A/HRC/45/34/Add.1
illnesses that their traditional methods cannot treat effectively. Indigenous persons told the
Special Rapporteur that leprosy, tuberculosis, malaria and yaws were common illnesses
within their communities. Malnutrition affected indigenous children: 40 per cent of
indigenous children under 5 years of age suffered from chronic malnutrition, compared
with 26 per cent for the whole population.17 Indigenous peoples’ use of and transmittal of
knowledge about traditional medicinal plants should be supported and encouraged. In this
respect, it should be noted that traditional indigenous medicine is part of the national health
system, including the national strategy for the promotion of traditional medicine based on
the identification of nearly 5,000 plants and the promotion of their use in preparing medical
compounds. It is essential that indigenous experts be among the drivers of this strategy.
43.
The Special Rapporteur regrets the lack of national statistics regarding the
experience of indigenous men, women and children within the health system. Health-care
centres can play a vital role in redressing the situation of discrimination by collecting data
disaggregated by sex, age and ethnicity in a way that respects privacy.
2.
Access to education
44.
Since the early 2000s, a project has provided informal schools for indigenous
peoples in Likouala and Sangha Departments. The project was initially created and run by
civil society organizations to respond to the daunting levels of illiteracy and poor school
attendance in areas densely inhabited by indigenous populations. The so-called “observe,
reflect and act” schools deliver a three-year programme to prepare young indigenous
children to enter the mainstream school system. UNICEF, WFP, the European Union, CIB
and the Government have since supported over 45 schools and more than 7,000 pupils in
the two Departments.
45.
While the “observe, reflect and act” system has led to an increase in the number of
indigenous children attending school, indigenous adolescents still represent only 0.05 per
cent of the junior high school population and 0.008 per cent of all high school students,
with indigenous girls remaining particularly excluded from education. 18
46.
The previous Special Rapporteur had encouraged the Government to adopt measures
to encourage indigenous children to stay in school after the three-year “observe, reflect and
act” school programme, including through the incorporation of indigenous people’s
teaching methods, the development of cross-cultural curricula, the use of bilingual
instruction and the scheduling of classes around the indigenous calendar and other cultural
patterns.
47.
Article 19 of Law No. 5-2011 requires the State to develop and implement education
programmes and appropriate structures that correspond to the needs and way of life of
indigenous peoples. Education is to be free and mandatory for all children aged 6 to 16
years. The decree implementing Law No. 5-2011 with regard to education provides for
special measures to be applied to indigenous children, including their automatic eligibility
for scholarship to higher education, the annual distribution of school kits and uniforms and
the opening of school restaurants for indigenous children.
48.
The national action plans for 2009–2013 and 2014–2017 delivered some results,
including the construction and equipment of classrooms, the provision of teaching materials,
the opening and provision of school canteens, the sensitization and mobilization of
indigenous parents and communities and the promotion of innovative pedagogical
approaches aimed at attracting and retaining indigenous students. Nevertheless, the current
reality on the ground remains starkly inadequate.
49.
Illiteracy remains widespread among indigenous populations, including in Sangha.
UNFPA reported to the Special Rapporteur that 65 per cent of indigenous children between
the ages of 12 and 15 years were not in school, compared to 39 per cent in the national
population as a whole. 19 During the visit, the Special Rapporteur was told that lack of
17
18
19
10
Congo, Ministry of Forest Economics, Cadre de Planification en Faveur des Peuples Autochtones :
Rapport Final (November 2018), p. 24 (in French).
UNICEF, Analyse de la Situation des Enfants et des Adolescents en République du Congo,
(September 2019) p. 124 (in French).
Information shared by UNFPA.