Geneva, 5th September
Yesterday in Geneva the United
Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) questioned Morocco about its
policy of privatising education and appeared to regret the absence of a
satisfactory response from the government. The Moroccan government was reviewed
this week by the UN Committee of Experts which is responsible for monitoring
the implementation of the International Convention on the Rights of the Child,
which Morocco ratified in 1993.
The members of the CRC raised
serious concerns about the impact of privatisation of Moroccan schools on
children’s right to free, quality and accessible education, asking four
questions on this topic. After the Moroccan delegation did not respond to the
first question, two other members of the CRC asked additional questions on the
topic voicing their concerns about issues such as the transfer of teachers from
public to private schools, inequalities created by privatisation, and the
education system that Morocco is promoting.
The Government delegation headed by
the Minister for Solidarity, Women, Family and Social Development, Ms. Bassima
Hakkaoui, responded that Morocco “promotes
free competition among schools” and hopes to rapidly achieve“20% of pupils enrolled in private schools”,
given the response, which denied any issue with regards to private schools in
Morocco, a CRC member felt compelled to ask another follow-up question on the
subject.
The Committee reminded the Moroccan delegation that education is a
public good guaranteed as such since the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human
Rights. It also
mentioned that the King of Morocco has recently added his voice to the
increasing concerns about growing inequalities created by privatisation in
education in Morocco, and asked the Moroccan delegation if there were at least
two issues associated with privatisation they could identify. It is only then
that that the representative from the human rights department of the government
finally admitted that there was a problem and that the government was working
to reform the education system.
“The
answers given by the government to questions from the Committee on the Rights
of the Child do not respond to the basic structural problems of discrimination
in the education system in the country created by privatization in education”,
reacted Sylvain Aubry, the researcher on the human right to education for the
Global Initiative for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (GI-ESCR).
The GI-ESCR with its Moroccan
partner has conducted a one-year research study on the effects of privatisation
in Morocco, and has published three reports demonstrating the negative impacts
of the government-backed privatisation in education on children’s right to
education (see here).
Lucy McKernan, UN Liaison with the
GI-ESCR, explained that “for 15 years,
the government has encouraged the development of private education. But today,
many Moroccans feel compelled to make sacrifices to send their children to
expensive private schools, and this creates great inequality and divide in
society between those who have access to the best expensive schools, and others
who feel left behind”.
Bret Thiele, co-director of the
GI-ESCR added “We hope that in its
concluding observations the Committee on the Rights of the Child will remind Morocco
of its obligation under international law to provide quality public education
for all, in order to fight against inequality, rather than encourage private
education, which is exacerbating geographic and socio-economic inequalities and
societal segregation".
Following its review of Morocco, the
CRC will publish at the end of September a set of recommendations on the
implementation of the Convention of the Rights of the Child in Morocco, called ‘concluding
observations’. The GI-ESCR and its partners have indicated that they will
closely monitor the implementation of these observations by the Moroccan
government.
Contacts:
·
Lucy Mc Kernan / lucy@globalinitiative-escr.org / +41 (0)79 103 7719
·
Sylvain Aubry / sylvain@globalinitiative-escr.org / +41 7 91 79 69 55; or +33 7 81 70 81 96 ; or +212 6 22 37 86
37; or +254 7 88 28 96 34