CCPR/C/67/D/694/1996
Page 15
4. In the Province of Ontario, the system of public schools provides for
religious instruction in one religion but adherents of other religious
denominations must arrange for their religious education either outside school
hours or by establishing private religious schools. Although arrangements exist
for indirect public funding to existing private schools, the level of such
funding is only a fraction of the costs incurred to the families, whereas public
Roman Catholic schools are free. This difference in treatment between adherents
of the Roman Catholic religion and such adherents of other religions that wish
to provide religious schools for their children is, in the Committee's view,
discriminatory. While I concur with this finding I wish to point out that the
existence of public Roman Catholic schools in Ontario is related to a historical
arrangement for minority protection and hence needs to be addressed not only
under article 26 of the Covenant but also under articles 27 and 18. The question
whether the arrangement in question should be discontinued is a matter of public
policy and the general design of the educational system within the State party,
not a requirement under the Covenant.
5. When implementing the Committee's views in the present case the State party
should in my opinion bear in mind that article 27 imposes positive obligations
for States to promote religious instruction in minority religions, and that
providing such education as an optional arrangement within the public education
system is one permissible arrangement to that end. Providing for publicly funded
education in minority languages for those who wish to receive such education is
not as such discriminatory, although care must of course be taken that possible
distinctions between different minority languages are based on objective and
reasonable grounds. The same rule applies in relation to religious education in
minority religions. In order to avoid discrimination in funding religious (or
linguistic) education for some but not all minorities States may legitimately
base themselves on whether there is a constant demand for such education. For
many religious minorities the existence of a fully secular alternative within
the public school system is sufficient, as the communities in question wish to
arrange for religious education outside school hours and outside school
premises. And if demands for religious schools do arise, one legitimate
criterion for deciding whether it would amount to discrimination not to
establish a public minority school or not to provide comparable public funding
to a private minority school is whether there is a sufficient number of children
to attend such a school so that it could operate as a viable part in the overall
system of education. In the present case this condition was met. Consequently,
the level of indirect public funding allocated to the education of the author's
children amounted to discrimination when compared to the full funding of public
Roman Catholic schools in Ontario.
Martin Scheinin (signed)