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and the danger teachers and students face every day, the latter are not
discouraged from continuing to teach and study. The progress that Algeria has
been making in respect of education despite these difficult circumstances must
be appreciated and encouraged.
287. The Committee takes note of the statement by the delegation that the
process of ratification of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women is under way.
288. The Committee notes with satisfaction that the Algerian authorities have
begun to pay more attention to allocate greater resources for the construction
of housing, particularly for low-income groups.
C.
Factors and difficulties impeding the
implementation of the Covenant
289. The Committee notes that the implementation of the economic, social and
cultural rights guaranteed by the Covenant has been seriously hampered by the
grave economic crisis which the country is undergoing. The economy’s heavy
dependence on hydrocarbons, the foreign debt and the drought that has affected
agriculture are recurring constraints which have an impact on the State budget
and social spending.
290. The Committee also notes that the high population growth rate has led to
a rapid increase in the number of job applicants, thereby increasing
unemployment.
291. Lastly, the Committee notes that the acts of terrorism which are
affecting the very heart of Algerian society are liable to impede its human
development and its capacity for promoting the realization of economic, social
and cultural rights.
D.
Principal subjects of concern
292. The Committee expresses its deep concern about the political turmoil in
daily life in Algeria, which is impeding the full realization of the rights
guaranteed in the Covenant.
293. The Committee is deeply concerned by the fact that the philosophy of the
Covenant, based on the principle of non-discrimination and on the idea of the
universality of human rights, has not fully taken root in Algerian society.
Furthermore, many forms of discrimination against women, both in legislation
and in everyday life, prevent women from exercising their economic, social and
cultural rights.
294. The Committee also deplores the fact that such fundamental freedoms as
the right to work, to education, to freedom of movement, and the right freely
to choose a spouse are not fully guaranteed for Algerian women. The violence
exercised against women in the family, and outside the family by fanatical
groups, is of profound concern to the Committee. A husband’s absolute right
to keep the conjugal home in the case of divorce is a further subject of
concern.