CCPR/C/67/D/694/1996
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the State party could not be deemed to discriminate against parents who freely
choose not to avail themselves of benefits which are generally open to all.
4.3.2 The State party argues that its funding of public schools but not private
schools is not discriminatory. All children of every or no religious
denomination have the same right to attend free secular public schools
maintained with tax funds. According to the State party, it is not a deprivation
by the Government that a child or a parent voluntarily chooses to forego the
exercise of the right to educational benefits provided in the public school
system. The State party emphasizes that the province of Ontario does not fund
any private schools, whether they are religious or not. The distinction made in
the funding of schools is based not on religion, but on whether or not the
school is a public or a private/independent institution.
4.3.3 According to the State party, the establishment of secular public
institutions is consistent with the values of article 26 of the Covenant.
Secular institutions do not discriminate against religion, they are a legitimate
form of Government neutrality. According to the State party, a secular system
is a tool which assists in preventing discrimination among citizens on the basis
of their religious faiths. The State party makes no distinctions among different
religious groups in its public education and does not limit any religious
group’s ability to establish private schools.
4.3.4 Apart from its obligations under the Constitution Act 1867, the State
party provides no direct funding to religious schools. In such circumstances,
the State party argues that it is not discriminatory to refuse funding for
religious schools. In making its decision, the State party seeks to achieve the
very values advanced by article 26, the creation of a tolerant society where
there is respect and equality for all religious beliefs. The State party argues
that it would defeat the purposes of article 26 itself if the Committee was to
hold that because of the provisions in the Constitution Act 1867 requiring the
funding of Roman Catholic schools, the State party now must fund all private
religious schools, thus undermining its very ability to create and promote a
tolerant society that truly protects religious freedom, when in the absence if
the 1867 constitutional provision, it would have no obligation under the
Covenant to fund any religious schools at all.
4.4.1. In relation to article 18, the State party refers to the travaux
préparatoires which make it clear that article 18 does not include the right to
require the State to fund private religious schools. During the drafting the
question was expressly raised and answered in the negative.4 As a consequence,
the State party argues that the author’s claim under article 18 is inadmissible
ratione materiae. In the alternative, the State party argues that its policy
meets the guarantee of freedom of religion contained in article 18, because it
provides a public school system which is open to persons of all religious
beliefs and which does not provide instruction in a particular religion or
belief, and because there is freedom to establish private religious schools and
parents are free to send their children to such religious schools. The State
party denies that paragraph 4 of article 18 obligates States to subsidize
private religious schools or religious education.5 According to the State party,
See Bossuyt, Guide to the Travaux Préparatoires of the ICCPR, 1987, at
4
369.
The State party makes reference to Nowak, UN Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, CCPR commentary, at 330-333.
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