A/HRC/46/57/Add.1
IV. Legal and institutional framework
A.
International framework
10.
Kyrgyzstan is a party to most core human rights treaties and regularly submits national
periodic reports to the monitoring bodies. However, it has not signed or ratified the
International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, nor
has it ratified the complaints procedures under the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child. The most recent
ratification was of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, on 16 May
2019.
11.
The Government of Kyrgyzstan should be commended for its generally positive
record with regard to its engagement with international human rights institutions and
mechanisms, including, specifically, special procedure mandate holders. Recent requests
from the Special Rapporteur on the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest
attainable standard of physical and mental health, the Working Group on Enforced or
Involuntary Disappearances and the Special Rapporteur on minority issues have all been
accepted, and the visits completed.
B.
Constitutional, legislative and institutional framework
12.
The Constitution of Kyrgyzstan has a number of human rights provisions, including
article 16 of the Constitution which guarantees the right to equality and non-discrimination
on many grounds, including sex, race, language, ethnicity, disability, age, belief, political and
other convictions, education, property and other status.
V. Positive steps and developments
13.
Kyrgyzstan has made significant strides in the field of human rights since it
transitioned to democracy after 1991. It has in more recent years made legislative,
institutional and policy progress in areas such as human rights protection and gender equality,
including its adoption of the 2012–2020 national strategy for achieving gender equality and
of the 2018–2020 national plan of action for achieving gender equality. It has also more
recently put into place a 2019–2022 national human rights action plan, and a 2019–2022
national action plan on the implementation of the recommendations of the Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination.
14.
There have also been initiatives such as a programme on multilingual education for
2017–2030, which, though praiseworthy in its intention to reflect the country’s rich cultural
and linguistic diversity, needs to be reconsidered and readjusted, as will be discussed later in
the present report.
15.
It is important to point out the significant efforts and progress that have been made in
the country in relation to statelessness – one of the most serious global human rights
challenges, which principally affects minorities. Worldwide, statelessness is mainly a
minority issue, since more than 75 per cent of the world’s estimated 10 million stateless
people are members of minority groups.
16.
In 2019, Kyrgyzstan became the first country to largely end statelessness for all
practical purposes – with one exception. The concrete measures undertaken by the
Government to eradicate statelessness include the State Registration Agency’s community
outreach initiatives to try to ensure that everyone in Kyrgyzstan has access to civil registration
and official documents, as well as a policy of granting automatic citizenship to children born
in the country who would otherwise be stateless. In partnership with civil society, the State
Registration Agency has implemented a countrywide campaign that led to the identification
of 79,000 people who were provided with identification cards, and, more specifically, a
campaign focusing on members of the Mugat minority who traditionally might not have any
identity papers or even birth registration. Civil society organizations were part of these
4