CRC/C/PAN/CO/3-4
(a)
There are gaps in school retention for the seventh to ninth grades. Vocational
education for the large proportion of children who drop out and are outside the education
system is scarce or unavailable;
(b)
Preschool education coverage is still very limited and the quality of informal
pre-schooling in rural and indigenous areas is low;
(c)
The education cash subsidy has been made conditional upon academic
performance, which impacts negatively on poorer children who tend to perform less well
than higher income children;
(d)
The review of school curricula did not include human rights and children’s
rights, nor the history and culture of the different ethnic groups in the State party; and,
(e)
63.
Access to multicultural and bilingual education is persistently lacking.
The Committee recommends that the State party:
(a)
Address the issue of non-completion and children dropping out, and
develop second-chance opportunities and vocational education for those children who
are left outside the formal educational system, especially but not only indigenous and
Afro-Panamanian children;
(b)
Improve access to preschool and basic compulsory education in rural
areas, including those with concentration of indigenous children, refugees and
migrants;
(c)
Modify the criteria for receiving the educational cash subsidy to avoid
discrimination and include asylum-seekers and refugees as recipients;
(d)
Include human rights and child rights as well as the history and culture
of the different ethnic groups in the territory in new revisions of the curricula; and,
(e)
Allocate sufficient human, technical and financial resources for the roll
out of the intercultural and bilingual education programme in all indigenous
territories as well as in other areas with indigenous populations.
H.
Special protection measures (arts. 22, 30, 38, 39, 40, 37 (b)-(d) and 32-36
of the Convention)
Refugee and asylum-seeking children
64.
The Committee is concerned at the lack of an adequate system of identification of
refugee and asylum-seeking children in the State party and that as a consequence, children
are sometimes repatriated without assessment of their situation. The Committee is also
concerned that the refugee determination process is conducted on a “head of household
basis”, which in reality prevents children under the age of 18 from being interviewed and to
be heard on a process that concerns them. The Committee regrets the lack of appropriate
mechanisms for refugee and asylum-seeking children to present individual claims as well as
the lack of evidence of application of the best interests of the child in decisions that concern
them.
65.
The Committee recommends that the State party improve the fairness of the
refugee determination system, include the concerned children in the refugee
determination process and apply the principle of the best interests of the child. By
involving the children, besides the head of the household, this process would allow for
children under the age of 18 to be heard and to participate in processes that are of
their concern. The Committee draws the State party attention to its general comment
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