| Country | Germany |
|---|---|
| Overview of the child rights situation | In Germany, significant numbers of girls are exposed to female genital mutilation. In addition, the prescription of psychostimulants for ADHD or ADD patients is extremely high. Children with disabilities, especially girls, are exposed to violence, and coal mining has a negative impact on children's health. |
| Violence | The Committee is concerned about ongoing violence experienced by children in schools and other institutions, including physical violence, bullying and an increase in cyberbullying. Furthermore, the Committee is concerned at the lack of adequately qualified teachers and school social workers in some schools to address the issue, as well as qualified staff in other institutions. |
| Discrimination | |
| Female genital mutilation and reproductive rights | The Committee is concerned about the significant number of girls living in the State party who are affected by genital mutilation or at risk of either being temporarily sent to a country where genital mutilation is practised or being exposed to it within the State party. The Committee also notes with concern that medical staff are often not well informed about genital mutilation and preventive and protective measures, and are therefore unable to give advice and provide help. To improve the situation, the Committee urges the State party to draft a national policy and strategy against female genital mutilation and to provide training on the prevention of and response to female genital mutilation for all relevant professional groups. Also, Germany should strengthen and organize further information dissemination and awareness-raising campaigns to prevent the practice. In that regard, particular focus should be placed on campaigns targeting girls at risk, informing them about access to help and advice. The Committee recommends to further strengthen measures for the elimination of female genital mutilation in its international cooperation programmes by, inter alia, extending financial and technical assistance to countries where female genital mutilation is practised. |
| Racism, children belonging to a minority and indigenous children | The Committee regrets that children from ethnic-minority backgrounds have a significantly weaker record of school achievement, twice the number of children from ethnic-minority backgrounds leave school without qualifications, compared to pupils from non-ethnic minority backgrounds.<br /> Therefore, the Committee recommends to allocate sufficient human, technical and financial resources to provide additional support to children from an ethnic-minority background within school facilities. |
| Situation of children with disabilities | The Committee is concerned about the findings of a recent study undertaken by the State party, according to which girls with disabilities are frequently at risk of violence, including sexual violence. |
| Education | |
| Free primary and secondary school | Yes |
| Free kindergarten | No |
| Digital possibilities | |
| Health | |
| physical health | The Committee is concerned at new morbidities in children which are being insufficiently addressed, related to attachment disorders, and to an increase in children’s emotional and behavioural problems, owing to pressure to succeed at school. |
| mental health | The Committee is concerned about the over-prescription of psychostimulants to children and about excessive diagnoses of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) or attention deficit disorder (ADD), and in particular the forced removal of children who are diagnosed/misdiagnosed with ADHD or ADD from their families and their subsequent placement in foster care or psychiatric hospitals, where many of them are treated with psychotropic medication. |
| Relation to other countries | |
| Impacts of climate change | |
| Business sector | The Committee notes that the State party uses a significant amount of coal to produce power and is concerned about the negative impact that coal emissions have on children’s health. The Committee is also concerned about the lack of adequate measures taken by the State party against German companies that conduct business abroad and reportedly violate children’s rights and other human rights. |
| Section Break | |
| Situation of juvenile justice | The Committee notes with satisfaction the legislative amendment prohibiting children in detention from being placed with persons up to the age of 24. However, the Committee regrets that not all Länder apply the principle of “deprivation of liberty as a last resort”. |
| Specific observations | While noting the measures undertaken by the State party to investigate cases of child abuse committed by church officials, the Committee is concerned that several cases have not been investigated. |
| Publications and Reviews | |
| Citations | |
| Additional Background | Concluding observations on the third and fourth periodic reports released on 25 February 2015. |
| Additional background (new) | |
| Websites | |
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| Fact Sheet URL | |
| Created By (User Id) | 3 |
| Entry Id | 44 |
| Source Url | https://www.childrightsfacts.org/2022/zeit-zum-ausprobieren/ |
| Entry Date | 2022-02-22 10:19:10 |
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