CRC/C/15/Add.213
page 13
60.
The Committee urgently recommends that the State party:
(a)
Ensure that all children, especially from the most vulnerable groups and in
rural areas, have access to primary health care and encourages the State party to pursue
its efforts in this respect and implement the recommendations of CEDAW as they relate to
children;
(b)
Develop a national policy in order to ensure an integrated and
multidimensional approach to early childhood development;
(c)
Continue and strengthen implementation of the WHO Integrated
Management of Childhood Illness programme;
(d)
Improve the specialized health care provided to children affected by the
Semipalatinsk nuclear testing site, including its psychosocial aspect;
(e)
Strengthen its efforts to detect and prevent diseases related to nuclear
contamination;
(f)
Focus more on a long-term developmental approach to the assistance to
children through, inter alia, supporting United Nations initiatives in this area;
(g)
Take all appropriate measures, including seeking international cooperation,
to prevent and combat the damaging effects of environmental degradation on children,
including pollution of the environment and food products.
6. Education, leisure and cultural activities
61.
The Committee welcomes the efforts taken by the State party to improve the education
system with the introduction of the Education Act 1999 which includes such aims as ensuring
compulsory secondary education for all children of school age, providing free textbooks to
vulnerable children and compulsory pre-school attendance. The Committee remains concerned
at the many difficulties education is facing, inter alia:
(a)
The increase in the cost of education which limits access to children from
economically disadvantaged households and rural areas;
(b)
The decrease in the number of pre-schools;
(c)
The increasing drop-out rates in secondary and vocational education;
(d)
Important regional disparities in the number of educational establishments and in
the quality of education, with rural areas being at particular disadvantage;
(e)
The implementation of education reforms without the necessary preliminary
preparation and training of teachers.