| Country | Nauru |
|---|---|
| Overview of the child rights situation | Nauru has particular problems in implementing the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in the area of violence against children. Reproductive health and the situation of asylum-seeking children need improvement as well. |
| Violence | The Committee is seriously concerned that 30 per cent of girls have been victims of sexual abuse before the age of 15, and at sentences in cases of rape and other sexual assaults that are well below the maximum sentences provided for in legislation. |
| Discrimination | |
| Female genital mutilation and reproductive rights | The Committee is concerned at the relatively high rate of teenage pregnancy. It is also concerned at the lack of a comprehensive national programme and the lack of coordination among agencies, which undermines the potential to develop a strategic and sustainable response to prevent early pregnancies. |
| Racism, children belonging to a minority and indigenous children | The Committee is concerned at the high rate of under-5 mortality for non- Nauruan and indigenous Nauruan children. Therefore, the Committee urges the State party to immediately strengthen efforts to ensure that access to adequate health care and nutrition is extended to the most vulnerable families, particularly non-Nauruan and indigenous Nauruan families, as well as asylum-seeking and refugee families. |
| Situation of children with disabilities | The Committee urges the State party to adopt a human rights-based approach to disability and establish a comprehensive strategy to ensure the inclusion of children with disabilities. It also urges the State party to develop a legal provision to ensure that all persons with disabilities have access, on an equal basis with others, to public buildings, public spaces and all service delivery areas. Further, Nauru should give priority to measures that facilitate the full inclusion of children with disabilities, including those with intellectual and psychosocial disabilities, in all areas of public life, such as leisure activities, community-based care and provision of social housing with reasonable accommodation, in particular the right to inclusive education in mainstream schools independent of parental consent, and ensure the availability of qualified assistance in mainstream schools. |
| Education | |
| Free primary and secondary school | Not clear |
| Free kindergarten | Not clear |
| Digital possibilities | |
| Health | |
| physical health | The Committee recommends that the State party allocate sufficient human and financial resources to ensure adequate postnatal care for new-borns and mothers and appoint health mediators to conduct home visits. It further recommends to conduct a survey to assess household nutrition levels, especially nutrition of new-borns and children under 5 years of age, and the adequacy of vitamin and micronutrient intakes. Furthermore, the Committee recommends that the State party develop policies to ensure that healthy food choices are available and affordable and strengthen awareness campaigns to promote the benefits of healthy eating for children. Nauru should also ensure the availability of and equitable access to quality primary and specialized health and dental care for all children, particularly those from socially and economically disadvantaged groups. |
| mental health | The Committee is concerned at the lack of qualified specialists, especially child psychiatrists and psychologists, as well as community-based mental health services for all children. |
| Relation to other countries | |
| Impacts of climate change | |
| Business sector | |
| Section Break | |
| Situation of juvenile justice | The Committee regrets the general lack of information provided by the State party in relation to the administration of juvenile justice. It is, however, concerned at the absence of specialized magistrates and personnel appropriately trained on children’s rights and at the insufficient application of recognized juvenile justice principles when dealing with children in conflict with the law. It is also concerned at reports indicating that the State party’s correctional services significantly lack capacity and fail to meet internationally recognized juvenile justice standards. The Committee is further concerned at reports of ill-treatment of detainees, including children, and at the fact that separate detention facilities do not exist for child offenders. |
| Specific observations | While the Committee acknowledges that the State party has taken steps to increase and improve child protection policies and legislation, it is concerned that the Immigration Act 2014 does not specifically criminalize the sale of, trafficking in and abduction of children and that the guidance and measures in place for the protection, rehabilitation and support of children who have been sold, trafficked or abducted are insufficient. |
| Publications and Reviews | |
| Citations | |
| Additional Background | Concluding observations on the initial report released on 28 October 2016. |
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| Fact Sheet URL | |
| Created By (User Id) | 3 |
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| Source Url | https://www.childrightsfacts.org/2022/zeit-zum-ausprobieren/ |
| Entry Date | 2022-03-02 10:23:59 |
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