CRC/C/15/Add.204
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Alternative care and adoption
35.
The Committee welcomes the State party’s efforts to place orphans with their extended
families while providing these families in particular female-headed households, with financial
assistance. The Committee also welcomes the information provided during the dialogue
that the criteria for potential adoptive families are not as narrow as presented in the State party
report (para. 169). The Committee welcomes the State party’s efforts to phase out large-scale
orphanages and other institutions and to place children in group homes only as a last resort,
but remains concerned that existing services are insufficient to provide for the large
number of orphans, including AIDS orphans, and unaccompanied refugee or displaced
children.
36.
The Committee recommends that the State party continue to strengthen and expand
its efforts to place children in need of alternative care with their extended families and to
promote adoption of these children when appropriate. The Committee also recommends
that the State party continue and expand as necessary its programme for the establishment
of children’s group homes, and seek international assistance in this regard.
Child abuse
37.
The Committee notes with concern that there is no information available on the various
forms of child abuse in the family and that legislation does not provide for effective protection of
children from sexual and physical abuse.
38.
The Committee recommends that the State party:
(a)
Reform its legislation on abuse in the family to expressly prohibit sexual and
physical abuse;
(b)
Undertake studies on domestic violence, ill-treatment and abuse (including
sexual abuse within the family) in order to adopt effective policies and programmes to
combat all forms of abuse;
(c)
Develop an effective national system for receiving, monitoring and
investigating complaints and, when necessary, prosecuting cases, in a manner which is
child-sensitive and ensures the victim’s privacy;
(d)
Set up a comprehensive nationwide response system to provide, as
appropriate, support and assistance to both victims and perpetrators of family violence,
rather than only intervention or punishment, and which ensures that all victims of violence
have access to counselling and assistance for their recovery and reintegration, while
preventing stigmatization of victims of abuse;
(e)
Seek technical assistance from, among others, UNICEF and the
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), in this regard.