The Government has been challenged by the UN Human Rights Committee on what measures it has taken “to prohibit all corporal punishment of children in all settings”.
It
has also been asked to explain the narrowness of abortion provision in
the new Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act, and the lack of an
independent inquiry into the Magdalene laundries.
Ireland’s treatment of
asylum seekers and Travellers has also been raised, as have the issues
of overcrowded prisons and why members of the judiciary must take a
religious oath.
The committee queried measures
taken by the State to ensure Garda co-operation with the Garda Ombudsman
and, where Roma communities in Ireland
are concerned, it asked the Government to “please clarify specific
measures taken to ensure their . . . right to be protected against
arbitrary interference with their family life”.
On women it asked for measures to be taken
“to meet the 40 per cent target in all State board positions as outlined
in the Programme for a National Government 2011- 2016”.
Detailed list of issues
Detailed list of issues
The
committee yesterday published a detailed list of issues it plans to
raise with the Government at a hearing in Geneva next July.
A spokesman
for the Department of Foreign Affairs confirmed last night the
Government had received the queries and would be responding to them
prior to the hearing, which begins on July 7th.
In
the document published yesterday the committee sought clarification on
whether the State intended to broaden access to abortion in Ireland
“including when the pregnancy poses a risk to the health of the pregnant
woman, where the pregnancy is the result of a crime, such as rape or
incest, cases of fatal foetal abnormalities, or when it is established
that the foetus will not survive outside the womb”.
Abortion
The committee sought clarification on circumstances in which the Director of Public Prosecutions “may authorise prosecutions, and against whom” where abortion is concerned.
It
asked the Government to clarify when it would “establish a prompt,
thorough and independent investigation into the abuse perpetrated in the
Magdalene laundries as recommended by the Irish Human Rights
Commission”.
It sought information on “how the redress scheme proposed
by Mr Justice John Quirke will be monitored by an independent body, and how the appeals process would operate.
It
asked the Government about measures taken “to amend the constitutional
provision requiring a religious oath from judges to allow for a choice
of a non-religious declaration” and about measures taken to remove the
offence of blasphemy from the Constitution and the Defamation Act 2009.
The
committee sought information on steps taken by the State “to ensure
that the rights of children of minority religions or non-faith are also
recognised in the Education Act 1998” as well as for “the number of
non-denominational primary schools that have been established”.
It
has asked for a timeline for the closure of St Patrick’s Institution
and for statistics “on the number of complaints of torture and
ill-treatment filed against prison officers, the number of
investigations instituted, and the number of prosecutions and
convictions imposed”.