le travail en faveur de l'épanouissement des droits de l'enfant par les animateurs de l'Etat et par la société civile, il n'en demeure pas moins que la majorité des enfants Burkinabè ne jouissent pas de droits réels, tant au niveau urbain qu'au niveau rural surtout.

[…]


Les enfants des villes sont parfois touchés par la prostitution et l'usage des stupéfiants.

[…]


Près de 46% de la population de Burkina ont moins de 15 ans. Plus exactement la frange de la population située entre 0 et 16 ans représente 16 %. Cette verdeur n'est pas accompagnée sur le plan de l'éducation scolaire. Le taux de scolarisation global approche 30 % dans les villes et est de 10 % dans les rurales.

Taux de mortalité infantile approximativement de 136 pour mille tandis que le taux de natalité avoisine 48 % pour un accroissement annuel d'environ 3 %.

[…]

Certes, le rapport de Madame Ministre donne quelques uns (la crise familiale, l'insuffisance d'attention favorisant la brutalité et la négligence, la réadaption physique, psychologique, l'enfance handicapée, l'enfance devant les juridictions inappropriées, l'exploitation et les violences sexuelles).



Il faut surtout insister de notre point de vue sur la surexploitation des enfants dans le secteur informel de l'économie où les enfants sont soumis aux caprices des employeurs au niveau urbain et au niveau rural.

[…]


A ce niveau, il faut souligner les conditions des enfants marqués par l'extrême pauvreté et la misère que connaissent généralement nos pays. Le Burkina Faso reste un pays pauvre, mais peut cependant s'en sortir. Pour ce faire, il est nécessaire de faire correspondre les déclarations d'intentions à une pratique concrète sur le terrain qui puissant conduire:

-à l'éradication de l'insécurité alimentaire;

-au traitement des enfants victimes de mauvais actes, d'abus divers (enfants abandonnés; enfants en danger; enfants en prison).

Un accent particulier doit être mis sur la situation dans les prisons. En effet, dans les dix prisons que compte le Burkina, on y relève la présence d'enfants mineurs; d'enfants emprisonnés avec leurs mères; détenus pèle mêle avec des délinquants endurcis dans des conditions d'hygiène déplorables. Il convient d'intéresser toutes les structures mises en place par Madame le Ministre (Comité de suivi d'évaluation du plan d'action national, Comité de lutte contre l'excision) au traitement de cette question.

[…]

La caractère saisonnier des cultures, le manque d'emploi, le manque d'infrastructures transforment les campagnes Burkinabè en désert humain. En effet, beaucoup de jeunes émigrent vers les pays voisins dans la morte saison et souvent n'y reviennent plus. En Côte d'Ivoire et au Ghana par exemple où on compte près de trois (3) millions, de deux (2) millions de Burkinabè, la situation des jeunes n'est pas reluisante. De notre point de vu le rapport de Madame le Ministre à péché sur cet aspect.



[…]

Même si le rapport relève qu'il n'existe pas de juridictions spécialisées pour les enfants, il ne met pas l'accent sur la nécessité de créer des Tribunaux pour enfants et leur importance sur l'éducation et le développement armonieux de l'enfant.

[…]

BURUNDI


Eastern and Southern Africa

CRC Session 25, 18 September - 6 October 2000

Defence for Children International - Burundi – French



www.crin.org/docs/resources/treaties/crc.25/burundiNGOreport.doc

[…]


47. Avec la guerre civil que connaît le BURUNDI depuis 1993, dans les bandes armées mais aussi dans une certaine mesure dans l'armée gouvernementale, des mineurs y ont été enrôlées, parfois de force.

50. Dans des camps de déplacés ou de regroupés, beaucoup d'enfant ne vont pas à l'école à cause de la pauvreté des parents mais également par manque d'enseignants. Par conséquent, l'avenir de ces enfants est compromis.

51. Les employés de maison dits "boys" et "bonnes" travaillent plusieurs heuress supplémentaires qui ne sont pas rémunérées.

[…]


Pourquoi le gouvernement burundais ne met pas sur pied des juges pour mineurs ?

En outre, les maisons de détention spécialisées pour femmes et enfants n'existent plus depuis la guerre civile de 1993.

[…]

Concernant l'adoption internationale, beaucoup de parents burundais ont complètement perdu les traces de leurs enfants confiés aux associations caritatives ces dernières années. Certains affirment même que leurs enfants, surtout les jeunes filles, ont été versées dans le tourisme à but sexuel et ont été acheminées vers les pays de l'Europe et de l'Asie.



Le gouvernement devrait réagir énergiquement et proposer une loi claire en matière d'adoption internationale.

[…]


L'âge de recrutement dans les forces armées est fixé entre 16 et 25 ans suivant les catégories. Néanmoins, depuis l'éclatement de la crise burundaise en 1993, nous avons assisté à un recrutement d'enfants de 13 à 15 ans. Ce recrutement se fait, parfois de force, dans la rébellion.

CAMBODIA


South Asia

CRC Session 24, 15 May - 2 June 2000

NGO Committee on the Rights of the Child


http://www.crin.org/docs/resources/treaties/crc.24/cambodiaNGOreport.pdf

[…]


Moreover Cambodian children, especially those in rural areas, can be married off by their parents at a young age by using a bogus birth registration certificate. Marriage of young children can be harmful to the health and welfare of the children and any babies born to them. The absence of birth registration also affects social status with regard to nationality, juvenile justice, sexual exploitation and trafficking and inheritance rights in case parents get divorced.

[…]


Children in urban areas feel that the repetitions are the result of less concentration on teaching by teachers, helping with household work, and being busy earning income for the family. Moreover, children gamble so much more.

[…]


According to NGO surveys the drop-out rate is also high. Based on actual field interviews with 81 child labourers in Poi Pet commune, O'chrove district, Banteay Meanchey province, in the north-western part of the country, 45 children dropped out of school. Most of them dropped out since the first and second grade while 36 others never attended school because of some reasons given below:

- The family is poor and the children have to earn income to support the family and do

household work.

- Some parents think that education is useless.

- Prevalent gambling around school grounds and glue sniffing (Poi Pet has the worst problems in the country in this regard) are additional reasons.

[…]


In Cambodia, 46% of the Cambodian population are children under 18. They are particularly

vulnerable and suffer various forms of abuse and exploitation in the society. Their rights are

easily violated. Nowadays, we notice that children suffer from abuses such as economic

exploitation, sexual exploitation, trafficking and drug abuse. There are also a number of children in conflict with the law. These serious problems require high consideration, urgent action and provision of special protection from the Royal Government of Cambodia (RGC).

According to the results of a survey and interviews of 324 children conducted by the NGOCRC and Children's Committee with children in especially difficult circumstances, children in urban areas, children in suburban areas and children in rural areas, the following forms of exploitation were identified:

· Children were forced to work too hard

· Children are sold into prostitution

· Physical and sexual abuse occur through kidnapping or trafficking to other countries.

[…]

The problem of children in conflict with the law is becoming serious in Cambodian society.



Children come into conflict with the law due to a lack of proper parental care, lack of food,

homelessness, and lack of schooling. Children become vagabonds and they commit serious

misconduct such as robberies, rapes, kidnappings and other criminal activities. Some offences are committed due to the intimidation of the 'Big Brother' gangs. There are some specific provisions in the Law on Criminal Procedures and the UNTAC Criminal Law with respect to child offenders, but this is not enough to fully comply with the CRC. Cambodia has no juvenile justice system and there is no alternative placement for incarcerating children separately from adults, except for one Youth Rehabilitation Centre (YRC) in Phnom Penh. According to prison statistics from LICADHO, the number of children detained in adult prisons rose from 45 in January 1998 to 163 children by August 1999, of whom only 62 (38%) had been sentenced. During the same period the number of children detained at the YRC rose from 45 (none sentenced) to 48, with one having been sentenced. This gives a total of 211 children in detention by August 1999, of whom 63 (30%) were sentenced by a court. Some were sentenced without any proper accusation from the court and without having recourse to legal representation. In addition many children are detained in police stations without clear incriminating evidence, and often beaten until they confess.

The RGC opened the youth rehabilitation centre in 1995 in order to rehabilitate children in

conflict with the law. It was set up by a sub-decree, with the aim of detaining "children from 7 to 17 years of age who have committed themselves to perversity, thievery and robbery throughout the country". The proposal to detain children under 13 is actually in conflict with other Cambodian laws on minimum age of imprisonment, but in practice most children detained are aged from 13 to 18 and some are over 18.

[…]


Some children are coerced by adults or gangsters to use substances to force them to commit illegal actions such as theft, robbery and other crimes. Some children using glue also commit crimes to find the money to pay for the glue once they became addicted.

[…]


Child prostitution is a very serious problem in Cambodia because of the low level of education, poverty, working to pay off debts, coercion, rape, kidnapping, deception, barbiturate use, and other forms of tricks used by pimps, con artists and brothel owners who deceive children into prostitution. Nowadays, children are targets for child abusers. Child prostitution in Cambodia does not only concern girls but also boys, and children of both sexes are commonly targeted by foreign paedophiles. Not only foreign tourists are customers; the biggest problem is the local demand of Cambodian men for young prostitutes, in particular girls, and there are brothels with young girls even in non-tourist places such as Battambang, Kampong Cham province etc. Furthermore there are an increasing number of tourists and business men from the region (Korea, Taiwan, Japan, Malaysia and others from European countries) who come into Cambodia and seek out children for sex.

[…]


Although Cambodia has laws, the number of prostitutes has noticeably increased in recent years and the age of the sex workers is getting even younger due to the ineffective implementation of the law and some gaps in existing laws in Cambodia. These factors allow sex tourists, businessmen and local customers to search by all means to buy virgin girls or young girls to satisfy their desire. Sexual abuse of children is common with little action being taken by the authorities to prevent it, and very few abusers or pimps are ever brought to justice. Indeed some police and military personnel are involved in running brothels and trafficking children. In Phnom Penh alone, there are 10,000 to 15,000 child prostitutes. 31% of all female prostitutes are aged between 12 and 17 years old, according to the United Nations Special Representative's Human Rights Reports on Cambodia. 50% of the prostitutes are sold by their family members and coerced into prostitution. Many

prostitutes and domestic workers come from rural families who are lured by money or by the

tricks of traffickers who promise honest and well paid jobs.

[…]


Nowadays, children are facing serious sex trafficking, not only in Cambodia but also across

national borders. Over the past few years there has been an increasing movement of women and children into prostitution across the border, which involves corrupt officials and paying of bribes. Alongside domestic prostitution within Cambodia, trafficking of Cambodian women and children to Thailand is also seemingly occurring , which usually involves prostitutes brought to Poi Pet inBanteay Meanchey province and Koh Kong province. At the main border checkpoint, they spent only 10 Baht ($0.25) which allows them to cross the border for 24 hours. Some traffickers pretend they are accompanying these women or girls on a day trip to Thailand but have nointention to return within a day. The girls sold to Thailand are mostly very young, under 13 years old. In Thailand, they can be sold to a customer for 20,000 Baht ($500) for one week and some girls are brought to other countries such as Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, Japan, Europe, etc. According to Trafficking of Cambodia Women and Children to Thailand 1998 (IOM). Children are also trafficked in Thailand for begging. This traffic is substantial, with around 100 to 150 children being returned to Poipet every week, according to figures from the Immigration Detention Centre in Bangkok.

[…]

At present, child labour is considered as a form of economic exploitation in Cambodia. However, articles 172 to 181 of the Cambodian Labour Law provide for working conditions and categories of work that children can do which are not harmful to their development.



Children have been seen working in many different occupations: for instance, children working in brick factories, salt fields, fishing, slaughter houses, iron-smelting workshops, mines and other enterprises. These activities can endanger the child's life, can cause disabilities or other diseases which are physically and mentally harmful to them, and especially can disturb their developmentand education. In addition there are many children who work as farmers, servants in restaurants and hotels, street vendors, scavengers, etc.

Despite the adoption of the Labour Law in 1997, children have been observed doing almost every kind of job that adults do, except for those requiring education or professional skills. This is because children can be easily abused and exploited by employers. For example some children are not aware of how much they earn because wages are paid directly to their parents or legal guardians. Moreover, the abour Code does not apply to the informal labour sectors such as children working on the farms of their parents, child domestic workers etc.

According to VCAO's survey, about 4000 children under 18 work as house servants in Phnom Penh city. These children are not allowed access to education and they work a full day without any time off. However they earn only 30,000 to 40,000 (about US$10) a month. Indeed some work as servants just for food and lodgings without salary. According to ILO/IPEC's report Child labor in Cambodia: An Overview 1998 9.2 per cent of Cambodian children between the ages of 5 and 14 are "economically active". 86% of them are

working to supplement their family income or to help pay their parents' debts. The agricultural

sector accounts for almost nine out of 10 of the child workers aged 5 to 14 years in Cambodia as a whole ( 88.6%), constituting 73.3% for urban areas and 89.8% for rural areas. A high percentage of working children (32 %) had to drop out of school or training programmes in order to assist households or to work for pay. According to the AAFLI and report on "Child Labour in Cambodia" of September 1996, they found children working in 30 out of 60 factories surveyed. Interviews with 55 of these children show that most of them were employed for loading bricks onto carts, wheeling carts outside and unloading the bricks onto trucks. A few children operated heavy machines as well. Many children reported frequent injuries because of their lack of protective equipment or insufficient training. This is especially true of brick factories where there are numerous cases of children suffering severe injuries such as loss of limbs through operating brick making machines. Some children reported that because their earnings were not enough to help support their families, they

end up borrowing money from their employers which in turn causes them to remain in debt to

their employers. At present, there is a type of work which badly affects the Khmer culture and tradition, and especially tarnishes the Khmer women's dignity. Cambodian girls are employed as beer or cigarette promotion girls or in other forms of promotional activities such as working in karaoke clubs, nightclubs and restaurants. These types of jobs require young attractive girls to lure customers. They affect the dignity of Khmer women as well as the future of those children.



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