A/HRC/25/56/Add.1
certificates in 2010 and 2011. The Civil Registration Act of 6 May 2011 extended the
deadline for birth registration from 30 to 90 days.
24.
In 2013, President Biya announced the issuing of free national identity cards as part
of an effort to address the ongoing problem. In its national report submitted for the second
cycle of the universal periodic review,12 the Government highlighted that, in 2011,
following a census carried out in eight regions, official documents were issued to members
of the Pygmy and Mbororo communities: 6,600 national identity cards, and 4,253
declaratory judgements serving as birth certificates, including 1,500 for children (a birth
certificate remains a requirement for the issuance of an identity card). Civil society groups
pointed out that, despite the instructions from the President that identity cards be free, local
officials often demand bribes and other fees that effectively defeat the purpose of the
policy.
D.
Access to education and health care
25.
According to the United Nations Children’s Fund,13 Cameroon has a net primary
school enrolment rate of around 84 per cent, making it one of the highest in western and
central Africa. Civil society representatives, however, frequently cited education issues as
among their primary concerns relating to some minority communities. While education is
free at the primary level, certain minority communities face challenges that hamper their
access to education and have a negative impact on education outcomes and literacy levels.
Problems are particularly acute for communities living in remote or forest localities, and
also arise in the provision of appropriate education for nomadic communities, issues
relating to language for communities whose mother tongue is not used in schools (public
education is conducted in French and English only, putting some children at a
disadvantage) and extreme poverty.
26.
Additional problems exist within communities, including a negative perception of
the value of education among traditional hunter-gatherer or pastoralist peoples. The
situation of minority and indigenous girls is a special cause for concern. Established gender
roles, early marriage and childbirth, the priority given to boys and other cultural factors
contribute to lower participation rates in education and higher drop-out rates for girls.14
While these challenges affect many communities, they are particularly grave for certain
minority and indigenous groups. The Government is striving to address such concerns,
including by means of sensitization campaigns aimed at parents and the creation of “girlchild friendly” primary schools.
27.
The Government stated that everyone has the right to equal access to education in
Cameroon, in accordance with article 7 of Act No. 98/04 of 14 April 1998 on education
guidelines in Cameroon. It noted that, in cooperation with United Nations agencies and
local and international non-governmental organizations, it had strengthened measures to
improve the access of vulnerable groups, in particular Pygmies and the Mbororo, to
education. Such measures include scholarships, certificate-based admission to training
schools, the provision of school kits, teacher training, the building of schools closer to
villages, the construction or rehabilitation of classrooms, mobile schools for nomadic
12
13
14
A/HRC/WG.6/16/CMR/1, para. 73.
See UNICEF, Progress for Children: Achieving the MDGs with Equity, No. 9, September 2010.
Available from www.unicef.org/protection/Progress_for_Children-No.9_EN_081710.pdf.
According to data collected in 2011 by the Cameroon Indigenous Women Forum, the rate of illiteracy
among Mbororo Fulani pastoralist women is around 98 per cent. See
www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/IPeoples/IFP/Aeisatu_Bouba_December_2012.pdf.
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