Switzerland needs a national child rights policy, say advocates
One year after the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child adopted recommendations for the Alpine nation, no progress has been made in certain areas, according to Child Rights Network Switzerland.
This content was published on
2 minutes
Keystone-SDA/swissinfo.ch/gw
Português
pt
A Suíça precisa de uma política nacional de direitos da criança
“It is high time that the federal government and the cantons intensify their efforts,” said the network’s president, Valentina Darbellay, in a statement issuedExternal link on Sunday, World Children’s Day.
“In this respect, it is important that organisations active in the field, as well as children and young people themselves, are involved in the development of measures,” she added.
During the 2021 periodic review for Switzerland’s implementation of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), Swiss representatives acknowledged to the committee that the country could be doing more to prevent violence against children and facilitate children’s participation in society. The Committee on the Rights of the Child monitors implementation of the CRC, which Switzerland ratified in 1997.
More
More
A ‘revolution’ in how we see the rights of children
This content was published on
Thirty years ago, the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child presented its take on juvenile justice: a child is the best judge of his or her situation.
A year later, the network said, implementation varies among the country’s 26 cantons, which are responsible for applying individual obligations of the CRC. Depending on where they live, children have access to varying levels of care, child and youth protection provisions or means of participation.
In addition to a national children’s rights policy, the advocacy group released recommendations in 10 priority areas where Switzerland needs to improve. These include focusing on poverty and protection against violence and gathering missing data on the living situation of children.
According to the newspaper NZZ am Sonntag, schools are also failingExternal link to respect the CRC, which stipulates the right of children to be heard in all decisions that affect them. This provision is not applied uniformly across Switzerland and implementation in some cases is problematic, the director of the children’s ombuds office, Irene Inderbitzin, told the paper.
Popular Stories
More
Swiss Politics
Why cars still reign supreme in ‘rail-nation’ Switzerland
Swiss central banker wants to boost equity to head off risks
This content was published on
Equity levels at the Swiss National Bank (SNB) are much too low for the risks its large balance sheet poses, according to Martin Schlegel.
Beer sales in Switzerland watered down by bad weather
This content was published on
The past brewing year fell through in Switzerland, partly due to the bad weather. Beer sales shrank again. For the first time, per capita consumption fell below the 50 liter mark.
Compensation for Syrian after pregnant wife denied help on Swiss train
This content was published on
Switzerland’s Federal Court has partially upheld the appeal of a Syrian family being deported from Switzerland to Italy in 2014. The man now also receives compensation.
Swiss-EU negotiations: Cassis to meet Sefcovic in Bern
This content was published on
Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis will meet the Vice-President of the EU Commission, Maros Sefcovic, in Bern on Wednesday.
This content was published on
The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child should ask Switzerland to report the extraterritorial impact of its tax policies.
Switzerland among best countries for children’s rights
This content was published on
A new ranking of states’ compliance with the international Convention on the Rights of the Child puts Switzerland in second place.
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.