E/C.12/1995/6
page 2
B.
Positive Aspects
3.
The Committee welcomes the signing of the 1992 Peace Accord, which ended the
armed conflict in the interior region of the State party, and the subsequent
disarming of the paramilitary groups involved in the conflict.
4.
The Committee welcomes the special consideration accorded to human rights
within the Constitution of Suriname and the accession by the State party to a
number of international human rights instruments. In this connection, it takes
note of the economic, social and cultural rights enumerated in Chapter 6 of the
Constitution.
5.
The Committee welcomes the establishment of the National Institution for
Human Rights, which is authorized, inter alia, to draft and submit reports to the
various international monitoring bodies, study international standards and
legislation, promote international cooperation, and investigate complaints of
alleged violations in the area of civil and political rights. The Committee also
welcomes the establishment of the National Women’s Bureau within the Ministry of
Internal Affairs to promote the human rights of women.
6.
The Committee welcomes the Government’s active efforts to reconstruct and
further develop the national economy, including the Structural Adjustment
Programme that is being implemented since 1993. It notes with appreciation that
the Programme contains a social safety component developed to protect the most
economically vulnerable groups.
C.
Factors and difficulties affecting the implementation of the Covenant
7.
The Committee notes with deep concern the economic crisis faced by the State
party due in part to the deterioration of the terms of trade for its principal
export, bauxite, and the ensuing phenomena of inflation and recession.
The
Committee is concerned that the prolonged economic crisis has given rise to high
levels of structural unemployment and is limiting the Government’s ability to
implement programmes that ensure the promotion and protection of the economic,
social and cultural rights in the State party, especially its ability to fully
implement those provisions of the Peace Accord concerning the development of the
interior of the country.
The Committee acknowledges that such financial
constraints may create difficulties with respect to the consolidation of
democracy following the signing of the 1992 Peace Accord. The Committee notes
that some important external assistance, such as vaccination services from
PAHO/WHO, have been suspended due to the State party’s inability to pay its
contributions to international organizations that provide such services.
8. The Committee notes with concern that women in Suriname still do not fully
enjoy their economic, social and cultural rights, due in part to traditional
customs and attitudes toward women. This situation manifests itself, among other
ways, in the form of violence against women and discrimination in employment.
9.
The Committee is further concerned about the Government’s inability to
collect relevant data on the level of enjoyment of economic, social and cultural
rights in the State party.
In this regard, the Committee regrets the lack of