A/HRC/51/28/Add.1
disaggregated data on poverty. According to the latest census, however, 61.2 per cent of
indigenous persons have their health insurance provided by the State and the indigenous
unemployment rate stands at 59.3 per cent.13 These figures bear testament to the high poverty
levels among indigenous peoples, due to structural social, political and economic exclusion.
78.
The Special Rapporteur is concerned about the official figures showing that 70.1 per
cent of indigenous households cannot meet their basic needs, compared with a rate of 24.6
per cent for the population as a whole. 14 Moreover, 27.8 per cent of the population in
indigenous territories do not have access to adequate housing. The Special Rapporteur was
informed about the obstacles single women face in gaining access to housing under the State
programmes.
79.
The Special Rapporteur welcomes the installation of 13 base station radios in 6
indigenous territories in 2021, as part of the Connected Communities Programme of the
National Telecommunications Fund, and the installation of 19 telecommunications masts in
2022. However, the Special Rapporteur is concerned about inequality of access to
technology, which is having a growing negative impact on the right to education, 15
particularly in the wake of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, and on indigenous
peoples’ ability to complete the administrative procedures necessary in order for them to fully
enjoy all their rights.
80.
Statistical data show marked inequalities in access to quality education: children in
indigenous territories have an average of 5.7 years’ formal schooling, compared with a
national average of 8.7 years; illiteracy rates are also much higher among indigenous peoples.
81.
The Special Rapporteur notes the recognition of indigenous education from a cultural
perspective by Executive Decree No. 37801-MEP. However, intercultural education in which
indigenous peoples can see their science and knowledge reflected as part of the country’s
cultural heritage needs to be guaranteed. The curricula for the various levels of education do
not include modules or courses on indigenous peoples.
82.
The Special Rapporteur received reports that there is no national strategy for
incorporating young people’s perspectives on education, technology, employment and
recreation.
83.
The Special Rapporteur congratulates Costa Rica on the establishment of the National
Health Council for Indigenous Peoples and the insurance scheme for cross-border NgäbeBuglé indigenous persons in Talamanca; the creation of the role of community indigenous
assistant; and the introduction of the Standardization Programme for Indigenous Peoples’
Health Care. He also encourages the State to continue working to guarantee equitable and
culturally appropriate access to medical care.
84.
Indigenous women reported a lack of quality, appropriate and intercultural health-care
services in indigenous communities, access-related difficulties due to lack of an Internet
connection and discriminatory treatment when receiving health care.
85.
The Special Rapporteur is concerned about inequalities in indigenous women’s access
to sexual and reproductive health services, which is evidenced by the reported indigenous
teenage pregnancy rate of 10.2 per cent, compared with a rate of 4.3 per cent for the
population as a whole.
86.
Despite the existence of official data on indigenous persons with disabilities, during
his visit, the Special Rapporteur noted that nothing was being done to raise awareness of the
rights of indigenous persons with disabilities within their territories and there was no human
rights-based State policy that would allow indigenous persons with disabilities to be
13
14
15
GE.22-11025
United Nations Development Programme, Costa Rica, Visión 2030 – Poblaciones Excluidas en Costa
Rica, 2011 National Population Census (National Institute of Statistics and Censuses of Costa Rica,
2016).
Ibid.
Only 17 per cent of indigenous persons over 4 years of age have access to a computer, compared with
an average rate of 48.7 per cent for the population as a whole. Only 14.9 per cent of indigenous
persons have access to the Internet, compared with an average rate of 63 per cent for the population as
a whole.
13