CRC/C/BTN/CO/2
page 13
(d) Take effective measures to counter stigma and discrimination faced
by children and families infected and affected by HIV/AIDS.
7. Education, leisure and cultural activities
(arts. 28, 29 and 31 of the Convention)
Education, including vocational training and guidance
60.
The Committee welcomes that the Constitution guarantees free education to
all children of school age up to class ten. The Committee also notes achievements in
education indicators, such as the decrease of the gender gap, and the planned
construction of primary and community schools. However, the Committee is
concerned that informal fees are still charged in schools, that additional costs have not
been waived for all parents and that education has not been made compulsory. The
Committee is furthermore concerned that a remarkable number of children are not
enrolled, that regional disparities persist, that repetition and dropout rates are still high
and that gender parity has yet to be still achieved. The Committee is also concerned
that early childhood care and education as well as vocational training are not yet
expanded to the extent needed.
61.
The Committee recommends that the State party:
(a)
Ensure that primary education is compulsory and free of all costs and
accessible in an equitable manner for all children;
(b)
Strengthen efforts to achieve enrolment of all children in school and
completion of primary education with a view to expand secondary
education by, inter alia, building new schools and providing better
equipment of all schools;
(c)
Improve the quality of education by adapting curricula to new
developments and introducing interactive teaching and learning
methods;
(d)
Provide more early education facilities and vocational training centres
accessible in all regions of the country;
(e)
Give children who have left school before graduation or never
attended school non-formal opportunities to begin or complete their
education;
(f)
Seek technical assistance from UNICEF and UNESCO in this regard.
Education of children of Nepalese ethnic origin
62.
The Committee, while noting as positive the planned re-opening of schools in
south Bhutan and the abolishment of the “no objection certificate” announced by the
State party during the dialogue, is still concerned about the prevailing discrimination
in the field of education against children of Nepalese ethnic origin. The Committee
notes with concern that these children have reduced access to education due to the
lack of educational institutions at all levels and that they are denied education in their
own language. The Committee is concerned about the lack of data on children of
Nepalese ethnic origin attending school.