COMPLAINTS MECHANISM: Joint statement by NGO Group on draft OP – Articles 3 and 12

Summary: Compilation of joint oral statements delivered by the NGO Group for the CRC at the second session meeting with the Open-ended Working Group on an Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child 6-10 December 2010.

Joint statement on Articles 3 and 12 of the draft Optional Protocol to the CRC

Delivered on 6 December by Anita Goh, Advocacy Officer of the NGO Group for the CRC

This statement is made on behalf of the 77 member organisations of the NGO Group for the CRC. 

Mr Chairman,

We welcome the statement made by Serbia and Slovenia and strongly support the inclusion of collective communications in the draft.

Collective communications will complement individual communications by allowing communications that do not require the identification of an individual victim. The delegation of Austria asked for examples of cases where plaintiffs would not come forward through the individual procedure. Mexico mentioned the case of street children, we can also think of victims of sale, victims of child labour, and any other category of children who will most certainly not use the individual communication procedure because of fear of reprisal from those violating their rights or because they do not trust national systems.

Under the collective complaints system of the European Social Charter system, complaints were brought regarding the right to education for children and adults with autism or to ensure that the rules against under-age labour was enforced, particularly work within the family. They did not identify individual victims but concerned identifiable groups of child victims.

To make sure that those categories of children can also have an international remedy if national systems fail them, it will be essential to allow for the actors who hear about those violations, namely the national human rights institutions, ombudspeople and NGOs, to “step in”, so to speak, and bring those issues to the attention of the Committee.

We understand the confusion of many delegations as to the relationship between collective communications and the inquiry procedure. Inquiry procedures are an established procedure to address grave or systematic situations whereas collective communications are meant to cover situations where children may be too vulnerable or victimised to use individual communications. They would moreover serve to develop the Committee's jurisprudence by pointing at implementation gaps.

As pointed out by Liechtenstein, such duplication could be avoided by changing the threshold for collective communications and allow them for those cases where the children will not be able to use the individual communication procedure.

We therefore strongly support the suggestion to change the threshold of Art. 3 to avoid this duplication, as suggested by Liechtenstein. 

We agree with Iran and others in that the ECOSOC status is not a valid requirement to allow standing of NGOs and that local and national NGOs that might not have the ECOSOC status because they do not work at the UN level, will be the best placed to know about children's rights violations on the ground.

We would therefore support the deletion of the ECOSOC status requirement in the text.

Owner: NGO Group for the Convention on the Rights of the Childpdf: http://www.crin.org/docs/Statement by Anita Goh on draft OP, Arts. 3 and 12.doc

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