Munyonyo Declaration on Justice for Children in Africa

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PREAMBLE

It is evident that with the advent of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child, most countries in Africa have made progress in passing new child rights laws. However, new child rights policies have not been fully integrated into the general development agenda of governments. Protection structures are largely neglected, and services are mostly ad hoc in nature, fragmented and do not achieve the desired effect on children. Definitions of child abuse have not been fully adapted to the African context and some forms of child abuse (for example, harmful traditional practices, corporal punishment and child labour) are still not totally recognised as abuse in Africa.

The implementation of children's rights in the justice system remains challenging within the informal and formal justice systems. One of the concerns is the lack of adequate legal provisions and mechanisms for the protection of victims and witnesses in most countries. They are often re-victimised during legal proceedings. Furthermore, children with disabilities and children belonging to minority groups are at higher risk of abuse when in contact with the justice system.

Despite the fact that deprivation of liberty should be a measure of last resort, many children are still kept behind bars. They are regularly incarcerated in the same facilities as adults, frequently face horrible conditions and often endure lengthy periods of pre-trial detention. Detention facilities generally lack proper sanitary facilities, adequate food, and educational and recreational programmes. Children in detention are at high risk of violence including sexual abuse. Separating children from their families and communities causes serious damage to their physical, psychological and social development and the consequences of incarceration on children can be lifelong and denting. Far too few prevention and rehabilitation measures are in place, and although some new policies provide for diversion and alternatives to detention, the structures and resources required for implementation of these policies are normally absent or weak.

Many children in Africa are not registered at birth and cannot benefit from their rights as children because they cannot easily prove their ages when legally required. As a result, some States have instituted age verification procedures, many of which are neither child friendly nor accurate, and unfairly place the burden of proof of age on the child. While it is pertinent that in the case of conflict or inconclusive evidence regarding the age of the child, the child must have the right to the benefit of doubt, this does not happen in practice.

Justice systems in Africa are complex. Most States have dualistic legal and governance systems that combine both informal justice system which is administered by community leaders and traditional authorities using customary laws and the formal justice system which is administered by the judiciary using written laws including colonial laws. In some countries in Africa, religious systems such as Sharia Law, also play a crucial role in the justice system. Thus, in Africa, ordinary citizens, including children, seek justice from a variety of mechanisms. These systems are sometimes disconnected, polarised and constrain children’s access to justice. Formal justice systems tend to be the least utilised by the population due to costs, limited accessibility and prolonged proceedings.

It is therefore important that cooperative and mutually supportive relationships are developed across all sectors and disciplines working in the field of justice for children.

CALL FOR ACTION

1. To all actors:
· Ensure that all children enjoy their rights in the justice system, whether they are in conflict with the law, or they are victims, witnesses, or subjects of judicial proceedings.
· Ensure that deprivation of liberty is used as a measure of last resort for children and promote alternative measures, such as diversion and restorative justice.

2. To the African Union:
· Put the issue of justice for children on the agenda of the Heads of State Summit, and advance and adopt Guidelines on Action for Children in the Justice System in Africa, which shall guide States to take positive actions for children in the national justice systems;
· Urge States to make children’s rights and welfare in justice a priority on their development agenda;
· Urge States to invest in programmes to respect and protect the rights of children in contact with the law;
· Provide the political and technical leadership and guidance to States to guarantee children's rights in the justice system in both law and practice.

3. To the African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child:
· Put the issue of justice for children on its agenda and support the further advancement of the Guidelines on Action for Children in the Justice System in Africa;
· Hold a consultation with CSOs and [I]NGOs and authorities and a Day of General Discussion on justice for children in Africa;
· Establish a working group on justice for children, mandated to draft a general comment covering all aspects of justice for children;
· Systematically raise the issue of justice for children, in particular when examining State Party reports and conducting investigative or fact-finding missions.

4. To the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child:
· Continue the collaboration with the ACERWC and the relevant special procedures mechanisms;
· Ensure that child justice is reflected in the concluding observations to State Parties;
· Consider the possibility of drafting a General Comment on Children of incarcerated parents, as a follow-up to the 2011 Day of General Discussion.

5. To our Governments and Parliamentarians:
· Increase budget allocations for children to the maximum extent of available resources in order to facilitate the development of effective systems of justice for children;
· Harmonise informal and formal justice systems by clearly defining jurisdictions, building working relationships between the two systems, and establishing procedures for their interaction;
· Strengthen the capacity of community leaders to promote and respect children's rights in the justice system;
· Define child abuse and violence against children within the national context in accordance with international and regional standards and ensure access to services and justice from the lowest to the highest level;
· Guarantee birth registration systems that are free, compulsory and accessible to all, and design child friendly guidelines for age verification to the benefit of children who cannot submit their birth certificate whenever required and that respect the rights and interests of the concerned children;
· Adopt and invest in programmes that prevent children from coming into conflict with the law and in programmes aimed at rehabilitating and reintegrating children in conflict with the law into society, with a view to minimizing recidivism;
· Establish and/or strengthen child protection systems including alternative family-based care for children in need of alternative care to enable them have a stable family environment thereby reduce the risk of them coming in conflict with the law;
· Strengthen child rights monitoring and accountability systems, and bring to justice those responsible for corruption, and child rights violations including arbitrary arrest and detention, extra-judicial killings , torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment;
· Establish specialised children’s courts, Independent Human/Child Rights institutions with a mandate to consider children’s rights in the justice system as a matter of priority;
· Strengthen child protection units within the police and provide institutionalised training on children's rights for all professionals in the field of justice for children, including social workers, lawyers and judges;
· Include continuous training on children’s rights in schools’ curricula;
· Invest in community based diversion and alternative dispute resolution initiatives;
· Develop free legal aid and paralegal programmes to facilitate children's access to justice;
· Ensure protection measures are in place for all children who come in contact with the law, giving particular attention to children with disabilities, children at risk and children belonging to minority groups;
· Increase opportunities for children to participate in decisions that affect them and their communities and foster their roles as positive social actors;
· Support the mandates and collaborate with the UN Special Representatives of the Secretary General on Violence against Children and on Children and Armed Conflict, and other relevant international and regional special procedures;
· Acknowledge the competence of, cooperate with, and respect and implement the decisions of international and regional human rights complaints mechanisms.
· Request technical advice and assistance in justice for children provided by the relevant UN agencies and programmes in particular the Interagency Panel on Juvenile Justice (UNICEF, OHCHR, UNODC, DPKO, UN CRC, UNDP);
· Collaborate with the African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child and other international and regional human rights bodies in submitting periodic reports and implement their Recommendations;
· Conduct research and collect and publish data and information concerning children in contact with the national justice system and make the data available to relevant stakeholders;
· Cooperate with CSOs and [I]NGOs in the implementation of joint programmes on justice for children.

6. To the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child:
· Continue the collaboration with the African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child and the relevant special procedure mechanisms;
· Ensure that justice for children is reflected in the concluding observations to States Parties;
· Consider the possibility of drafting a General Comment on Children of incarcerated parents, as a follow-up to the 2011 Day of General Discussion.

7. To the United Nations and other international partners:
· Provide resources and technical assistance to key government ministries to develop and implement national policies and plans of action to set up effective justice systems for children;
· to establish data collection and management systems and to build the capacity of legal and law enforcement professionals;
· Support and provide financial assistance to CSOs and [I]NGOs to enable their active participation in national policy making;
· Make the issue of children's rights in the justice system paramount on the international agenda and organise frequent international fora to further this agenda;
· Conduct and fund ongoing research on children’s rights and examine the dynamics of issues affecting children.

8. To [I]NGOs and CSOs:
· Monitor the implementation of children’s rights with regard to child justice and provide governments, regional and international bodies with facts and evidence including by participating in treaty body reporting procedures and submitting complaints to relevant international and regional mechanisms;
· Persistently engage government to take action to improve respect for children’s rights in the justice system;
· Assist governments with relevant training on children’s rights in the justice system and other capacity building initiatives for government officials and community-based actors who encounter children in their work;
· Raise public awareness of children’s rights in the justice system and mobilise the public on their role in justice for children;
· Educate children on their rights in justice and increase their capacity to understand and enforce their rights;
· Help children to access justice through the legal system where their rights have been violated;
· Engage with children and ensure that their views are shared with relevant stakeholders and taken into account in the justice system.

9. To Community Leaders, Religious Leaders and Parents:
· Promote and advance good traditional practices that respect and protect the rights of children, in accordance with international and regional standards such as good parenting and family based care and prohibit traditional practices that are harmful to the health, welfare and development of children;
· Strengthen mechanisms for alternative dispute resolution, and ensure children’s representation and participation;
· Improve cooperation with the police and other formal justice institutions in cases of child abuse, violence against children, and other child rights violations.

10. To the Media:
· Play a key role in promoting children’s rights in the justice system;
· Make the issues affecting children in contact with the law visible, using accurate and balanced information without stigmatising or further victimising individual children;
· Protect the dignity, identity and privacy of children.

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English
Scope: 
Date: 
Tuesday, January 24, 2012 (All day)

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