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06 August 2014 subscribe | subscribe | submit information
  • CRINmail 1389

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    LATEST NEWS AND REPORTS

    Migration controversies in Australia and Europe

    Officials in Australia’s Immigration Department covered up the scale of mental health concerns among child asylum seekers, according to findings by the country’s Human Rights Commission (HRC). Dr Peter Young, the former director of mental health services at detention centre service provider, the International Health and Mental Services (IHMS), said immigration officials asked him to withdraw figures on “significant” mental health issues from his reporting. The findings showed that the incidence of mental health problems among children in immigration detention centres is about 30 per cent higher than the normal child population. The HRC’s president Gillian Triggs has described the evidence as “very troubling and damning”.  "We're coming across what you'd see perhaps as a manipulation of the circumstances,” she said. "There seems to be ... almost a systemic process within the [Immigration] department to keep these figures under some sort of wrap - they're not being analysed, they're not being considered."

    The HRC’s year-long inquiry into the effects of immigration detention on child asylum seekers has also found that many of the 174 children inside the Christmas Island detention centre are sick, with most of them having asthmatic conditions or stomach complaints, as well as there being instances of children attempting self-harm. Meanwhile the 157 Sri Lankan Tamil asylum seekers currently at the centre of an Australian High Court battle, including 50 children were almost sent to India on lifeboats they were taught how to operate, according to the Tamil Refugee Council. They are now all being held on the island of Nauru, after being transferred from the Curtin detention centre in Western Australia, and having spent three weeks detained on a customs vessel. The asylum seekers are seeking compensation for false imprisonment

    Meanwhile States in the European Union are pushing potential asylum seekers to take increasingly dangerous routes to reach Europe through measures to keep irregular migrants out, regardless of their motives, Amnesty International has said in a recent report. The organisation documents that EU countries are taking drastic measures to “defend” their borders by funding sophisticated surveillance systems, coordinating a Europe-wide team of border guards to patrol EU frontiers, using the threat of lengthy detention to deter those thinking about coming to Europe, and unlawfully expelling migrants and refugees without access to asylum procedures and often in ways that put them at grave risk. The report also examines cases of child asylum-seekers, including those who are unaccompanied.

     

    Uganda anti-gay law annulled

    Uganda’s Constitutional court has annulled the country’s much-criticised Anti-Homosexuality Act on a legal technicality, but activists say homosexuality remains a crime under colonial-era laws. The law, which was signed into law in February, criminalised all expressions of homosexuality, including its “promotion”, and allowed for courts to sentence people to life imprisonment for certain actions such as touching in public. But the Constitutional Court’s panel of five judges agreed that the law, which had received international condemnation and prompted donor countries to cut aid, had not been properly passed through Parliament, as not enough MPs were in attendance when it was approved. Activists warn, however, that lawmakers could try to re-introduce new anti-gay measures. While welcoming the ruling, Frank Mugisha, director of Sexual Minorities Uganda, lamented that “the case was not heard on its true merits. The truth is that not only is the anti-homosexuality act persecutory, it is also unconstitutional and illegitimate… Until the act has been dismissed on the substance of our arguments, we cannot rest easy."

    Meanwhile activists in Belarus fear lawmakers may enact an anti-gay law similar to that passed in Russia last year banning the “promotion of non-traditional sexual relations.” According to the Equal Rights Trust (ERT), a bill claiming to protect children from “propaganda of homosexuality” was included in a presidential decree concerning parliament’s legislative agenda.

     

    UN committee finds Spain guilty of neglect

    The UN has found Spain guilty of failing to prevent the death in 2003 of a girl who was killed by her father despite dozens of domestic violence complaints filed against him. The mother of the girl, who at the time was separated from the girl’s father, had filed more than 40 police complaints between 1999 and 2001 seeking a restraining order against the abuser. But the father was still granted unsupervised arranged visits with the girl, and during one of these shot his daughter dead and then committed suicide. After exhausting all legal remedies in Spain, the mother appealed to the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), which last month ruled that the Spanish State’s negligence was responsible for the girl’s death. 

    According to a 2012 report by Save the Children, family courts in Spain continue to fail to systematically take children's best interests into account during court proceedings on domestic abuse. The organisation - as well as CEDAW in the case above - found that judges are often found to prioritise re-establishing a relationship between a child and an allegedly abusive parent over ensuring a child's protection from the risk of abuse. Decisions on custody and visitation rights, for example, are made even if a criminal proceeding against a parent for alleged abuse is open, thus ignoring the risk of further violence.

     

    ‘Praying away’ AIDS and Ebola

    A government official in Nigeria has warned that pastors claiming to be able to cure Ebola could face jail time. The country’s Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Aderemi Ibirogba, advised people to be wary of those who make claims about their ability to provide a cure for the deadly virus, which has claimed more than 930 lives, most in the west African countries of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, according to the World Health Organization.

    In Papua New Guinea, revivalist Christian churches are promoting prayer as a substitute for medication to patients with HIV. Health workers have said that revivalists even visit hospitals, telling HIV-positive patients to throw away their anti-retroviral medication. Pastor Godfrey Wippon, who heads the country’s Revival Centres, claims baptism and prayer can cure AIDS and even bring the dead back to life. In a country where there is widespread belief in sorcery and poor medical facilities, people are increasingly turning to faith-healing.

     

    Gang violence in Honduras & the UK

    The threat of gang violence and organised crime in Central America has created a refugee crisis in the region, with children fleeing their home countries and travelling mainly to the United States. Gangs in Honduras are recruiting new members to kill and dismember those who refuse to join, according to a CNN journalist, who adds that children are even being recruited in schools. However, controversy remains around the Honduran State’s measure to curb gang violence, namely its “Guardians of the Fatherland” programme which involves children perceived to be at risk of recruitment receiving military training every Saturday for three months. Dozens of local organisations have said that it is not appropriate for the military to exercise a pastoral role, and that social protection and crime prevention already resides with child-specialist state institutions.

    Gangs in London, United Kingdom are drawing up lists of teenage girls whom they consider to be “legitimate” rape targets, as sexual violence is being increasingly used to spread fear, to antagonise rival groups and as a form of revenge. According to youth workers, the creation of the lists has even resulted in girls being dragged from school buses and sexually assaulted. Claire Hubberstey, interim chief executive of the Safer London Foundation, says gang members are taking advantage of low conviction rates for rape, as they see sexual violence as less-risky than carrying a weapon. Young women connected to gangs are viewed as "currency" by rival gangs, according to Carlene Firmin, head of the MsUnderstood Partnership. She says that even if the acts do not have the desired effect, the violence is more about punishing girls directly. Her charity has even found that some girls are offered to rival gangs to bolster allegiances or foster a truce.

     

    New resources on education and health work

    The Right to Education Project has launched a new page on a justiciable right to education, that is, being able to challenge a violation of this right or pursue its enforcement through the courts. The organisations explains: “A justiciable right to education means that when this right is violated, the right-holder can take his/her claim before an independent and impartial body, and if the claim is upheld, be granted a remedy, which can then be enforced.” Among the page’s features, the organisation explores the importance of justiciability and why it is an issue, examples of the justiciability of the right to education, challenges, and the role of civil society in the area.

    A new curriculum on children’s rights seeks to give health workers in east Africa a general introduction to children’s rights and their application in day-to-day practice. The CREATE (Child Rights Education in East Africa) curriculum is to help professionals protect children from emotional, physical and sexual abuse. The curriculum is an open educational resource that can be freely accessed and adapted, making it suitable for professionals, health workers, teachers, police officers, lecturers in Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. Is available online and can also be downloaded as a pdf.

     

    Call for submissions: IACHR

    The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights is inviting organisations to send requests for hearings and working meetings for its 153rd Session, which will take place 23 October to 7 November 2014. Hearings during the session will be held on 27, 28, 30 and 31 October, and the working meetings on 29 October. The requests for hearings and working meetings can only be made through the following links in English, Spanish, French and Portuguese. The deadline for requests is 13 August.

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    ACCESS TO JUSTICE FOR CHILDREN IN MAURITIUS

    In this week’s instalment of our access to justice report series, we look at children’s access to justice in Mauritius.

    Although Mauritius has ratified the CRC, its status in the domestic legal system is weak - it has not been incorporated into domestic law, does not take precedence over conflicting laws, and cannot be directly enforced in court. However, children, with the help of their representatives, have several ways to challenge rights violations, such as: applying to the Supreme Court for redress for rights violations or judicial review of administrative acts, submitting complaints to the Ombudsperson for Children or National Human Rights Commission, and private prosecutions. In any proceedings, a child “capable of discernment” may request to be heard by the judge alone, with a legal counsel or person of his/her choice. Furthermore, Mauritius has signed the Optional Protocol to the CRC on a communications procedure, which, once ratified, will enable children to bring complaints to the UN about violations of their rights under the CRC. 

    Read the full report on access to justice for children in Mauritius.

    This report is part of CRIN's access to justice for children project, looking at the status of the CRC in national law, the status of children involved in legal proceedings, the legal means to challenge violations of children’s rights and the practical considerations involved in challenging violations.

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    UPCOMING EVENTS

    Surrogacy: Hague conference on the private international law issues surrounding the status of children, including issues arising from international surrogacy arrangements
    Organisation: International Institute of Social Studies
    Date: 11-13 August 2014
    Location: The Hague, Netherlands 

    Europe: Ensuring the Rights of the Child, and Family-based Services
    Organisation: International Foster Care Organisation
    Date: 26-29 August 2014
    Location: Waterford, Ireland

    Course: MSc in Children’s Rights
    Organisation: Queens University Belfast
    Location: Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
    Application deadline: 1 September 2014

    Africa: Keeping Children Safe in Africa - Identifying and addressing the challenges
    Organisation: Keeping Children Safe et al.
    Date: 3-5 September 2014
    Location: Cape Town, South Africa

    Mental health: Third European Conference on mental health
    Organisation: Various
    Date: 10-12 September 2014
    Location: Tallinn, Estonia

    Justice: Access to justice for children - Legal clinics & other instruments for the promotion of children's rights 
    Organisation: Save the Children - Italy
    Date: 11-13 September 2014
    Location: Pisa, Italy 

    Child rights: European responses to global children’s rights issues - Key findings and future directions
    Organisation: UK Economic and Social Research Council
    Date: 14 September 2014
    Location: Brussels, Belgium

    Juvenile justice: ‘Making deprivation of children’s liberty a last resort - Towards evidence-based policies & alternatives’
    Organisation: International Juvenile Justice Observatory
    Call for papers deadline: 15 September 2014
    Event date: 3-4 December 2014
    Location: Brussels, Belgium

    Consumerism: 'Protecting and Valuing Children as Consumers – European Perspective'
    Organisation: Eurochild et al.
    Location: Brussels, Belgium
    Date: 15 September 2014

    Statelessness: Global Forum on Statelessness
    Organisation: Tilburg University
    Date: 15-17 September 2014
    Location: The Hague, Netherlands 

    Child-friendly cities: 7th Child in the City conference
    Organisation: Child in the City Foundation
    Location: Odense, Denmark
    Date: 29 September - 1 October 2014

    Course: Master of Advanced Studies in Children's Rights
    Organisation: University of Geneva and the Institut Universitaire Kurt Bösch
    Application deadline: 30 September 2014
    Location: Sion and Geneva, Switzerland

    Best interests: Developing Child-Centred Practice in Law, Social Work and Policy for Cross-Border Families
    Organisation:  International Social Service – USA Branch
    Date: 2 October 2014
    Location: Baltimore, United States

    Violence: 7th African Conference on Child Abuse and Neglect
    Organisation: African Network for the Prevention and Protection against Child Abuse and Neglect
    Date: 13-15 October 2014
    Location: Nairobi, Kenya

    Digital media: Institutionalisation of child rights in the digital future
    Organisation: UNICEF Turkey et al.
    Date: 16-17 October 2014
    Location: Istanbul, Turkey

    LGBT: Rights on the move - Rainbow families in Europe
    Organisation: University of Trento et al.
    Date: 16-17 October 2014
    Location: Trento, Italy

    Social protection: Sixth International Policy Conference on the African Child
    Organisation: African Child Policy Forum
    Date: 27-28 October 2014
    Location: Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

    Child protection: The role of child helplines in protecting children and young people online
    Organisation: Child Helpline International 
    Date: 30-31 October 2014
    Location: London, United Kingdom

    Course: MSc Children, Young People and Family Wellbeing
    Organisation: Oxford Brookes University, UK
    Date: September 2014 or January 2015 entry
    Location: N/A - Distance Learning course

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    EMPLOYMENT

    CRIN: Journalism Internship
    Application deadline: 10 August
    Location: London, United Kingdom

    Love146 Europe: Residential Deputy Manager (for Senior Social Worker)
    Job location: Hampshire, United Kingdom
    Deadline: 8 August 2014

    Save the Children Sweden: Child Protection Advisor
    Application deadline: 10 August 2014
    Location: London, United Kingdom

    European Roma Rights Centre: Human Rights Monitor in Moldova
    Application deadline: 31 August 2014
    Location: N/A

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    JARGON OF THE WEEK: Human rights acronyms

     

    That human rights reports are filled with acronyms - that is, abbreviations composed of the first letter of other words and pronounced as a word - makes life considerably easier for advocates. Imagine having to write “United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization” every time you refer to UNESCO -- not to mention the number of breaths you’d have to take to say it! (We did find longer examples, but they exceeded the legal word limit.) 

    While the UNESCO acronym is just that: an acronym, other acronyms create actual words. Here are some of the more creative examples we’ve come across.

    For grammar enthusiasts, you can find pronouns like WHO (World Health Organization). 

    New parents can even look to acronyms for ideas for baby names, with examples such as TESSA (Teacher Education in Sub-Saharan Africa), MEGAN (Mentoring Excluded Groups and Networks), and ROBERT (Risk-taking Online Behaviour Empowerment through Research and Training -- itself worthy of a Jargon of the Week entry!).  

    Fashionistas will find links between the clothing industry and human rights with the use of acronyms like CAP (Consolidated Appeals Process), while meteorology students can read about weather conditions like HEAT (Health Education and Training) and those studying zoology will come across words on animal anatomy like SCALES (Southern Communities Advocacy Legal and Education Service). 

    But the top prize for acronym creativity must go to the one that describes a fluid that circulates in the vascular system of a plant, that is, SAP (Structural Adjustment Programme).

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