A/HRC/25/56
or rendered inaccessible by simultaneous intersecting disadvantage in another. These
intersecting and mutually reinforcing inequalities are often rooted in historical
relationships, and continue to be reproduced through discrimination in social, economic,
environmental and political domains.”
B.
Education
59.
Education is a basic human right for all children, and yet in all regions there are
minority children who do not enjoy that right or enjoy it to a much lesser extent than others.
Often countries face serious problems in providing basic education for many children
owing to factors including scarcity of resources, poverty and conflict. However the
challenges and barriers to minority children are frequently based on and perpetuated by
discrimination and social exclusion. Lack of access to education perpetuates a cycle of
poverty that is often experienced most acutely by minority communities. Yet conversely,
education provides a gateway to development and the full enjoyment of a wide array of
human rights for minorities.
60.
In 2009, of the world’s 101 million children out of school, an estimated 50–70 per
cent were from minorities or indigenous peoples.24 In Central Africa, the great majority of
Batwa and Baka have not had access even to primary education. Only 13 per cent of
children in sub-Saharan Africa have access to primary education in their mother tongue.25
In South Asia, Dalit girls are prevented from pursuing their education not only because of
poverty, but through discrimination and sexual violence. Literacy levels are commonly
much lower among Dalit girls. For example, in the Mushahar Dalit community in India,
barely 9 per cent of women are literate.26 In Latin America, millions of indigenous and
African descendant children work in fields, plantations or mines instead of being in school.
61.
As a result of factors including segregation, stigmatization, and high dropout rates
among Roma, their attendance beyond primary school is dramatically lower than the
average. In South-East Europe only 18 per cent of Roma attend secondary school,
compared with 75 per cent of the population, and less than 1 per cent of Roma attend
university.27 In many countries globally, education is only in the national or majority
language leaving linguistic minorities disadvantaged. In Viet Nam and other South-East
Asian countries, education is commonly only in the language of the majority putting
minorities at a disadvantage in education.
24
25
26
27
16
Minority Rights, “Millions of European children still denied an education – new global report”, 16
July 2009. Available from www.minorityrights.org/7967/press-releases/millions-of-europeanchildren-still-denied-an-education-new-global-report.html.
UNDP, Human Development Report 2004 (New York): p. 34, figure 2.4.
International Dalit Solidarity Network, recommendations on Dalits’ access to education, submitted to
the Forum on Minority Issues, 2008, para. 83. Available from
http://idsn.org/fileadmin/user_folder/pdf/New_files/UN/IDSN_Forum_on_Minorities.pdf.
Expert paper prepared by UNICEF on Ending discrimination against Roma children, in Council of
Europe report “Ending discrimination against Roma children” (http://assembly.coe.int/ASP/Doc/
XrefViewPDF.asp?FileID=19545&Language=EN).