CRC/C/TLS/CO/1
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40.
The Committee welcomes the State party’s accession to the Convention against Torture
and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Punishment or Treatment, but is concerned at allegations
concerning cases of degrading treatment of children by the police and in the prison system.
41.
The Committee urges the State party to strictly observe the minimum standards
prescribed by the above Convention and to ensure that no child is subjected to inhumane or
degrading treatment of any kind.
Corporal punishment
42.
The Committee is concerned at reports that corporal punishment is a common
phenomenon at home and is frequently used to discipline children at school and in other
educational settings.
43.
In light of the Committee’s general comment No. 8 on the right of the child to
protection from corporal punishment and other cruel or degrading forms of punishment,
the Committee recommends that the State party explicitly prohibit corporal punishment in
all settings, including through awareness-raising campaigns aimed at families, the school
system and other educational settings.
5. Follow-up to the United Nations Study on Violence against Children
44.
With reference to the United Nations Study on violence against children (A/61/299),
the Committee recommends the State party to:
(a)
Take all necessary measures for the implementation of the recommendations
contained in the report of the independent expert of the United Nations study on violence
against children, while taking into account the outcome and recommendations of the
regional consultation for East Asia and the Pacific held in Bangkok from 14 to 16 June
2005;
(b)
Use these recommendations as a tool for action in partnership with civil
society and in particular with the involvement of children, to ensure that every child is
protected from all forms of physical, sexual and mental violence and to gain momentum for
concrete and, where appropriate, time-bound actions to prevent and respond to such
violence and abuse;
(c)
Seek technical assistance from UNICEF, the Office of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) and the World Health Organization
(WHO) for the above-mentioned purposes.
6. Family environment and alternative care
(arts, 5, 18 (paras 1-2), 9-11, 19-21, 25, 27 (para 4) and 39)
Children deprived of their family
45.
The Committee notes with concern the existence of widespread practices by which
children are removed from their family for a variety of reasons, usually perceived to be in the