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Second periodic reports of States parties due in 1998 : Yemen. 23/07/98.
CRC/C/70/Add.1. (State Party Report)
COMMITTEE ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD
CONSIDERATION OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES PARTIES
UNDER ARTICLE 44 OF THE CONVENTION
Second periodic reports of States parties due
in 1998
Addendum
YEMEN
[Original: Arabic]
[3 February 1998]
* The present document contains, in addition to
the second period report of the State party, the supplementary information
on the situation of children in Yemen in the light of the Convention
on the Rights of the Child compiled by the Ministry of Social Security
and Social Affairs which had been requested by the Committee on
the Rights of the Child at its eleventh session during the consideration
of the initial report of Yemen (CRC/C/8/Add.20) (see A/51/41, paras.
821-843).
Introduction
1. Since Yemen's ratification of the Convention
on the Rights of the Child in 1991 and the subsequent preparation
in October 1994 of the initial report on the situation of children
in Yemen, the Yemeni Government, represented by the Ministry of
Social Security, Social Affairs and Labour, being aware of its obligations
in regard to the issues referred to in the provisions of that Convention,
has been endeavouring to implement those provisions in an effective
manner through plans and programmes of action. In this way, the
Government is striving to give effect to the articles and provisions
of that Convention notwithstanding the difficulties impeding their
implementation.
2. The form and content of the present report are based on the general
guidelines and on the observations which the Committee on the Rights
of the Child made in 1996 on the initial report. It provides additional
information in order to facilitate an objective and comprehensive
insight into a number of legislative, social and educational issues
within the context of governmental strategies, policies and programmes,
as well as the Government's position on those issues and the strategies
that are expected to be formulated to improve the standard of services
for the benefit of children in Yemen since the ratification of the
Convention and the submission of the initial report.
3. This report has been prepared in the light of the numerous child-related
activities and programmes which the State has organized over the
last two years including, in particular, a series of preparatory
meetings of the working group comprising representatives of the
various ministries and institutions concerned, as well as the NGO
Coordinating Commission on the Rights of the Child, in the course
of which the general framework of the Government's plan was defined.
These meetings concluded with a symposium, held in Sana'a from 21
to 22 April 1996, on the implementation of the Convention on the
Rights of the Child, which led to the formulation of a plan of action
based on specific approaches and procedural measures, which became
part of the policies which must be pursued by the Government and
the governmental organizations through their competent channels,
and the activation of the Higher Council for Maternal and Child
Welfare.
4. In this connection, we take this opportunity to express the Ministry's
gratitude to the working group which diligently prepared this report,
the aim of which is to give a realistic and objective account of
the manner in which the provisions of the Convention are being implemented
and to enable the Government to rectify its child-related courses
of action in the light of these findings and objectives.

I. LEGISLATION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD
5. Yemeni laws and legislation contain a number
of legal provisions designed to provide adequate guarantees of the
rights of Yemeni children in accordance with the aims set forth
in the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the guidelines
adopted by the Committee on the Rights of the Child in October 1991.
These legal provisions cover numerous aspects of the lives, survival
and development of children.
A. Definition of the child in Yemeni legislation
6. Various Yemeni laws and legislative enactments
set the legal age for the exercise of various rights and obligations.
For example:
(a) The Constitution. Under article 63 (b) of the amended Yemeni
Constitution, the minimum age for participation, as a voter, in
elections to the legislative authority (the House of Representatives)
is 18 years. The same minimum age is also specified in the Electoral
Act, the Compulsory National Service Act (art. 3) and the General
Reserve Act (art. 4);
(b) The Civil Service Act. Article 22 stipulates that candidates
for public office must be over 18 years of age, which may be reduced
to 16 years of age in the case of posts and occupations which require
special instruction at training institutes or centres;
(c) The Personal Status Act. Article 15 of this Act sets the minimum
age for marriage at 15 years in the case of both males and females.
Article 127 sets the minimum age of maturity for men at 10 years,
on the attainment of puberty, and for women at 9 years, likewise
on the attainment of puberty;
(d) The Civil Status and Civil Registration Act. This Act stipulates
that every citizen of the Republic of Yemen is entitled to be issued
with a personal identity card on reaching the age of 16 and with
a family identity card if he marries and has children (art. 49 of
the Act and art. 51 of the Civil Code). A person attains legal majority
on reaching the age of 15 years, provided that he is in possession
of his mental faculties and is rational in his behaviour at that
time. Article 52 sets the age of discretion at 10 years, at which
a person is regarded as being capable of exercising discretion although
vested with the limited legal capacity of a child. Anyone who, on
reaching the age of majority, is found to be an imbecile is deemed
to be vested with the limited legal capacity of a child capable
of exercising discretion;
(e) The Juveniles Act. This Act defines a "juvenile" as
any person who commits an act which the law designates as criminal,
or who becomes a potential delinquent, while under 15 years of age
(art. 2);
(f) The Penal Code. With regard to criminal responsibility, this
Code stipulates that a child under seven years of age who commits
an act constituting an offence is not liable to criminal prosecution.
If the act is committed by a child over 7 but under 15 years of
age, instead of the prescribed penalty the judge can impose only
one of the measures provided for in the Juveniles Act. Persons under
18 years of age may be sentenced to no more than half the legally
prescribed maximum penalty;
(g) The Passports Act. Article 6 of this Act stipulates that passports
and travel documents may be issued to any persons over 16 years
of age who hold Yemeni nationality. Minor children are entered on
the passport of either parent in whose company they are travelling.
However, as an exception to this rule, a passport may be issued
to a minor, subject to the approval of his guardian, if circumstances
so require.
7. In general, the legal age specified in Yemeni legislation is
consistent with the definition of the child and the age of majority
as specified in the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
B. General principles concerning the rights of
Yemeni children
8. Yemeni legislation embodies a number of principles,
described in the following paragraphs.
1. Non-discrimination
9. Article 2 of the Convention stipulates that
the child must not be subjected to discrimination of any kind, irrespective
of the child's or his or her parent's race, sex or language, etc.
and requires the States parties to take appropriate measures to
ensure that the child is protected against all forms of discrimination.
We find that Yemeni legislation defines these measures as follows:
(a) Articles 24, 40, 41 and 55 of the Yemeni Constitution guarantee
opportunities for all citizens in the political, economic, social
and cultural fields, as well as freedom of thought and freedom to
express opinions orally, in writing or pictorially, and all citizens
are deemed to be equal in regard to their public rights and obligations
and their entitlement to enjoy social welfare and security in the
event of sickness, disability, unemployment, old age or the loss
of their breadwinner;
(b) Under article 5 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, all citizens
are equal before the law and it is prohibited to harass or harm
any person because of his nationality, race, origin, language, belief,
occupation, educational level or social status. Article 42 of the
Labour Act emphasizes that women are on an equal footing with men
in regard to their terms of employment, their job-related rights
and obligations and their working conditions, without any discrimination.
Other legislative enactments also prohibit discrimination among
citizens on grounds of their colour, sex or religion.
2. The right to life, survival and development
10. Article 6 of the Convention stipulates that
every child's inherent right to life must be recognized and the
States parties must ensure to the maximum extent possible the survival
and development of the child. The Yemeni legislature has endeavoured
to establish and consolidate this right in article 30 of the Constitution,
in which reference is made to the need to protect and cater for
the welfare of mothers and children.
11. Under article 230 of the Penal Code, a newborn child is regarded
as a person with human rights, provided that he or she is born live,
regardless of whether the circulatory system is functioning in all
or part of the child's body, regardless of whether the umbilical
cord has or has not been cut, and regardless of whether the child's
life begins with the crying, sneezing, breathing or movement indicative
of life. The duration of the mother's pregnancy is also covered
by this Code, articles 239 and 240 of which refer to offences relating
to abortion. Anyone who deliberately causes a woman to have a miscarriage
without her consent is deemed to have committed an offence punishable
by payment of the blood money for a foetus, which amounts to half
the normal blood money, if her foetus is aborted or dies in her
womb. If the foetus is born live and subsequently dies, the full
blood money is payable and the offender is also liable to a corrective
penalty and payment of damages in respect of the harm caused to
the woman and her foetus. If an abortion takes place with the woman's
consent, the offender is held liable for blood money in accordance
with the above-mentioned conditions but the woman is not entitled
to any compensation, regardless of the extent of the harm caused
to her, other than the blood money for accidental homicide. If a
woman provokes her own abortion, she is liable for the blood money.
No penalty is imposed on anyone if a medical practitioner decided
that the abortion was necessary in order to safeguard the mother's
life.
12. Articles 128, 129, 130, 131 and 132 of the Personal Status Act
make provision for protection of the child and of his or her right
to life, survival and development. The shortest period of pregnancy
is deemed to be six months and the longest nine months, subject
to evidence of its continuity as attested by a competent physician.
If the woman is delivered and claims to be still carrying another
foetus, provided that there is evidence of her veracity and that
her claim is corroborated by a competent physician, her spouse must
protect and care for the child in such a way as to safeguard the
child's life, survival and development.
13. Article 38 of the Civil Code stipulates that the personality
of a human being begins when he or she is born live and ends at
his or her death. However, a foetus also has legally recognized
rights.
14. The need to ensure the survival and development of the child
is reflected in the legislation in force in the State. For example,
in article 30 of the Maternal and Child Welfare Act, the welfare
of infants and children is defined as their physical and mental
development during the early years of their life. Under the Personal
Status Act, the mother has an obligation to breastfeed her child
or, if this proves impossible, to have the child breastfed by another
woman in return for remuneration (art. 136). Under the terms of
this Act, the father also has an obligation to maintain the child,
provided that he is wealthy or capable of earning a living. If he
is indigent or incapable of earning a living, the responsibility
for maintenance devolves on the mother and, after her, on other
wealthy relatives, depending on their degree of kinship under the
rules of inheritance, who are required to provide the child with
food, clothing, accommodation and medical treatment (arts. 149 and
158).
3. Respect for the views of the child
15. Yemeni laws and legislation, including the
Press and Publications Act, recognize the rights of citizens, including
children, to participate in political, economic, social and cultural
life and protect their freedom of thought and their freedom to express
their opinion and seek information in a manner consistent with public
order, public morality and respect for the rights of others. The
principal method of expression of the views of the child is deemed
to be through drawing and school activities.
4. Civil rights and freedoms
16. The Yemeni legislation in force recognizes
these rights in accordance with the following principles:
17. Name and identity. Articles 7 and 8 of the Convention are reflected
in Yemen's national legislation, as illustrated by articles 38,
39, 40, 46 and 50 of the Civil Code, which stipulate that the personality
of a human being begins when he or she is born live and ends at
his or her death, births and deaths being entered in the official
legal registers in which everyone is identified by a distinctive
name and patronymic or surname.
18. Articles 20, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 29 and 30 of the Civil Status
and Civil Registration Act stipulate that the child's birth must
be registered by notifying the Civil Status Department within 60
days from his or her date of birth. Foundlings must be immediately
handed over to a welfare institution or children's home. On arrival
at the first port in the Republic of Yemen or at any of its consulates,
the child is issued with a birth certificate. The procedures for
registration are as follows:
(a) In the case of children of known parentage, all their particulars,
as well as those of their parents, are registered;
(b) In the case of foundlings of unknown parentage, the details
of the child are registered and the Director of Personal Status
gives the child a full name under which the child is entered in
the register of births, without mentioning the fact that he or she
was a foundling. The column in which the particulars of the parents
are normally entered is left blank unless one of the parents acknowledges
paternity or motherhood;
(c) In the case of illegitimate children, neither the name of the
father nor the mother may be mentioned if the parents are within
the prohibited degrees of kinship which exclude marriage. The mother's
name is not mentioned if she was married and her husband was not
the father of the child. Likewise, the father's name is not mentioned
if he was married and the child was not born to his legal spouse,
unless the child was born before the marriage or after its annulment
in the case of adherents of a religion which does not permit polygamy.
19. Nationality. Article 3 of the Yemeni Nationality Act guarantees
some of the rights of the child by preserving the child's identity
in the following cases:
(a) Anyone born to a father who holds Yemeni nationality;
(b) Anyone born in Yemen to a mother holding Yemeni nationality
and a father who is stateless or of unknown nationality;
(c) Anyone born in Yemen to a mother holding Yemeni nationality
and a father whose paternity of the child has not been legally established;
(d) Anyone born in Yemen to unknown parents, any foundling discovered
in Yemen being deemed to have been born therein and to be entitled
to Yemeni nationality failing proof to the contrary;
(e) Any expatriate holding Yemeni nationality on his departure from
the national territory who has not relinquished that nationality
in accordance with the law and at his explicit request, even if
he has acquired the nationality of the country of his residence
under its laws. The law recognizes the rights of a child whose mother,
although holding Yemeni nationality, is married to a non-Yemeni,
by granting the child Yemeni nationality as his or her birthright.
Article 49 of the Personal Status Act stipulates that, on reaching
the age of 16 years, every national of the Republic of Yemen must
be issued with a personal identity card or a family identity card
if he marries and has children.
20. Freedom of thought and religion, freedom of expression and freedom
to seek, receive and impart information. With regard to these freedoms
recognized in articles 13 and 14 of the Convention, articles 40
and 41 of the Constitution of the Republic of Yemen stipulate that
all citizens are equal in regard to their public rights and obligations
and every citizen has the right to participate in political, economic,
social and cultural life, to which end the State guarantees freedom
of thought and freedom to express opinion, orally, in writing or
pictorially, within the limits of the law. Article 3 of the Press
and Publications Act also recognizes freedom of expression and communication
and freedom to receive information, which it regards as a fundamental
right of all citizens, including children. Furthermore, the Press
and Publications Act recognizes freedom to seek knowledge and ideas,
which it regards as a right of citizens, in order to enable them
to express their views either orally, in writing, pictorially, in
the form of art or through any other media. No distinction is made
between children and adults in this regard.
21. The Yemeni legislature has linked the requirements of article
14 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child to respect for divinely
revealed religion. Articles 2 and 3 of the country's Constitution
stipulate that the Islamic Shari'a is the source of all legislation
in the Republic of Yemen, while article 103 prohibits the publication
of certain material, particularly if it violates the lofty principles
of the Islamic faith or disparages other divinely revealed religions
or human beliefs such as Judaism and Christianity.
5. Freedom of association and freedom of peaceful
assembly
22. Under article 57 of the Constitution of the
Republic of Yemen, citizens throughout the Republic enjoy the right,
in a manner consistent with the provisions of the Constitution,
to organize themselves in the political, professional and trade-union
fields and to form occupational, cultural and social organizations
and national federations in such a way as to further the aims of
the Constitution. The State is taking all the measures needed to
enable its citizens to exercise this guaranteed right. Article 40
of the Yemeni Constitution stipulates that all citizens are equal
in regard to their public rights and obligations, without any distinction
between children and adults.
23. Under the Establishment of Associations Act of 1963, any group
of citizens has the right to form such associations or federations
in accordance with the terms of the Act. Accordingly, children are
permitted to establish their own associations.
6. The right to privacy
24. Articles 47 and 52 of the Yemeni Constitution
stipulate that all citizens are on an equal footing in regard to
their rights and obligations and must be protected from subjection
to any arbitrary or unlawful interference with their privacy, family,
home, correspondence or communications.
25. These rights are recognized in the Penal Code, under which it
is a punishable offence to invade a person's privacy, to threaten
to divulge personal confidential matters, to violate the privacy
of homes or correspondence, to restrict freedoms in an unlawful
manner, to in any way threaten to commit a harmful act in order
to frighten the threatened person or any of his relatives, to eavesdrop
on, or to use any device to record or transmit, conversations that
take place in a private place or by telephone, or to use any device
to take or transmit a photograph of any person in a public place,
unless this is done at a public gathering with the full knowledge
and presumed consent of the persons participating therein. Under
articles 246, 253, 254, 255, 256 and 257 of the Public Rights Act,
no one may be subjected to torture or other forms of cruel, inhuman
or degrading treatment or punishment. Under articles 8, 14 and 37
of the Juveniles Act, children also enjoy these rights as set forth
in the legislative enactments concerned.
26. In general, the Penal Code makes it a criminal offence to compel
anyone to confess to a crime or to make statements or provide information
relating thereto. The same applies to any unlawful restriction of
liberty or resort to the use of force. Under articles 166, 167 and
168 of the Code, it is a criminal offence for any public official
to commit or order the commission of such acts during the discharge
of his duty by, for example, using torture, force or threats in
order to induce a suspect to confess to a crime or compel a witness
or make statements or provide information. It is likewise a criminal
offence to inflict or order the infliction of a penalty more severe
than that to which the convicted person has been sentenced or, in
the case of an official responsible for the implementation of orders,
to refuse to implement an order for the release of a prisoner or
to deliberately keep him in the penal institution after he has served
his sentence. Furthermore, it is a criminal offence to abuse authority
by unlawfully treating people in a harsh, dishonourable or physically
painful manner. Under article 247 of the Code, it is a criminal
offence for any person to unlawfully prepare, lend, rent, or provide
premises for the purpose of imprisonment or detention, regardless
of whether or not he participated in the arrest, imprisonment or
detention.
27. Article 47 of the Constitution of the Republic of Yemen stipulates
that no one may be placed under surveillance or investigated except
as provided by law. The dignity of supporters of any political ideology
must be safeguarded and it is prohibited to subject anyone to physical,
psychological or mental torture or to force anyone to make a confession
during an investigation. Torture and inhuman treatment are likewise
prohibited at the time of arrest and during the period of detention
or imprisonment. This article helps female prisoners who are obliged
to keep their infant or young children with them by ensuring that
they are not subjected to forms of torture that would be psychologically
harmful to their children or expose them to future behavioural disorders.

7. Protection of working children
28. Articles 28 and 29 of the Constitution stipulate
that work is a right, an honour and a necessity for the development
of society. Every citizen has the right to engage in the type of
work that he chooses for himself, within the limits of the law,
and no work may be forcibly imposed on citizens except as provided
by law or in performance of a public service in return for fair
remuneration. Trade-union and professional activities and relations
between workers and employers are regulated by law.
29. However, a 1994 survey showed that children in the age group
10-14 years were working in sectors subject to the provisions of
the Civil Service Act. The fact that children formed 1 per cent
of the workforce in the State's administrative agencies and 0.1
per cent in the mixed sector indicates lax enforcement of the civil
service legislation.
30. Under article 22 of the Civil Service Act and its Implementing
Regulations, candidates for public office must be over 18 years
of age, which may be reduced to 16 years of age in the case of posts
and occupations which require special instruction at training institutes
or centres or at places of work specified by the Ministry for the
Civil Service and Administrative Reform. In every case, age must
be proved by a birth certificate or a certificate issued by the
competent medical board.
31. In keeping with international principles concerning human, civil
and political rights and with the Convention on the Rights of the
Child and the international and Arab labour standards concerning
the employment of children, Yemeni law embodies constitutional and
legal guarantees which take into account the physical capacities
of working children and protect their safety, their morality and
their physical, mental, spiritual, moral and social development.
32. The Trade-Union and Professional Activities Act, which regulates
relations between workers and employers outside the public service
sector, makes provision for similar obligatory safeguards and equal
rights without discrimination on grounds of sex, age, race, colour,
belief or language.
(a) Employment of young persons
33. Article 2 of the Labour Act No. 5 of 1995 defines a "child"
as any male or female under 15 years of age. Although the Act does
not explicitly specify a minimum age for employment, it requires
the Minister for Social Security, Social Affairs and Labour to issue
directives specifying the regulations and procedures for the employment
of children, defining their terms and conditions of employment and
designating the activities, occupations and industries in which
they can be employed (art. 17). These directives were incorporated
in the Labour Council's plan for 1997. Under the Labour Act No.
5 of 1995, young persons in employment enjoy all the rights granted
to ordinary workers, in addition to extra privileges by virtue of
the special nature of their legal status and the protection accorded
to them. Article 1 of the Act defines a young person in employment
as anyone working under the supervision of an employer, even far
away from his peers, in return for a wage in accordance with a written
or unwritten contract. This applies to men, women, young persons
and anyone undergoing training. Articles 52 and 53 of the Labour
Act emphasize the importance of the employer's obligation to pay
the young person, in respect of the work that he performs, a fair
wage comparable to that paid to adults working in similar occupations.
In every case, the said wage must not be less than two thirds of
the minimum wage payable to persons working in the same occupation
and must be handed to the young person himself. These provisions
do not apply to persons working in their own family circle and under
the supervision of relatives.
34. The Labour Act devotes an entire section (arts. 48-53) to the
regulation of the employment of young persons. It covers their terms
and conditions of employment and their working hours, makes provision
for their protection and prohibits the employment of children and
young persons in heavy work, in hazardous industries and in socially
dangerous occupations and remote and undeveloped locations.
35. The Act permits the employment of children only with the approval
of their guardians and after the competent labour office has been
notified. It stresses the need for children to be medically examined
before employment, in order to ensure their medical fitness and
development, and for the provision of a healthy and safe working
environment for working children. Such working children must also
undergo a periodic medical examination in order to ensure their
ongoing fitness for work. It is prohibited to employ children on
overtime, on night work or on official or weekly holidays in any
circumstances whatsoever.
36. Under the Labour Act, every employer employing children on his
premises must follow a number of rules and procedures laid down
in article 51 of the Act, including the following:
(a) He must maintain a register showing the social and occupational
status, names, addresses, ages, guardians and dates of entry into
service of the working children, as well as any other details required
by the Ministry of Social Security, Social Affairs and Labour;
(b) He must have these children medically examined before employing
them and periodically thereafter and also whenever necessary in
order to ensure their medical fitness. A health file must be opened
for every working child;
(c) The rules governing the employment of children and the privileges
accorded to them under the Labour Act and its Implementing Regulations
must be posted in a prominent place on his premises.
37. In order to ensure the implementation of these principles, penalties
were prescribed for employers who violated the provisions concerning
the employment and protection of young persons (arts. 48-52 of the
Labour Act). The fines ranged from 1,000 to 20,000 rials. In order
to provide further protection for the rights of young persons, Act
No. 25 of 1997 amended some of the articles of the Labour Act No.
5 of 1995 by increasing the fines to 5,000-20,000 rials, in addition
to the imposition of a penalty of up to three months' imprisonment,
without prejudice to any more severe penalty. In this connection,
the Act should have imposed a criminal penalty on employers who
violate these provisions. Moreover, under the terms of the new Labour
Act, an employer who employed a young person in a manner contrary
to the Act was not obliged to pay him the agreed wage or to compensate
him if he suffered an occupational injury, even if it were due to
negligence.
38. Accordingly, in 1996 the Ministry of Social Security, Social
Affairs and Labour took legal steps to rectify that situation by
issuing a directive containing a list of violations and penalties
to be imposed on persons who infringed the Labour Act. Some of the
provisions of that directive related to the rules governing the
employment of children. It is noteworthy that the Ministry of Labour
and Vocational Training is currently endeavouring to amend the above-mentioned
list of violations and penalties in a manner consistent with the
penalties and sanctions prescribed in the new amendments to the
Labour Act.
39. In this connection, the Government has also endeavoured to coordinate
with some non-governmental organizations concerned with children
with a view to beginning the preparation of a field study, funded
by the Swedish organization R?dda Barnen, on the employment of children
in the Republic of Yemen. A number of specialists from the Ministry
of Social Security, Social Affairs and Labour, the Ministry of Planning
and Sana'a University were assigned to prepare this study.
40. Since 1996, the Ministry of Social Security, Social Affairs
and Labour exchanged a number of notes and other correspondence
with the International Labour Organization on this subject with
a view to the dispatch of an ILO committee in March 1997 to study
the employment of children. This constituted an excellent beginning
for fruitful cooperation between the Yemeni Government and the International
Labour Organization, particularly since the latter willingly agreed
to offer support and cooperation to curb the phenomenon of child
labour and devise ways to implement special projects in this field
within the framework of cooperation to combat poverty. In furtherance
of those endeavours, the Ministry of Labour and Vocational Training
is organizing, in collaboration with the International Labour Organization,
UNICEF and the World Health Organization, a country seminar on measures
to curb the phenomenon of child labour in the Republic of Yemen.
This seminar, to be held at Sana'a from 6 to 8 October 1998, will
be attended by representatives of a number of governmental, non-governmental
and international organizations concerned with child labour and
will discuss several working papers on various aspects of this phenomenon
with a view to the joint formulation of a strategy for future action
to curb it.
41. It is difficult to compile adequate and realistic data and statistics
concerning the employment of children and to determine the occupations
in which they are working in view of the absence of a database not
only on the employment of children but also on the labour force
in general. Hopes are currently being pinned on a project for the
establishment of a labour force database to be compiled by Yemen
in collaboration with the International Labour Office in 1997.
42. The lack of data is attributable to the poor performance of
the bodies concerned with employment, the absence of employment
offices at the local level, the lack of coordination between employment
policies and labour force plans and programmes, and the lack of
coordination between the bodies responsible for the employment of
manpower and the labour inspectorate.
43. The Government is hoping to rectify those shortcomings, provided
that it receives the assistance required to take the necessary measures
including, in particular, improvement of the institutional performance
of the bodies concerned with employment and labour inspection at
the national and local levels in order to ensure appropriate implementation
of the Act, the provision of effective protection for working children,
activation of the role of the bodies concerned with employment and
manpower planning, enrichment of human resources and gradual expansion
of the scope of economic and social measures to alleviate poverty
and ensure an increase in the level of family income.
44. To this end, adequate educational and training facilities must
be made available to curb the phenomenon of child labour. Consideration
must also be given to the formulation of a plan to protect and support
working children, supplement the legislation regulating the implementation
of the Act, remedy the existing discrepancies between the provisions
of the Act and the extent to which they are applied, and monitor
its implementation in regard to the employment of children.
(b) Employment of disabled persons
45. Article 23 of the Convention emphasizes the special needs of
mentally or physically disabled children. Our national legislation
embodies these provisions in a number of enactments and directives.
46. Article 24 of the Civil Service Act indicates that each administrative
unit in the State institutions should employ a specific quota of
disabled persons, to be determined by the Ministry, in posts compatible
with their capabilities. The Council of Ministers Decision No. 215,
concerning the employment of disabled persons, places State institutions
under an obligation to employ disabled persons, in keeping with
the Civil Service trends in this regard, pursuant to the policy
and philosophy of integrating disabled persons in society and promoting
their contribution to socio-economic development.
47. Article 15 of the Labour Act stipulates that, whenever possible,
employers should employ disabled persons nominated by the Ministry
of Social Affairs and Labour or its offices, in a ratio of up to
5 per cent of their total labour force, in jobs and occupations
consistent with their capabilities and their potential, in such
a way as to enable them to enjoy all the rights granted under the
Labour Act.
(c) Specification of working hours and rest and holiday periods
for young persons
48. Articles 48 and 50 of the Labour Act stipulate that the working
hours of a young person should not exceed 42 hours per week, distributed
over a six-day period, and it is prohibited to employ young persons
on overtime or night work except in certain occupations specified
by the Minister for Social Security, Social Affairs and Labour.
Young persons must also be trained during their daily working hours,
such training time being calculated as part of the official working
hours. However, Act No. 25 of 1997, which amended some articles
of the Labour Act No. 5 of 1995, abolished the above-mentioned article
48 specifying the working hours of young persons, as a result of
which the working hours of adults, amounting to not more than 48
hours per week, now apply to working children. This places children
at great risk.
49. Young persons must not be required to work during weekly rest
periods or official or other holidays. In addition to the rest periods
specified in those articles, young persons are entitled to 30 days'
annual holiday in respect of each year of actual service, calculated
at a rate of two and a half days per month of service, and neither
the young person nor his guardian are permitted to forego all or
part of this annual holiday even in return for compensation. The
purpose of this stipulation is to safeguard the physical and mental
health of the young person and enable him to perform his work in
a manner compatible with the provisions of these articles, under
which young persons can be employed only on the most favourable
terms and conditions.
50. Although those provisions do not apply to young persons working
in their family circle under the supervision of relatives, article
53 of the Labour Act stipulates that such work is subject to appropriate
health and social conditions.
51. It should be noted that wage-earning employment of children
outside their family circle is a new phenomenon in Yemeni society,
being linked to the deteriorating economic situation during the
current stage through which Yemen is passing, and the following
measures need to be taken in order to deal with that phenomenon:
(a) Improvement of the institutional performance of inspection bodies
at the local and central levels;
(b) Strengthening of the role of the labour inspectorate in order
to ensure proper implementation of the rules governing employment;
(c) Invigoration of the role of planning bodies concerned with the
employment of Yemeni manpower, and gradual expansion of the scope
of the socio-economic measures designed to reduce poverty and ensure
a higher level of family income;
(d) Provision of adequate educational and training facilities to
curb the phenomenon of child labour;
(e) Rectification of the existing discrepancies between the Act
and the extent to which it is applied by dealing with the numerous
ways in which employers breach the provisions of the Labour Act
concerning the employment of children in view of the negligence
and lack of control and inspection by the Ministry of Labour and
Vocational Training due to the lack of resources allocated for inspection.

C. Family environment and alternative care
1. Family unity
52. With regard to the principles concerning the
family, which are consistent with the Convention on the Rights of
the Child, article 26 of the Constitution of the Republic of Yemen
stipulates that "the family, which is rooted in religion, morality
and patriotism, is the cornerstone of society and the law shall
protect its structure and strengthen its ties".
53. The Personal Status Act regulates all family matters from the
time when the family is formed through betrothal and marriage, including
the fruits of that relationship between the spouses and their consequent
parental responsibilities, rights and obligations towards their
children, particularly infant children.
2. Child maintenance and its collection
54. The question of child maintenance is regulated
by the Personal Status Act and the Pensions Act.
55. Article 158 of the Personal Status Act stipulates that the maintenance
of an indigent infant or minor child is payable by the child's father,
provided that he is wealthy or capable of earning a living. If he
is indigent and incapable of earning a living, the responsibility
for maintenance devolves on the mother, if she is wealthy, and,
after her, on other wealthy relatives, depending on their degree
of kinship under the rules of inheritance. If there are numerous
wealthy heirs, they are jointly responsible for the payment of maintenance,
each in accordance with his share of the inheritance.
56. Under the terms of article 292 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
the monthly child maintenance is determined by the court and paid
from the income arising from the property and rights of the person
accused of failing to pay maintenance in respect of any person whom
he was previously obliged to support. If the child possesses property
and is therefore deemed to be wealthy while the father and mother
are indigent, under article 161 of the Personal Status Act they
must be maintained from the property of the child. In the event
of the death of a wealthy person, whether male or female, young
or old, his inheritance is divided among his next of kin in accordance
with the rules of inheritance. Maintenance of the mother, and subsequently
of the father, takes precedence over the maintenance of other relatives.
57. With regard to pensions and separation-from-service benefits,
the Pensions Act and the Retirement Benefits on Separation from
Civil or Military Service Act stipulate that pensions and benefits
are payable, in equal shares, to the persons whom the insured or
retired person was supporting at the time of his death. The payment
of such entitlements ceases on the death of the beneficiaries and
in the following circumstances:
(a) In the case of males, when they begin working, when they reach
the age of 18 years if they are not studying, when they reach the
age of 21 years if they are studying at the secondary level, or
when they reach the age of 26 years if they are studying at university
level. This does not apply to persons whom the competent medical
board has certified as being incapacitated for work.
(b) In the case of females, when they marry or enter employment
from which they earn a wage that disqualifies them from receiving
further benefits in respect of their deceased spouse. In the event
of subsequent divorce, they recover their entitlement to benefits
on the expiration of the legally stipulated waiting period before
remarriage becomes permissible.
3. Adoption
58. The Personal Status Act regulates the question
of the transfer of custody between relatives, if such is requested
for any reason acceptable to the judge, in accordance with the conditions
of custody. Although the situation of foundlings, children of unknown
parentage and orphans without relatives has not been regulated,
the current practice is for adoption to take place through the court
with the approval of the institution in which the child is living.
It is noteworthy that, as stipulated in article 135 of the Act,
adoption does not establish links of kinship for persons of unknown
parentage and adopted children have no right to inherit from their
deceased adoptive parent, who can endow them, by bequest, with no
more than one third of his estate.
4. Custody of a child whose mother is married to
a person other than the child's father
59. The Personal Status Act regulates the situation
of children whose mother is married to a person other than their
father. Article 141 of the Act stipulates that the mother has a
greater right to custody of her child, provided that she is found
fit to undertake that custody. She cannot forfeit her right to custody
unless another person agrees to accept custody, which is one of
the child's rights, and her husband cannot prevent her from exercising
her right. Even if she is of disreputable character, this does not
preclude her right to custody until the child reaches the age of
five years. As a general rule, article 139 limits the duration of
custody to 9 years of age in the case of males and 12 years of age
in the case of females unless the judge decides otherwise in the
interests of the child. This means that the mother has the right
to keep her children during the period of custody. She is not permitted
to relinquish custody before the child reaches the age of five years,
after which the child has the right to choose the parent with whom
he or she wishes to live.
5. Institutional care
60. The Yemeni legislature has regulated institutional
care in article 105 of the Penal Code, which stipulates that: "If
the judge finds that, at the time of the commission of an offence,
the person accused thereof was unable to distinguish right from
wrong due to a mental disorder, he shall order the said person's
placement in an institution for the treatment of mental disorders."
Under the same article, the institution is required to report to
the judge on the patient's condition at periodic intervals not exceeding
six months and, after seeking the opinion and approval of the competent
medical authority, the judge may decide to order his release or
his delivery into the custody of a relative capable of providing
him with care and protection.
61. At the request of the Department of Public Prosecutions or the
persons concerned, and after seeking the opinion of the competent
medical authority, the judge may order his readmission to the institution
for further treatment if circumstances so require.
62. Article 36 of the Juvenile Welfare Act makes provision for the
following penalties and measures against juvenile offenders:
(a) Placement in a juvenile rehabilitation and welfare centre run
by the Ministry of Social Security and Social Affairs or in another
legally approved institution (handicapped juveniles being placed
in an appropriate rehabilitation centre) for a period not exceeding
10 years if they commit serious offences, 3 years if they commit
minor offences and 1 year in the case of potential delinquency.
The institution in which such juveniles are placed must submit a
report to the court on their behaviour at intervals not exceeding
six months;
(b) Placement in a specialized hospital in which the juvenile can
receive the requisite care. The court monitors his need for ongoing
treatment at periodic intervals not exceeding one year, during which
medical reports are submitted to the court, which may order his
release if his condition so permits. On reaching the age of 15 years,
the juvenile is transferred to a specialized hospital for the treatment
of adults if his condition necessitates further treatment.

II. SOCIAL WELFARE AND PROTECTION
A. Social security
63. Under article 55 of the Constitution, the State
undertakes to provide social security for all citizens in the event
of sickness, disability, unemployment, old age or loss of their
source of support. This policy is reflected in a number of legislative
instruments, including:
The Insurance and Pensions Act No. 25 of 1991.
The Pensions and Benefits for the Armed and Security Forces Act
No. 32 of 1992.
The Social Insurance Act No. 26 of 1991.
64. The first two above-mentioned Acts apply to all persons working
in the public sector, while the Social Insurance Act No. 26 applies
to persons working in the private sector. Under the terms of the
Social Security Act No. 2 of 1980, as amended by the Social Welfare
Act No. 31 of 1996, persons who lose their source of support are
granted welfare benefits, particularly if they fall within the category
of persons entitled to the services available for widows with young
or minor children in accordance with the terms and conditions laid
down in the Act.
B. Special protection measures
65. Through its legislation, the Republic of Yemen
has endeavoured to take the measures needed to protect children
in the following manner.
1. Children in emergency situations
66. The Republic of Yemen experienced a state of
emergency when war was declared on 5 May 1994 by Presidential Decree
No. 20 of 1994. That war resulted in the displacement of many families
from the areas of conflict and children constituted the most vulnerable
category in those areas. The State endeavoured to tackle that problem
by appealing to local civilian and international organizations to
assist the stricken families and, in particular, their children.
(a) Refugee children
67. The Yemeni legislature has endeavoured to provide protection
in accordance with article 45 of the Constitution of the Republic
of Yemen, under which the extradition of political refugees is prohibited.
This protection is also enjoyed by persons related to them, including
children. With regard to displaced victims of armed conflicts, and
particularly refugees fleeing from civil wars in neighbouring States
such as Somalia, the Yemeni Government, acting in cooperation and
coordination with international organizations, is caring for them
and their children and making provision for their stay in the country.
(b) Children in armed conflict
68. In article 6 of the Constitution of the Republic of Yemen, the
State affirmed its adherence to the Charter of the United Nations,
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Pact of the League
of Arab States and the generally recognized rules of international
law, thereby confirming its commitment to the welfare of children
who are victims of conflicts. In accordance with that constitutional
affirmation, Yemen has an obligation to comply with the Geneva Conventions
concerning the following aspects of human rights:
(a) Amelioration of the condition of the wounded and sick in armed
forces in the field;
(b) Amelioration of the condition of wounded, sick and shipwrecked
members of armed forces at sea;
(c) Treatment of prisoners of war;
(d) Protection of civilian persons in time of war;
69. Articles 2 and 3 of the Compulsory National Service (Defence)
Act stipulate that every male citizen over 18 years of age has an
obligation to perform military service. However, article 8 of the
Act grants full exemption from national military service to certain
categories of persons, even if they are over 18 years of age. These
exempted categories are: fathers of three or more children and persons
supporting brothers and sisters who are found to have no other source
of support.
70. Article 4 of the General Reserve Act stipulates that the general
military reserve consists of male citizens between 18 and 50 years
of age, thereby excluding children.
2. Children in conflict with the law
(a) Child offenders
71. In accordance with the guidelines concerning the Convention
on the Rights of the Child, we wish to draw attention to the following
points.
72. Article 49 of the Judicial Authority Act makes provision for
the establishment of juvenile courts of first instance and the regulation
of their composition, competence and procedure. Accordingly, the
legislature promulgated the Juveniles Act, article 8 of which stipulated
that the Department of Public Prosecutions was responsible for the
examination and handling of juvenile cases. The same article also
stipulated that, during the interrogation and examination, the examiner
must show due regard for the age of the juvenile, the gravity of
the act of which he is accused, his physical, mental and psychological
condition, and the circumstances in which he was raised.
73. Under article 11 of the Juveniles Act, it is prohibited to detain
a juvenile under 12 years of age in a police station or other security
establishment. His legal or testamentary guardian or another trustworthy
person must stand surety for him, failing which he must be placed
in the nearest juvenile rehabilitation and welfare centre for a
period not exceeding 24 hours. If his release poses a threat to
himself or to others, he must be referred to the Department of Public
Prosecutions for consideration of his case. Juveniles over 12 years
of age may be detained in a police station for up to 24 hours, provided
that they are kept in a special place which precludes their mixing
with other older detainees. If the offence with which the juvenile
is charged necessitates his remand in custody, article 12 permits
his confinement in a juvenile rehabilitation and welfare centre,
by order of the Department of Public Prosecutions, for a period
of up to one week.
74. Article 13 of the Act stipulates that juvenile cases must be
regarded as urgent cases for which the Act specifies rules of procedure
designed to protect juveniles, as well as the measures and penalties
to which they are subject.
75. Article 15 of the Act makes provision for the establishment
of juvenile courts in each governorate of the Republic by order
of the Council of the Judiciary based on a proposal from the Minister
of Justice.
76. In fact, a juvenile court, consisting of a president and five
judges, has been established in the governorate of Aden under the
terms of Decree No. 11 of 1996 promulgated by the President of the
Republic and the Chairman of the Higher Council of the Judiciary.
77. Every court of first instance in the Republic is also competent
to hear juvenile cases, such as cases involving child maintenance
and custody, and to hand down judgements therein.
78. Under article 15 of the Juveniles Act, the Higher Council of
the Judiciary is empowered to vest a court of first instance in
each governorate with exclusive competence to exercise the functions
of a juvenile court if such a court cannot be established due to
the small number of juvenile cases in the governorate concerned.
(b) Children deprived of their liberty
79. Juveniles over 12 years of age can be held at a police station
for up to 24 hours, after which they must be placed in a rehabilitation
and welfare centre by order of the Department of Public Prosecutions
or the court. Under article 29 of the Juveniles Act, it is prohibited
to mix male and female juveniles in a single rehabilitation and
welfare centre, during the period of interrogation and examination
by the Department of Public Prosecutions, in the court or while
they are serving their sentences.
80. Article 35 of the Juveniles Act stipulates that sentences imposed
on juveniles must be served in places in which they are isolated
from adults within the penal institution. The prison administration
receives all convicts through the Department of Prisons in accordance
with the Prisons Regulatory Act.
81. Article 32 of this Act stipulates that a place known as an admission
centre, in which incoming prisoners are interviewed, must be established
in every prison. During their confinement, first-time offenders
are isolated from prisoners who have previously been convicted of
serious offences, foreigners are isolated from Yemeni prisoners,
juveniles are isolated from adult prisoners and female prisoners
are isolated from male prisoners.
82. However, since separate premises have not yet been established
for female juveniles, the latter are currently held in women's prisons,
which might pose a threat to their future social behaviour. The
Government must therefore take urgent measures to solve this problem,
which the competent authorities are already studying.
(c) Penalties
83. Article 36 of the Juveniles Act stipulates that a juvenile under
10 years of age who commits an offence punishable under the Penal
Code cannot be sentenced to the penalty prescribed therefor. A juvenile
can be sentenced only to one of the following measures:
(a) A reprimand, rebuke or censure from the court for his conduct
and a warning not to engage in such conduct again;
(b) Delivery into the custody of a parent or a person exercising
the right of legal or testamentary guardianship. In the absence
of anyone willing to assume this responsibility, the juvenile is
delivered into the custody of a member of his family or any trustworthy
person who undertakes to bring him up, or into the custody of a
reliable family willing to undertake responsibility for his upbringing;
(c) Enrolment for vocational training in a specialized centre or
an industrial, commercial or agricultural enterprise willing to
train him for a period not exceeding three years;
(d) Imposition of specific obligations and prohibition of the frequentation
of specific places. This measure is taken for a period of not less
than six months and not more than three years;
(e) Judicial probation, i.e. the juvenile is not permitted to live
in his natural family environment and remains subject to guidance,
supervision and other obligations specified by the court for a period
of up to three years. If this measure fails, he is brought before
the court, which can impose any other measures that it deems appropriate;
(f) Placement in a juvenile rehabilitation and welfare centre or,
in the case of handicapped juveniles, in a rehabilitation centre,
under the terms of a court order. The duration of such placement
must not exceed 10 years in the case of serious offences, 3 years
in the case of minor offences and 1 year in the case of potential
delinquency. The centre must submit a report on the juvenile's condition
and behaviour at six-monthly intervals so that the court can take
an appropriate decision in the light thereof;
(g) Placement in a specialized hospital in which the juvenile can
receive the care that his condition requires under the supervision
of the court. On reaching the age of 15 years, juveniles whose condition
requires further treatment are transferred to a specialized hospital
for the treatment of adults. Article 37 of the Juveniles Act stipulates
that a juvenile under 15 years of age who commits an offence punishable
by the death penalty is liable to a penalty of not less than 10
years' imprisonment. In the case of other offences committed while
he is in full possession of his mental faculties, he is liable to
not more than one third of the maximum penalty prescribed for the
offence.
84. Under article 38, a juvenile who commits two or more offences
is liable to a single appropriate measure. If so requested by the
Department of Public Prosecutions, the court is empowered to postpone
the juvenile's transfer from a juvenile rehabilitation and welfare
centre to a prison in order to enable him to complete the vocational
training that he has begun.
85. Article 31 of the Penal Code stipulates that a person who was
under seven years of age at the time of his commission of an act
constituting an offence cannot be prosecuted therefor. In the case
of a juvenile offender over 7 but under 15 years of age, instead
of the prescribed penalty the judge can impose only one of the measures
provided for in the Juveniles Act. In the case of offenders over
15 but under 18 years of age, the sentence imposed cannot exceed
half of the maximum legally prescribed penalty, the death penalty
being commuted to a term of 3-10 years' imprisonment. In all cases,
the prison sentence is served in special places in which the convicted
person is treated in an appropriate manner. Persons who commit an
offence while under the age of 18 are not held fully criminally
responsible for their acts.
86. A careful study of the prescribed penalties shows that the Yemeni
legislature amended the penalties stipulated in the Juveniles Act
of 1992 and the Penal Code of 1994, which are pending ratification
by the House of Representatives but are nevertheless being applied
under the terms of the Constitution.

3. Protection of children from exploitation
87. Within the overall framework of Yemeni law
and legislation, care is taken to protect children from exploitation.
The Labour Act grants children the right to work and to benefit
from employment opportunities under special terms and conditions,
which effectively ensure that they will not be exploited. The general
provisions of the Social Assistance Act also cater for the psychological
and material welfare of families, and particularly of children,
in order to protect them from need, destitution and economic exploitation.
88. The programmes of the Social Security network and the Social
Welfare Fund illustrate some of the Government's principal strategies
and policies, the short- and long-term objectives of which are to
improve the living conditions of poverty-stricken families and prevent
children from becoming victims of their families' unfortunate economic
circumstances.
(a) Drug abuse
89. The Penal Code in general, and the Narcotic and Psychotropic
Substances Act in particular, prescribe penalties for the use of
such substances. All intoxicants, of any type whatsoever, are prohibited,
regardless of the quantity that needs to be absorbed to ensure intoxication.
The Prevention of Illicit Traffic in, and Use of, Narcotic and Psychotropic
Substances Act makes it a punishable offence to use or traffic in
such substances unless they are required for medical or scientific
purposes, in which case they can be used subject to the issue of
a licence by the Ministry of Public Health specifying the manner
in which they may be used for medical or scientific laboratory purposes.
90. The Act also prohibits the cultivation and import of plants
from which narcotic and psychotropic substances are extracted, except
for purposes of study and scientific research which are permitted
on certain conditions. It is prohibited to put these substances
into general circulation or to permit their misuse, particularly
by young persons on whom they might have adverse health, psychological
and social effects.
(b) Sexual exploitation and sexual abuse
91. Yemeni law prohibits sexual exploitation and sexual abuse, which
are punishable offences. The legal provisions relating to such matters
are illustrated by the following:
(a) Pandering. Under article 280 of the Penal Code it is an offence,
punishable by a term of up to 15 years' imprisonment, for anyone
to allow his wife, any of his close female relatives or any female
under his guardianship or tutelage to engage in prostitution. Repeated
offenders are liable to the death penalty. Any woman who permits
her daughters to engage in prostitution is likewise liable to the
same penalty;
(b) Procurement. Under article 279 of the Penal Code, anyone who
incites another person to engage in an act of debauchery or immorality
is liable to a penalty of up to three years' imprisonment. If such
incitement actually leads to the commission of the act, the penalty
is a term of up to seven years' imprisonment. If the person incited
to engage in such an act is a young offender under 15 years of age
or a child who depends for his or her livelihood on the acts of
debauchery or prostitution to which he or she is incited, the penalty
for such incitement can be as high as 10 years' imprisonment. If
both circumstances are combined, i.e. incitement and commission
of the act, the penalty for such incitement can be a term of up
to 15 years' imprisonment;
(c) Debauchery and obscenity. Article 3 of the Juveniles Act stipulates
that a juvenile who engages in acts of debauchery, obscenity or
immorality, gambling or drug abuse, etc., or who assists persons
engaged therein, is deemed to be delinquent and is liable to the
penalties prescribed in the Act;
(d) Sexual abuse. Article 272 of the Penal Code prescribes a penalty
of up to five years' imprisonment for anyone who, through force
or deception, sexually abuses a female under 15 years of age, a
male under 12 years of age or any person who is wholly or partly
incapable of exercising discretion for any reason whatsoever. The
same penalty applies if the offender is an ascendant of the victim
or responsible for his or her upbringing;
(e) Rape. Article 269 designates sexual assault involving rape as
a criminal offence punishable by the penalty prescribed in the Shari'a.
If, for any reason, this penalty is not applicable, the offender
is liable to a term of up to seven years' imprisonment. If the offence
was committed by two or more persons, or if the offender was responsible
for the supervision, protection, upbringing, custody or treatment
of the victim, or if the offence caused the victim to suffer severe
physical or health-related damage, or if the victim became pregnant
as a result of the criminal act of rape, the penalty is a term of
up to 15 years' imprisonment;
(f) Sale, traffic and abduction. Article 249 prescribes a penalty
of up to five years' imprisonment for anyone who abducts another
person. If the victim of the abduction is a female, a juvenile,
insane or feeble-minded, or if the abduction is effected through
the use of force, threats or deception, the penalty is a term of
up to seven years' imprisonment. If the abduction is accompanied
or followed by bodily harm, assault or torture, the penalty is a
term of up to 10 years' imprisonment without prejudice to the right
to retribution, blood money or compensation, as appropriate, if
such is warranted by the harm caused. If the abduction is accompanied
or followed by murder, adultery, prohibited sexual assault or sodomy,
the offender is liable to the death penalty. Article 251 prescribes
a penalty of up to three months' imprisonment and a fine for anyone
who refuses to hand over a young child or a minor to the person
holding legal custody. This penalty does not apply if the abductor
genuinely believed that he was entitled to legal custody or if he
was holding a court judgement to that effect. However, if the child
or minor was abducted by such a person after a court judgement awarded
custody to another person, the penalty is a term of up to six months'
imprisonment or payment of a fine. In addition, under article 252
of the Penal Code, anyone who abducts, conceals, substitutes or
falsifies the parentage of a newborn child is liable to a term of
up to five years' imprisonment;
(g) Sale. The sale of human beings is prohibited by law and anyone
who owns another person is obliged to free him or her from servitude,
since slavery is forbidden. This is in conformity with the provisions
of the Convention on the Rights of the Child insofar as it directly
affects the rights of children. Article 248 of the Penal Code prescribes
a penalty of up to 10 years' imprisonment for anyone who:
(i) Buys, sells, gives away or otherwise disposes illegally of any
person as a slave;
(ii) Causes a person to enter or leave the country with a view to
trafficking in the said person.
4. Children belonging to a minority or an indigenous
community
92. Although the Constitution stipulates that the
Islamic Shari'a is the source of all Yemeni legislation, it also
regards all citizens as equal in regard to their public rights and
obligations and indicates that the State shall ensure equal opportunities
for all citizens in the political, economic, social and cultural
fields. Accordingly, children have all the statutory rights and
obligations of adults, without any discrimination on grounds of
their origin or religion. For example, Yemeni children of Jewish
parents enjoy the same freedom and human, economic, educational
and other rights and obligations as other Yemeni citizens without
any distinction or discrimination.

C. Improvement of the standard of living
93. The State, wishing to improve the standard
of living of families and children, formulated a comprehensive strategy
to combat poverty, within the framework of a series of practical
steps and measures, at the first and second National Conferences
on Population Policies, which were held in October 1991 and October
1996 respectively.
94. Begging. The Juveniles Act regards a juvenile as a potential
delinquent if he is found begging and the Yemeni legislature has
endeavoured to combat this phenomenon under the terms of article
203 of the Penal Code, which stipulates that anyone who habitually
engages in such an act is liable to a penalty of up to six months'
imprisonment if he could have found legitimate ways to earn a living.
The penalty is increased to one year's imprisonment if the act is
associated with threats or feigned disability or if the beggar is
accompanied by a young child who is not one of his descendants.
The court is empowered to sentence the beggar to the prescribed
penalty by ordering him to perform compulsory work for a period
of up to one year if he is able to work, or by ordering his placement
in a shelter or centre for the disabled or in an officially recognized
charitable institution if he is unable to work. The position adopted
by the Penal Code is, therefore, that anyone who commits such major
or minor acts merits punishment, particularly if they contravene
the provisions of article 203 concerning young children (juveniles).
Although this phenomenon is regarded as a punishable criminal act,
it requires an economically oriented approach and careful consideration
of the living conditions of these children whose situation is deteriorating
due to the increasing economic pressures that the country is facing
and which are adversely affecting their lives and inducing them
to beg.
1. Measures to combat poverty
95. The aim of the National Population Strategy
(1990-2000) was to improve the quality of life in regard to education,
health, living conditions and basic needs, raise the level and ensure
the equitable distribution of income, provide better employment
opportunities, achieve a population distribution consistent with
the requirements of the natural, economic and production environments,
particularly between rural and urban areas, and protect the environment
and the population from harmful practices.
2. Improvement of family living conditions
96. The urgent steps and measures taken by the
Government to improve the living conditions of families and children
included those described below.
(a) Establishment of the Yemeni Council for Maternal and Child Welfare
97. This Council was established in 1991 under the terms of Presidential
Decree No. 53 in order to improve the situation of mothers and children.
Unfortunately, however, the current political and economic circumstances
prevented the implementation of the plans that had been formulated
to promote the survival and development of children and improve
the situation of mothers and families. Consequently, the Council's
work remained in abeyance until mid-1995 when it was reactivated
and the Council began to study and monitor the situation and needs
of mothers and children in the light of international human rights
instruments, the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the recommendations
of international and Arab conferences. This led to the formulation
of the National Plan for Mothers and Children, the most important
objectives of which were as follows:
(a) To draft a comprehensive national plan, within the framework
of the State's general planning, to protect mothers and children
in various fields including, in particular, social and family welfare,
health, education, culture, information and legislation;
(b) To gather available information, statistics and studies in maternal
and child-related fields, evaluate their indicators and propose
training programmes conducive to a more effective implementation
of maternal and child-related activities;
(c) To conduct the studies, research and surveys needed to assess
maternal and child needs, to secure governmental support therefor,
and to formulate programmes, in collaboration with international,
regional and Arab organizations, aimed at securing external support
for the implementation of maternal and child projects by establishing
priorities within the framework of the plans and programmes designed
to meet those needs;
(d) To propose legislation concerning the welfare, protection and
development of mothers and children, and to update existing legislation
in a manner consistent with the requirements of children;
(e) To propose appropriate cultural, educational and information
programmes and to stimulate public awareness of the needs and problems
of mothers and children and ways to tackle them on a sound scientific
basis;
(f) To monitor and evaluate the application of the General Strategy
and National Plan for Mothers and Children in the light of the reports
submitted by the various Ministries and bodies, and to provide guidance
with a view to overcoming obstacles.
98. A branch of the Yemeni Council for Maternal and Child Welfare
is currently being established at Aden in preparation for the extension
of its services to the other governorates.
(b) Establishment of the Social Security network
99. This network was set up in view of the need to include social
aspects in the economic development process through a series of
measures within the framework of the economic reform programme which
was designed to benefit all sections of the population, including
children, in order to promote and strengthen the social component
of the development process, create appropriate conditions for the
success of reform and restructuring, and deal with the side effects
of the implementation of the reform programme in various fields.
100. The importance of this network is evident from its objectives,
comprising the following measures:
(a) Mobilization of human resources in support of the reform programme
in order to reduce unemployment and alleviate its adverse social
repercussions, particularly among children;
(b) Measures to combat the phenomenon of poverty, assist the poorest
sections of the population, reduce the growing number of persons
falling below the poverty line, promote training in a manner consistent
with the needs of the labour market in such a way as to enhance
skills, provide better job opportunities, develop employment programmes
and employment-generating institutions and create the requisite
balance in the achievement of economic and social goals as a basic
priority in the development process through the implementation of
labour-intensive projects, particularly in densely populated areas
and in the public works, road construction and agricultural land
reclamation sectors, especially in rural areas;
(c) Establishment of an economic development and employment fund
with a view to providing employment opportunities in order to overcome
the unemployment problem and alleviate the effects of the economic
reform measures on persons with limited income, university and college
graduates, persons repatriated from the Gulf States, women and residents
of areas that lack local community services;
(d) Establishment of new development locations through the reclamation
of agricultural land and its distribution among farmers, graduates,
young persons and needy families in order to provide new employment
opportunities and reduce the pressure on urban agglomerations;
(e) Promotion of vocational training programmes in order to enhance
skills and rehabilitate and retrain unemployed and surplus labour;
(f) Encouragement of individual initiative and private enterprise
through the granting of incentive loans by development banks, temporary
tax and Customs exemptions, exemption from insurance contributions
for a specified period of time, and payment of financial subsidies.
101. The Ministry of Planning and Development and the Ministry of
Social Security and Social Affairs have agreed with the United Nations
Development Programme to combat poverty in Yemen through a series
of measures including, in particular, studies and surveys to be
conducted by United Nations experts, in collaboration with Yemeni
staff, to identify areas of poverty. These studies and surveys have
already begun. A memorandum of understanding was drawn up between
the State and the World Bank for the establishment of a social development
and employment fund in the second half of 1997. The pilot project
began with the planning of experimental small-loan activities at
Hodeida and Dhamar and consideration is being given to the planning
of similar activities in the governorates of Aden, Ta'izz and Hadhramaut.
The initial cost of the social development fund is estimated at
US$ 80 million, of which US$ 40 million will be contributed by the
World Bank and US$ 20 million by the European Union.
(c) The Social Welfare Fund of 1996
102. The main purposes of this Fund were:
(a) To effectively help to alleviate poverty and relieve the hardship
caused by the economic measures, and to develop the Social Assistance
Act and increase the number of beneficiaries from the services provided
under the terms of that Act, which was formerly known as the Social
Security Act.
(b) To focus on indigent persons lacking a source of livelihood
or movable or immovable property, as well as elderly persons (55-60
years in the case of men and 50 years in the case of women), widows,
spinsters, divorced women, orphans who are under the legal age for
employment or who are suffering from total, partial or temporary
disability, the families of prisoners and the families of missing
persons.

D. Juvenile welfare policies and programmes
103. The Government is currently making increasing
endeavours to provide services for juvenile offenders, vagrants,
delinquents and potential delinquents alike and to find appropriate
ways to reform them and protect them from delinquency through placement
in rehabilitation and welfare institutions for juveniles. In pursuance
of these policies, the Government has formulated programmes and
promulgated national legislation to deal with the problem of juvenile
delinquents through prevention or rehabilitation in a manner consistent
with their circumstances and their situation. However, there is
an urgent need for a comprehensive national plan to overcome this
problem through preventive and curative means, taking into consideration
the changing socio-economic circumstances and situations, in such
a way as to turn potential delinquents into active members of society
capable of furthering the overall national development process in
the country through reform and social, psychological and cultural
welfare programmes and activities.
104. The Juveniles Act made provision for numerous preventive measures
needed to rehabilitate juvenile delinquents and prevent them from
further delinquency or potential delinquency. Various articles of
the Act refer to the need to control delinquents who commit serious
offences, the institutions empowered to punish them, the type of
penalties to be imposed on them, the methods of enforcing these
penalties, their guaranteed right to defend themselves against charges
with which they are faced, and a large number of measures to facilitate
the examination of juveniles during their trial in order to mitigate
the adverse psychological effects of these judicial proceedings.
105. Articles 3-10 of the Act define the concept of juvenile delinquency
and the cases in which a juvenile can be regarded as a potential
delinquent so that the competent authorities can intervene and help
him. A definition is also given of juveniles who pose a threat to
society and ways to deal with them. Accordingly, the Department
of Public Prosecutions is designated as the authority responsible
for conducting examination proceedings and taking action in juvenile
cases, bearing in mind the fact that the juvenile's guardian must
be notified if he is arrested after breaking the law.
106. The Labour Act No. 5 of 1995 regulates the employment of young
persons by laying down a series of rules that ensure the requisite
protection for young persons entering the labour market and enable
them to exercise all their rights.
1. Welfare services for child offenders
107. Social, educational and psychological services are provided
for young offenders at the social rehabilitation centres where they
also benefit from institutional care. The juveniles placed in these
institutions engage in numerous activities designed to rectify their
behaviour and change their inclinations. The juvenile inmates also
benefit from health care, nutrition programmes and other services.
108. In view of the small number of juvenile welfare centres, the
penal institutions established special independent sections for
the detention of young persons sentenced to custodial penalties.
These sections are completely separate from the building in which
adult prisoners are detained. However, the social and educational
services that should be provided for young persons are totally lacking
in these penal institutions and, consequently, there is a need to
review the question of the detention of young offenders in these
institutions and to endeavour to place them in juvenile rehabilitation
and welfare centres as stipulated in the Juvenile Welfare Act.
109. The Republic of Yemen currently has four juvenile rehabilitation
and welfare centres at Sana'a, Ta'izz, Hodeida and Ibb in which
juveniles are treated in a manner consistent with the provisions
of the Juvenile Welfare Act and classified by age group, type of
offence committed and degree of responsibility in accordance with
the definitions of the concepts of juvenile offenders and delinquents
as set forth in the Act. The young inmates of these centres benefit
from new opportunities for rehabilitation and reform through the
following services:
(a) Technical and vocational training workshops, such as dressmaking
workshops for women, tailoring workshops for men, carpentry, welding
and turnery workshops, training in agriculture;
(b) Educational services such as Koran recitation classes; literacy
classes; general education classes from the primary level to the
end of the secondary level for juveniles wishing to continue their
vocational education. This service meets a basic requirement for
rehabilitation;
(c) Social and psychological services provided as soon as juveniles
are placed in these institutions. The social counsellor conducts
a preliminary socio-psychological study of the juvenile's social
situation in order to determine the causes and extent of his delinquency
so that the institution can formulate an appropriate remedial plan
consistent with his situation and circumstances;
(d) Cultural activities. The juvenile inmates of these institutions
take part in cultural activities such as lectures, preparation of
magazines for wall display, familiarization with the institution's
library, cultural competitions and religious counselling so that
they can derive optimum benefit from their leisure time with a view
to their rehabilitation and future reintegration in society and
normal life;
(e) Sports activities. These institutions organize sports activities
for their juvenile inmates, such as games, the formation of various
sports teams and participation in sports competitions arranged within
the institution or with other schools. These activities are regarded
as the best way to reorient the physical and mental capacities of
the inmates and use their leisure time in a beneficial manner. They
also constitute a method of social rehabilitation;
(f) Social activities. These institutions endeavour to organize
social activities by arranging trips to archaeological sites and
some social institutions, as well as recreational excursions and
other forms of social activity, in order to familiarize the juveniles
with the society in which they are living and expand their horizons
and their general knowledge. These activities also constitute a
form of social and psychological rehabilitation;
(g) Health services. Each of these institutions has a medical unit
in which juvenile inmates receive the requisite health care and
benefit from rapid first-aid services in emergencies.
2. Difficulties and obstacles
110. The social rehabilitation and welfare centres and institutions
for juveniles are facing the following difficulties and obstacles
relating to the general strategies for their activities:
(a) The inadequacy of the policies and programmes for the management
and operation of these institutions;
(b) The lack of pre-service and on-the-job training programmes for
the technical staff working with juveniles in order to enable them
to assume their responsibilities towards the target group of juvenile
delinquents or potential delinquents by helping them to diagnose,
assess and resolve problems in accordance with carefully studied
plans and programmes;
(c) The inadequate feedback from the process of reform, character
evaluation, psychological readaptation and social integration of
juveniles;
(d) The shortage of rehabilitation and training programmes for the
juvenile inmates benefiting from the services of these welfare and
boarding institutions. Diversified training programmes constitute
an important means of treatment and reform for juveniles;
(e) The low standard of the cultural, social, sports and artistic
activity programmes which help to occupy the leisure time and orient
the capacities of juveniles in a manner conducive to the rectification
of their behaviour;
(f) The limited availability of equipment and explanatory educational
aids at the rehabilitation and vocational training workshops which
help to further the education and training of the juvenile inmates
of these centres;
(g) The lack of independent budgets for the activities and programmes
of these institutions in order to enable them to deal with the administrative
and technical problems and educational requirements of the workshops.
Poor maintenance of equipment and installations renders them constantly
unable to meet not only contingent but also essential operational
needs, bearing in mind the fact that these centres have a centralized
budget;
(h) Failure of the centres to meet the diverse nutritional requirements
of juveniles at the various stages of their physical and intellectual
development, in which they need a healthy and balanced diet;
(i) The State's lack of the resources needed for the establishment
of separate welfare and rehabilitation institutions for young women,
as a result of which both delinquent and potentially delinquent
young women are confined together in special sections of the prisons
and allowed to mix with other female convicts by whom they are influenced,
thereby aggravating their behavioural problems and making it more
difficult to evaluate their situation and ensure their re-education
and social integration, since these penal institutions do not offer
programmes for these young women.
E. Policies and programmes for the welfare of the disabled
111. Social, educational, rehabilitation and training services are
provided for the various categories of disabled persons, through
rehabilitation and welfare centres and institutions for the disabled,
in accordance with the laws in force. Disabled children include
those who are blind, weak-sighted, paraplegic, deaf, dumb, hard
of hearing or mentally retarded.
112. Being aware of its major responsibilities in this field, the
State established the National Committee for the Welfare of the
Disabled, the terms of reference of which were specified in Presidential
Decree No. 5 of 1991. Its tasks included the formulation of strategies
and general policies concerning the welfare, rehabilitation and
social reintegration of the disabled, bearing in mind the need to
encourage initiatives designed to promote the welfare of disabled
persons by supporting the associations operating in this field.
This Committee consists of 17 persons, including representatives
of a number of Ministries, prominent personalities and businessmen,
and falls under the high-level supervision of the Prime Minister.
In order to facilitate the tasks and functions of this Committee,
the legislature made provision for the establishment, at the Ministry
of Social Security, of a Fund for the Welfare of the Disabled under
the terms of Presidential Decree No. 6 of 1991. The Cabinet also
issued a number of decrees to improve the situation of the disabled,
including the following:
(a) Decree No. 14 of 1991 concerning the establishment of new associations
for the welfare and rehabilitation of the disabled, and Decree No.
215 concerning the employment of the disabled;
(b) Decree No. 147 of 1990 concerning a comprehensive survey to
determine the extent of the problem of disability and identify its
categories, types, causes and areas of highest incidence, and Decree
No. 150 of 1990 designating 9 December of every year as the National
Day for the Disabled;
(c) Decree No. 153 of 1991 concerning the incorporation of programmes
for the welfare and rehabilitation of the disabled in the curricula
of Sana'a and Aden Universities.
Some of these decrees have already been put into effect, while others
still require backing and support at the political or social levels.
113. It has proved very difficult to make accurate estimates of
the number of disabled persons by age and sex due to the lack of
the field surveys and studies needed to determine the magnitude
of this phenomenon. Most of the available data on child disabilities
in Yemen were obtained from four surveys, conducted during the period
from 1983 to 1988, which indicated that the proportion of disabled
children under 18 years of age amounted to 10 per cent as compared
with a worldwide average proportion of 8-13 per cent.
114. Yemen has made great endeavours to deal with the phenomenon
of disability as follows:
(a) Limitation of disability through:
(i) Prevention based on public information and the stimulation of
awareness of the magnitude of the problem in order to eliminate
its sources and causes;
(ii) Treatment designed to alleviate disability and overcome the
problems faced by disabled persons through medical assistance such
as the early diagnosis of disability;
(b) Accident prevention;
(c) Psychological and physical therapy;
(d) Provision of social services, improvement of the capacities
of primary health care centres and ongoing stimulation of awareness
concerning the need for pre- and post-natal care for expectant mothers;
(e) Administration of basic primary vaccines against measles, poliomyelitis
and whooping cough.
115. The State, in collaboration with non-governmental organizations,
is helping to implement training and rehabilitation programmes for
the disabled. Aden currently has a number of rehabilitation and
welfare centres, run by the Ministry of Social Security and Social
Affairs, for various categories of disabled persons and there are
also several community-based projects, such as centres for the blind
at Sana'a, Aden and Hadhramaut and rehabilitation centres for the
disabled, in various parts of the Republic.
116. Rehabilitation and welfare centres for the blind provide various
services in the formal education and vocational training fields
and teach the academic syllabuses for the basic stages (from the
first to the ninth grade) in accordance with the Ministry of Education's
curricula but using Braille. The blind are also trained in various
skills including carpentry, stonework and traditional handicrafts,
such as pottery and wickerwork, and are supplied with the raw materials
and tools needed for such training.
117. The State extends symbolic financial assistance (about 500
rials) to each disabled person, together with one set of winter
and summer clothing, food and health care services.
118. The Intellectual Development Centre at Sana'a provides disabled
children with practical knowledge in accordance with the educational
curricula of the Ministry of Education through sign language and
lip-reading and also organizes socio-cultural programmes and activities,
such as sports festivals, excursions, a school library and the projection
of recreational video films for children. Emphasis is placed on
various skills, such as carpentry, upholstery work, knitting, tailoring,
dressmaking and computer science. It currently has 392 male and
female students.
119. The Paraplegic Centre at Aden provides rehabilitation services
for paraplegics in various fields, such as secretarial work, carpentry,
the fabrication of prostheses, various types of tailoring and the
manufacture of leather shoes and bags, and holds occasional exhibitions
of products. It also organizes literacy classes for disabled persons.
The centre has 90 male and female students.
120. The Ta'izz Centre and the Zabid Centre teaches deaf and dumb
children through sign language. The former centre currently has
80 male and female students and the latter 45.
121. The social rehabilitation programme provides rehabilitation
services at the local community and national levels and constitutes
a new approach to work with the disabled. In its broad sense, community-based
rehabilitation involves active and comprehensive participation by
all the bodies concerned with welfare, such as the Ministries of
Health, Education, Social Security and Social Affairs and Labour
and Vocational Training.
122. In the governorate of Lahej, 63 disabled children are currently
being trained and rehabilitated, 68 require follow-up and 20 require
referral. In the governorate of Ta'izz, 157 disabled children are
being trained and rehabilitated, 32 require referral and 35 require
follow-up. The programme is expected to be extended to other areas
(Hajda, Rumada and Hajar) and 21 persons received training in order
to begin the rehabilitation and training of disabled persons in
those areas during the biennium 1995-1996. The operation is currently
being extended to further areas in the governorates of Ibb, Aden
and Abyan in which 1,090, 1,001 and 1,700 disabled persons have
been listed respectively.
123. The Early Home Intervention Project which began in 1993 with
assistance from the Arab Council for Children and with support from
the State, has since been suspended due to the shortage of qualified
training staff and the lack of funds. It provided services for 56
disabled children of both sexes.
124. The Central Support Project at Sana'a and Aden focuses on community-based
rehabilitation in areas close to urban agglomerations, such as the
Thila area, in which the number of disabled persons is being determined
and the local community is being trained to work in collaboration
with the State. These centres are currently being equipped and provided
with the raw materials needed for their operation. This project
is helping to support existing carpentry, turnery and leather workshops,
in addition to the conduct of a feasibility study on market needs.
It is also helping to train Yemeni staff working in this field through
external and internal training courses and the establishment of
new operating units, such as the evaluation unit for staff and participating
students.
125. Efforts are being made to implement the social reintegration
programme for disabled persons so that these children can attend
ordinary schools applying the comprehensive education programme
in accordance with the provisions of the Convention on the Rights
of the Child concerning the child's right to education and development
in keeping with the principle of equality of opportunity.
126. The following difficulties and obstacles have been encountered
in implementing this programme:
(a) Lack of the technical and administrative expertise needed to
operate these institutions, which affects the extent of the services
that they provide;
(b) Inadequate coordination, communication and collaboration between
the bodies concerned;
(c) Failure to strictly apply the legislation that has been promulgated
to safeguard the rights of disabled persons;
(d) The Government is concentrating on specific welfare priorities
for these categories due to the shortage of the financial, technical
and human resources needed to run the activities and programmes
of these institutions, which has reduced the effectiveness of their
role in assisting their child and other beneficiaries. Hence, the
increasing number of beneficiaries from these institutions is in
inverse proportion to the financial resources allocated to them;
(e) Lack of expertise and specialized personnel capable of planning
welfare, rehabilitation and reintegration projects for disabled
persons, and inadequate pre-service and ongoing training programmes
for these personnel;
(f) Instability of the professional workforce in this field in view
of the difficulty of working with the disabled and the lack of financial
incentives offered;
(g) The number of social, educational and training institutions
that have been established to cater for the welfare and rehabilitation
of disabled persons is not commensurate with the magnitude of the
problem of disability in the country;
(h) The institutions and centres for the disabled are concentrated
in the administrative centres of some governorates and rehabilitation
and welfare services for the disabled are not available in remote
rural areas;
(i) Some of the existing institutions for the disabled serve only
a limited number of disabled persons in specific categories and
age groups, while others cater for all age groups without planning
their working methods. Some even cater simultaneously for mutually
incompatible categories of disabled persons, such as the deaf and
dumb, the mentally retarded and children suffering from multiple
disabilities, which makes it difficult to provide integrated educational,
rehabilitation, training and welfare services due to this multiplicity
of needs and the shortage of resources;
(j) Because of various social considerations and values, the number
of male beneficiaries from the services of most of these institutions
is higher than the number of female beneficiaries;
(k) The educational services provided at most of the existing institutions
for the disabled are limited to the primary or primary/preparatory
levels and do not extend to the higher levels of education;
(l) The vocational training sections at some of these institutions
confine themselves to training in a single occupation or a limited
number of occupations that do not meet the needs of the labour market.
Moreover, the vocational instructors lack vocational training experience
and there are no specialists in speech therapy, diagnosis, evaluation
and treatment, which are indispensable requirements for the welfare
and rehabilitation of the disabled;
(m) In general, these institutions lack highly qualified instructors
capable of managing rehabilitation and training programmes for the
disabled;
(n) There are no local production workshops to cater for the needs
of partially incapacitated disabled persons who are unable to work
in the production facilities provided by the State or the private
sector.
127. In general, the form and architectural design of the buildings
or facilities of the existing institutions are not currently suited
to the provision of services for the disabled due to the inadequate
number of classrooms or rooms used as vocational training workshops
or for other activities.
128. Consequently, under the present circumstances, we find that
the services currently provided by these institutions do not live
up to the State's aspirations to improve the situation and meet
the increasing needs of disabled persons. Hence, the question of
the social integration of the disabled should be reviewed and endeavours
should be made to develop the educational policies and programmes
at the ordinary schools as the best way to meet these constantly
increasing needs and remedy the inadequate absorption capacity of
the existing centres for the disabled. Efforts should also be made
to benefit from international external expertise in this field.
129. For the period 1997-2000, three projects are being implemented
at Abyan, Al-Jawf and Hadhramaut, as well as three others involving
the expansion, renovation and repair of existing centres at Aden,
the city of Sana'a and Ta'izz. Plans are also being made for the
construction of 10 centres at Lahej, Hodeida, Dhamar, Ibb, Shabwah,
Mahra, Mahwit and Al-Baida during the period 1997-2000.

III. HEALTH EDUCATIONAL AND RECREATIONAL SERVICES
Health Services
130. The Republic of Yemen has witnessed rapid
demographic growth during the last two decades. For example, the
resident population has increased from 12,364,400 persons in 1990
to about 14,587,807 according to the results of the general population
census of 1994, i.e. an annual growth rate of 3.7 per cent. This
increase is attributable to the improved health situation, the lower
mortality rates and the relatively stable fertility rate (amounting
to 7.4 per cent).
131. According to article 32 of the Constitution of the Republic
of Yemen, health and social services are basic requirements for
social development and progress and are provided through contributions
from society and the State. Article 54 of the Constitution further
stipulates that all citizens have a right to health care, which
the State must secure through the establishment and expansion of
various hospitals and health institutions, the legal regulation
of the medical profession and the development of free health services.
To this end, the legislature has promulgated the following legislation
and decrees:
(a) The Act regulating the exercise of the health professions;
(b) The Presidential Decree establishing the Yemeni Council for
Medical Specializations;
(c) The decree promulgated by the Prime Minister regulating medical
treatment abroad.
132. Public health services were developed considerably during the
years 1990-1995. For example, the number of hospitals increased
from 74 in 1990 to 81 in 1995, i.e. an increase of 15 per cent.
The number of hospital beds also rose from 7,970 in 1990 to 9,169
in 1995 (an increase of 9 per cent) and the number of health centres
rose from 390 in 1990 to 395 in 1995.
133. However, notwithstanding this increase in the number of health
units and health counsellors, as a result of which at least 50 per
cent of the population should have access to health services, it
must be pointed out that most of these units (four fifths) are not
operational since their supervision and funding was suspended for
a long period of time extending into the 1990s for various reasons
including, in particular, non-payment of the supervisory staff and
the shortage or poor quality of the pharmaceutical supplies and
equipment. This situation had an adverse effect on the health services
required by mothers and children, who constitute a proportion of
not less than 70 per cent of the population.
134. This situation resulted from the increasing demand for such
services due to the increase in the population, particularly the
youthful segment, whose health needs the State was unable to meet.
According to the statistics contained in the UNICEF publication
The State of the World's Children (1997), the services that are
provided by the health institutions in the principal governorates
currently cover only about 30 per cent of the population.
135. During the period 1990-1995, health services were accessible
to about 38 per cent of the population in urban and rural areas.
Table 3 in the annex shows that the proportion of government spending
allocated to health rose from 3.9 per cent in 1992 to 4.7 per cent
in 1995.
1. The child's right to health
136. Since the beginning of the 1990s, the State's
concern for the survival and health of children, as reflected in
the general policies of the Ministry of Health, has led to a reduction
in infant and child mortality and malnutrition.
137. Within the context of this review of the measures taken by
the Republic of Yemen to achieve the international goals, it should
be noted that Yemen has attended all the international forums directly
or indirectly concerned with children and has eagerly ratified the
agreements and programmes of action formulated during those meetings
at the international or regional level. Our country has ratified
the Convention on the Rights of the Child and has adopted the National
Population Strategy, the targets of which include a reduction in
infant and child mortality and in the incidence of moderate and
severe malnutrition and an increase in the coverage of immunization
against the six diseases that affect children.
138. A review of these aspects leads to the following conclusions:
(a) Immunization. The endeavours made in this field have achieved
appreciable coverage by this important service during the last five
years (1991-1996) as shown in the following tables:
Table 1
Immunization coverage (women and children) during the period 1990-1996
|
Activity
|
Vaccine
|
Years |
Observations
|
|
1990 |
1991 |
1992 |
1993 |
1994 |
1995 |
1996 |
|
Child coverage |
BCG |
107 |
74 |
54 |
57 |
41 |
60 |
|
|
|
|
Measles |
74 |
57 |
49 |
51 |
31 |
53 |
|
|
|
|
Polio and triple |
89 |
62 |
50 |
51 |
33 |
54 |
|
|
|
Nonpregnant women |
Tetanus |
15 |
8 |
8 |
6 |
8 |
10 |
|
|
|
Pregnant women |
Tetanus |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
National days for the eradication of polio (1st
stage) |
1st dose
2nd dose |
|
|
|
|
|
|
119
134 |
|
Table 2
National days for the eradication of poliomyelitis 1992-1996
The factors that led to the low level of performance of the immunization
programme are:
(i) Lack of clearly defined goals at all levels;
(ii) Inadequate preparation of clearly defined and detailed plans;
(iii) Insufficient training;
(iv) Poor supervision;
(v) Lack of evaluation in accordance with the strategy;
(vi) Poor condition of the refrigeration equipment;
(vii) Lack of public participation;
(b) Malnutrition and diarrhoea. The incidence of severe and moderate
malnutrition has declined in recent years and amounted to 30 per
cent in 1995; the mortality rate attributable to diarrhoea has declined
in recent years from 66 per cent in 1990 to 40 per cent in 1995.
The achievements made are the folloing:
(i) Rehydration solution has been supplied to the administrative
centres of the governorates and some of the main towns in the districts;
(ii) Staff have been trained in ways to treat diarrhoea in children;
(iii) Health awareness has been promoted through symposia, pamphlets,
posters, booklets and radio and television programmes;
(iv) The proportion of mothers able to treat diarrhoea and use rehydration
solution has been increased;
(c) Encouragement of breastfeeding. The Ministry of Health in our
country has taken a number of measures to curb the spread of artificial
feeding and encourage breastfeeding, which is more beneficial to
the health of children since it does not entail exposure to many
of the diseases, particularly diarrhoea, which prove fatal to so
many children. These measures include:
(i) Large-scale information campaigns using the various information
media;
(ii) Prohibition of the distribution of free samples of infant formula
at hospitals and health facilities throughout the Republic;
(iii) Implementation of the child-friendly hospital initiative.
According to the statistics presented in the UNICEF publication
The State of the World's Children (1997), during the period 1990-1996
about
15 per cent of infants up to the age of three months were breastfed
exclusively and 51 per cent of those aged six to nine months received
solids in addition to breastfeeding.
(d) Hygienic aspects of some social customs. Male circumcision is
a religious rite that is observed by Islamic, Jewish and many other
communities in which all males are circumcised. Since the beneficial
results of the observance of this rite have been confirmed by medical
research, the Ministry of Health is endeavouring to ensure that
this custom is practised in a hygienic manner that safeguards children
from many complications that might arise if health facilities were
not available to provide this service in a careful and hygienic
manner. Female circumcision, a tradition that might have been inherited
from some neighbouring African States in which it is widespread,
is a rare phenomenon in our country and, therefore, does not warrant
concern as a health hazard since many other health problems that
endanger the lives of children merit higher priority in regard to
research and monitoring.
2. The mother's right to health
139. The mother's health has a direct or indirect
effect on the health of her children. Since the under-15 age group
constitutes 50.27 per cent of the population, this means that we
are concerned with the health of 75 per cent of Yemeni society.
The latest statistics on the maternal health situation contain only
estimated figures that might be unreliable. At all events, however,
the maternal mortality rate remains high, possibly amounting to
1,000 deaths per 100,000 live births.
(a) Prenatal care
140. The demographic survey of maternal and child health that was
conducted in Yemen in 1991-1992 provided the following indicators:
(a) At the time of the survey, 16.7 per cent of married women were
pregnant (17.2 per cent in rural and 14.3 per cent in urban areas);
(b) The proportion of these women receiving prenatal medical care
amounted to 21.2 per cent (16.3 per cent in rural and 49.2 per cent
in urban areas);
(c) Tetanus vaccinations were administered to 33.4 per cent of pregnant
women in urban areas and 11.4 per cent in rural areas.
(b) Care during childbirth
141. The findings of the 1992 survey concerning delivery under qualified
medical supervision showed that 11 per cent of newborn children
were delivered by a physician, 5 per cent by a midwife and 8 per
cent without assistance.

3. General strategies, aims and policies
142. The National Population Strategy (1996-2000)
includes a plan to reduce the incidence of contagious and parasitic
diseases, particularly among infants and children, and to improve
the nutritional state of health of citizens in general and especially
of those most vulnerable to malnutrition, such as infants and children,
through the provision of health care and treatment services in all
parts of the country. The plan aims to achieve the following objectives:
(a) Reduction in infant mortality from 83 to 60 per 1,000 by the
end of the year 2000;
(b) Reduction in the mortality rate among children under 5 years
of age to 95 per 1,000 by the end of the year 2000;
(c) Increase in the proportion of children immunized against the
six killer diseases to 90 per cent by the year 2000;
(d) Increase in the coverage of primary health-care services from
45 per cent to 60 per cent by the year 2000;
(e) Eradication of poliomyelitis and neonatal tetanus by the year
2000;
(f) Construction of 34 rural hospitals, 168 health centres and 674
health units in all the governorates.
143. The principal policies and measures applied under the plan
are:
(a) Provision of day-care centres for children at which reasonably
priced services will be available to working women in order to help
them to remain in employment;
(b) Promotion of awareness by married women of the benefits of birth
spacing and the practice of family planning to that end.
144. The health projects include 29 programmes to promote maternal
and child care, combat malnutrition and widespread chronic diseases
and improve environmental and occupational health.
145. The cost of the health projects that are under way amounts
to 260 million rials.
146. The Government's five-year plan makes provision for the following
measures to ensure the survival, protection and development of children:
(a) Increase in the coverage of maternal and child health services
to 60 per cent by the year 2000;
(b) Increase in the health-care coverage of pregnant women to 60
per cent;
(c) Encouragement of community-based and foreign participation in
support of health programmes;
(d) Planning and implementation of pre-service and on-the-job training
programmes for persons working in the field of maternal and child
care;
(e) Increase in the level of immunization coverage;
(f) Treatment of malnutrition in children. In fact, the rate of
severe and moderate malnutrition declined to 30 per cent in 1995
and the plan makes provision for a number of measures to further
improve the nutritional situation of children by the year 2000.
These measures include a reduction in the incidence of iron deficiency
anaemia to 66 per cent in rural areas and 16 per cent in urban areas
(i.e. one third lower than the figures for 1994), and the elimination
of vitamin A and iodine deficiency, by the end of the year 2000;
(g) During the last five years, the child mortality rate from diarrhoea
has declined from 60 per cent in 1990 to 40 per cent in 1995. The
first five-year plan aims to further reduce the number of deaths
from diarrhoea to half the figure for 1995 and to increase the rate
of utilization of rehydration solution from 30 per cent to 80 per
cent.
147. The results of the Yemeni demographic survey in 1991-1992 showed
that the child mortality rate in the age group 1-4 years amounted
to 47.1 per 1,000 live births in the case of females and 41 per
1,000 live births in the case of males. This indicates that, from
their childhood, Yemeni women do not receive appropriate health
care. Moreover, in rural areas, young girls begin to assume arduous
household responsibilities at 6 years of age and are married as
soon as they reach the stage of adolescence, at which time they
have to assume double responsibilities in and outside the home.
148. Anaemia is widespread among women of childbearing age, particularly
in rural areas and in the coastal plain, largely as a result of
the high fertility rate, the short interval between births, constant
exposure to parasitic and contagious diseases such as malaria, and
malnutrition. Anaemia increases the risk of death if the mother
suffers a haemorrhage. It also increases the risk of puerperal infection
which, in turn, can lead to death or peritonitis and sterility.
149. The future plans to reduce maternal morbidity and mortality
aim to achieve two goals:
(a) Improvement in female health (long-term goal);
(b) Prevention of maternal mortality (short-term goal).
150. On the whole, it can be affirmed that the strategies, policies
and objectives concerning the provision of services to safeguard
the health of children, ensure their proper nutrition and protect
them from the diseases that threaten their survival and development,
as set forth in the Convention on the Rights of the Child, are reflected
in the National Population Strategy, the Plan of Action pertaining
thereto, the Five-Year Plan and the sectoral plans of the government
agencies concerned, in which the articles and provisions of that
Convention are taken fully into account. If their implementation
has encountered some difficulties and obstacles, this indicates
that the extent of implementation is commensurate with the objectives
to be attained and is a natural result of the Government's diligent
endeavours to give greater effect to the provisions of the Convention
in a manner consistent with its present situation and aspirations.
151. The following health projects are contained in the Government's
five-year plan for 1996-2000:
(a) Projects for public health-care programmes in all the governorates.
These projects include 29 programmes to promote maternal and child
care, combat malnutrition and widespread chronic diseases such as
malaria, tuberculosis and bilharziasis and improve environmental
and occupational health;
(b) Construction of 34 rural hospitals throughout the Republic.
The aim of these projets is to provide diagnostic, therapeutic and
general medical services at an estimated cost of about 2.3 billion
rials. They are expected to be implemented during the five-year
plan for 1996-2000;
(c) Construction of 168 health centres. The aim of this project
is to construct and equip 168 medical centres throughout the Republic
in order to expand primary health-care services by providing the
centres with laboratories and radiological examination equipment
for the benefit of citizens. The estimated financial cost of the
project is 4.1 billion rials;
(d) Construction of 674 health units. The aim of this project is
to construct and equip 674 health units to provide primary health-care
services in remote areas at an estimated total cost of about 3.4
billion rials;
(e) Establishment of a cardiosurgical centre. The aim of this project,
to be implemented at the Thawra Hospital at Sana'a, is to meet the
increasingly urgent needs for the treatment of heart diseases. Its
estimated total cost amounts to about 350 million rials.
B. Educational services and policies
152. The Republic of Yemen applies the principle
of equal opportunities in regard to education, which is free and
compulsory. Article 32 of the Constitution stipulates that the State,
together with society, must contribute to the provision of education,
which is a prerequisite for social development and progress. Article
53 further stipulates that all citizens have a right to education
which the State must safeguard, in accordance with the law, by establishing
various educational institutions and making basic education free.
In view of the high illiteracy rate among women who missed the opportunity
to attend official educational institutions, the State organizes
programmes for the eradication of illiteracy from which children
also benefit.
153. Technical and vocational education programmes are being expanded
for the benefit of children of both sexes in order to ensure their
welfare and protect them from delinquency and perdition by creating
appropriate conditions for the development of their intellectual,
physical and spiritual aptitudes.
1. Pre-school educational institutions (nursery
schools and kindergartens)
154. Education in these institutions is regarded
as an ancillary and necessary means to prepare children psychologically
for enrolment in subsequent stages of education. Although about
106 institutions of this type (43 governmental and 63 private) have
so far been established, they are concentrated in the principal
cities.
155. It is noteworthy that the total number of children enrolled
at kindergartens declined from 9,847 in 1990/91 to 9,775 in 1994/95
in all three age groups (younger, intermediate and older). This
was attributable to the following reasons:
(a) The limited number of existing nursery schools and kindergartens;
(b) The low level of family awareness concerning the importance
of enrolling children at these institutions as a preparatory stage;
(c) The difficult economic situation faced by a large proportion
of families, which are unable to afford the cost of enrolling their
children at these institutions;
(d) The inadequate financial and technical resources of the existing
institutions, some of which are unable to apply modern educational
methods.
2. Basic education
156. The statistics compiled by the Ministry of
Education indicate that the number of children under six years of
age admitted to the first primary grade rose from 106,087 in the
academic year 1990/91 to 139,305 in 1994/95. This represents an
increase of 31.3 per cent and an annual growth rate of 7 per cent.
The total number of children in the age group 6-15 years enrolled
at the basic stage of education also rose from 2,076,138 in the
academic year 1990/91 to 2,766,255 in 1994/95, i.e. an increase
of 33.2 per cent and an annual growth rate of 7.4 per cent. During
the same period, the proportion of female students rose slowly from
25.6 per cent to 27.8 per cent. The Government is currently tackling
the problem of the low rate of female enrolment in education through
joint programmes and activities with a number of international organizations,
including UNICEF which is collaborating with it in the implementation
of a comprehensive programme in a number of selected areas with
a view to encouraging young girls to show an interest in education.
The results so far achieved have been promising.
157. In spite of the increase in the number of students enrolled
at this stage of education, there are evident imbalances from the
standpoint of the relationship between the expansion of the absorption
base for children of school age in the age group 6-15 years and
the corresponding population age group as shown by the final results
of the 1994 general census. However, the ability to achieve the
goals set in the National Population Strategy for 1990-2000 is highlighted
by the following:
(a) In the first grade of basic education, the enrolment rate for
6-year-old children amounted to 29.2 per cent for males and 18.5
per cent for females (a combined rate of 24 per cent), which indicates
that 76 per cent of 6-year-old children do not have an opportunity
to enrol in the first grade of basic education. However, those rates
do not accurately reflect the real educational enrolment rate due
to the young age of the children, who qualified when the census
was conducted in December 1994. Moreover, many persons enrol after
reaching that age, particularly in rural areas;
(b) Fifty-five per cent of the population in the age group 6-15
years were enrolled for basic education. This means that 45 per
cent of children were not enrolled for education. There was also
a disparity between the enrolment rates for the two sexes (about
71 per cent for males, as compared with 37.5 per cent for females)
even though the sex ratio is almost equally balanced. This educational
disparity is wider in rural than in urban areas, amounting to 48.8
per cent and 79.5 per cent respectively, due to the lesser availability
of educational services;
(c) If the endeavours to expand basic education keep pace with the
annual rate of increase in the number of students (7.4 per cent
between the academic years 1990/91 and 1994/95 as shown in Table
1), it will be possible to achieve an almost total enrolment rate,
i.e. more than the target of 85 per cent set in the National Strategy,
on the assumption that the population in the age group 6-15 years
will number 4,243,000 persons by the year 2000 in accordance with
the average alternative projections, bearing in mind the fact that
the Strategy targeted the population in the age group 6-12 years,
i.e. before the restructuring of the education system under which
the basic stage of education was increased to nine years, thereby
covering the age group 6-15 years.

3. Secondary education
(a) General secondary education
158. Although the results of the 1994 general census indicated that
only 13.5 per cent of the total population in the age group 16-18
years were receiving secondary education, the general secondary
schools absorb the lion's share, as compared with other branches
of secondary education, as shown by the quantitative evolution in
enrolment rates during the academic years 1990/91-1994/95. Some
indicators to this effect will be found in
Table 1, which shows the remarkable development of general secondary
schools in which the number of students enrolled rose from 113,719
to 232,506, i.e. an annual growth rate of 19.6 per cent.
(b) Teacher training institutes
159. After students, teachers constitute the largest and most important
element in any education system responding to the increasing social
demand for education. In past years, however, education policy was
characterized by indecisiveness concerning the importance of teacher
training, which led to a variety of qualifications ranging from
the three-year post-preparatory diploma to the diploma awarded after
four years of training following completion of the standardized
stage of education. Those teacher training programmes made an evident
distinction between primary and secondary schoolteachers. Ministry
of Education statistics show that the total student enrolment at
these institutes rose from 13,444 in the academic year 1990/91 to
27,745 in 1994/95, representing an annual growth rate of 19.9 per
cent and an overall increase of 106.3 per cent. About 8,000 students
of both sexes graduate from these institutes every year. Enrolment
was suspended after the graduation of the last class in the academic
year 1994/95 so that these institutes could be transformed into
two-year post-secondary intermediate colleges.
(c) Technical and vocational education
160. The aim of technical education and vocational training is to
provide the rising generation with the knowledge and skills needed
to meet the needs of the labour market. During the last two decades,
the State has endeavoured to promote this type of education and
has formulated educational and training programmes suited to the
needs of the local environment. However, in spite of the achievements
made, particularly when viewed within that short time frame, those
programmes have not played a prominent role in education policy
and largely failed to meet expectations since enrolment fell steadily
from 5,405 in the academic year 1990/91 to 5,069 in 1994/95, i.e.
a decline of 6.2 per cent. This decrease in demand for technical
and vocational education is attributable to numerous factors, including:
(a) The reluctance of basic education graduates to enrol at these
institutes due to the low social esteem attached to this type of
education, which usually attracts only persons with the lowest academic
aptitudes and qualifications;
(b) The absence of a clear concept of the input and output of technical
and vocational education within the framework of a comprehensive
policy linking the intake at the various stages of education to
development needs as the basis on which to determine the extent
and type of expansion required in the vocational and technical training
programmes;
(c) The high drop-out rate from these vocational institutes and
centres for numerous reasons, such as the low incomes of some of
the students' families and the lack of opportunities for practical
training due to the inadequate financial appropriations;
(d) The lack of employment opportunities and the failure to take
the measures needed to encourage graduates to seek self-employment
opportunities.
161. As part of the State's endeavours in this regard, important
steps have recently been taken to help to achieve the aim of increasing
the absorption capacity and improving the standard and effectiveness
of technical education and vocational training by:
(a) Placing the formal institutes and centres under the control
of the Public Authority for Technical Education and Vocational Training;
(b) Establishing a Vocational Training Fund;
(c) Formulating plans for the development of technical education
and vocational training within the context of a comprehensive programme
financed by the World Bank and a number of funds and friendly States.
4. Informal education
162. One of the educational problems facing our
country is the high illiteracy rate which, according to the results
of the 1994 general census, amounted to 55.8 per cent of the total
population in the age group 10 years and above. There is considerable
disparity between males and females, with the illiteracy rate amounting
to 76.2 per cent among females as compared with 36.5 per cent for
males, in view of the low educational enrolment rates among females
due to the short-sighted attitude taken towards the education of
girls.
163. There are also evident disparities between urban areas, in
which educational services are concentrated, and rural areas which
are still suffering from a shortage of educational services. The
illiteracy rates in urban and rural areas amount to 34.1 per cent
and 63.3 per cent respectively.
164. One of the aims of the National Population Strategy for 1990-2000
is to focus on a programme for the eradication of illiteracy in
order to reduce the illiteracy rate to less than 50 per cent among
females and less than 30 per cent among males by the year 2000.
These rates include male and female children.
5. Expenditure on education
165. The increasing levels of expenditure on education
are illustrated by the following table:
Table 3
Evolution of expenditure on education as a proportion of the State's
public budget and GNP during the years 1990-1995 (in millions of
rials)
|
Indicators |
Years |
|
1990 |
1991 |
1992 |
1993 |
1994 |
1995 |
|
Expenditure from the
State's public budget |
35 967.0 |
44 069.8 |
57 042.8 |
68 983.6 |
87 128.3 |
124 140.0 |
|
Expenditure on education |
6 189.6 |
8 578.2 |
10 766.1 |
13 531.3 |
16 728.5 |
21 856.1 |
|
Expenditure on education
as a percentage of the State's public budget |
17.2 |
19.5 |
18.9 |
19.6 |
19.2 |
17.6 |
|
Gross national product
(at market prices) |
97 779 |
112 434 |
135 949 |
170 298 |
221 103 |
294 252 |
|
Expenditure on education
as a percentage of GNP |
6.3 |
7.6 |
7.9 |
7.9 |
7.6 |
7.4 |
Source: Statistical Yearbook 1990-1995, Central
Statistical Office.

6. Problems and obstacles in the education and training sector
166. The education system is facing numerous problems
such as, in particular:
(a) The high illiteracy rate among the population;
(b) The low enrolment rate in basic education;
(c) The dispersion of the population in many rural areas;
(d) The high educational drop-out rate;
(e) The low standard of education and training due to the following:
(i) Failure to modernize educational curricula, especially in secondary
education in which the teaching materials used are out of date;
(ii) The lack of a uniform Education Act in the Republic of Yemen;
(iii) The low standard of some educational and training institutions,
in which conditions are not conducive to an improved choice and
in which the training provided constantly falls short of the aim
of developing the skills and know-how of students;
(iv) The failure to meet appropriate health and educational conditions
in some schools;
(v) The poor standard of the technical equipment in the existing
technical institutes and centres and its failure to keep pace with
the technological developments that are being introduced in the
labour market;
(vi) The lack of facilities, such as workshops and laboratories,
needed for the practical training required during the study of scientific
subjects;
(vii) The low quality of the intake into technical and vocational
education due to the low standard of general education;
(viii) The inadequate linkage between education and training systems
and employment and production institutions.
7. Educational projects in the five-year plan for
the period 1996-2000
167. The Government is seeking to cover the deficit
in educational services by adopting the following projects:
The construction of 20,618 classrooms for the stages of basic education;
The construction of 1,154 classrooms for the stages of secondary
education;
Provision of the furniture and educational requisites needed in
the new classrooms.
168. The aim of the projects is to increase the absorption capacity
of educational institutions at the basic and secondary levels of
education in order to cater for the expected increase in the number
of students during the next five years. The total cost is estimated
at about 53 billion rials, of which 50 billion is for basic education
and 3 billion for secondary education.
The projects are expected to be completed during the period of the
five-year plan (1996-2000).
(a) School health projects, literacy centres and orphanages throughout
the Republic
169. The aim of these 30 projects is to improve school health and
construct literacy centres and orphanages in all the governorates
at an estimated total cost of 4 billion rials.
(b) Kindergarten projects
170. The aim of these 43 projects, the total cost of which is estimated
at about 611 million rials, is to establish kindergartens for the
benefit of children in all the governorates.

C. Cultural, leisure and recreational activities
171. Through its educational institutions which
are providing services for male and female children, the Yemeni
Government, represented by the Ministry of Education, is organizing
cultural activities linked to the education system. In order to
ensure the effective promotion, control and regulation of these
activities, a series of ordinances were promulgated in the form
of pedagogical directives in keeping with public policies and programmes.
These ordinances included:
(a) The Social Service Directive, promulgated in Ministerial Ordinance
No. 795 of 1995, which consisted of 18 articles divided into the
following five sections:
(i) The principles and aims of school social service;
(ii) Fields, means and methods of school social service;
(iii) Qualifications and duties of the sociologist;
(iv) Role of the headmaster and the social monitor in regard to
school social service;
(v) Records and their content;
(vi) Rights and obligations of the sociologist, who has the same
legal status as a teacher;
(b) Ministerial Ordinance No. 801 of 1995, promulgating the School
Library Directive, consisted of 25 articles divided into the following
sections:
(i) Aims and specifications of the school library;
(ii) Cultural and educative activity of the school library;
(iii) Technical and administrative organization of the school library;
(iv) Maintenance of library records;
(v) Conditions for the selection of the librarian: his rights and
obligations, in regard to which he must be treated in the same way
as other teachers;
(vi) Role of the school in regard to the school library;
(vii) Purpose-oriented operation of school libraries.
172. These directives, which have been circulated among all schools,
are helping to regulate those activities. In actual fact, however,
those activities are largely confined to schools in some of the
principal administrative centres. The reasons for this include:
(a) Only the headmasters of schools in some governorates are sufficiently
motivated to organize such activities;
(b) Inadequate awareness of the important role that those activities
play in furthering the education process;
(c) The extent to which the role and content of those activities
are supported by the local community and, in particular, by parents
and guardians.
However, these may not be the only reasons, given the possible existence
of other factors relating to the academic circumstances, environment
and facilities and the values and customs of the local community.
173. It should be noted that there is still an urgent need to extend
those activities to the other educational institutions in the governorates
in which cultural activities seem to be inadequate. Other activities,
such as physical, artistic and musical education and school competitions
which constitute an extension of cultural and recreational activity
or fall within its scope, receive little attention, even at schools
in the principal administrative centres.
174. Every governorate has a department of education, one section
of which is responsible for the promotion of cultural, artistic
and sports activities at the schools through the provision of monitors
to supervise artistic, physical and musical education, handicrafts,
domestic science and the library. Consideration is being given to
the idea of introducing social education in all the governorates
with the help of graduates in sociology, psychology and social service,
as already indicated in the relevant directive. These educational
institutions are endeavouring to assign a more active role to the
school sociologists, currently numbering 1,000 (70 per cent female
and 30 per cent male) in the principal governorates such as Sana'a,
Aden, Ta'izz and Hodeida, who have numerous tasks and responsibilities,
such as:
(a) Organization of cultural and recreational activities (summer
camps, for example) which help to occupy leisure time;
(b) Promotion of environmental health programmes and organization
of day camps;
(c) Organization of educative and recreational excursions to familiarize
female students with their environment and some of its institutions,
thereby furthering the aims of the education process;
(d) Procurement of economic aid and assistance, in cash and in kind,
from charitable persons for poorer female students in order to encourage
them to continue their education;
(e) Handling the problems of persons who are repeatedly absent or
liable to drop out of school (particularly the economic problems
that might cause females to drop out);
(f) Dealing with other family problems that affect the student's
level of academic achievement (such as family break-ups, divorce,
constant disputes, late arrival at school due to unfavourable family
circumstances, and other academic problems which impede or prevent
regular school attendance);
(g) Organization of charity fairs to support poorer female students;
(h) Coordination and liaison with charitable associations which
provide schools with regular aid for the benefit of female students;
(i) Linkage between the school and the home with a view to the furtherance
of proper social adaptation and upbringing;
(j) Promotion of family awareness of the importance of girls' education
through parent/teacher councils.
175. In the light of the above, it should be noted that cultural
and recreational activity must be conducive to the implementation
of policies and programmes the content and aims of which complement
the aims of children's education, particularly in the case of female
children who are deprived of these activities due to other preponderant
priorities, particularly in rural areas.
176. If there is a serious intention to develop and enhance the
quality and content of those activities, particularly in view of
the fact that an increase in enrolment and absorption rates during
the next six years is one of the strategic aims of the Population
Plan of Action for 1996-2006, the Ministry of Education should review
the existing policies and programmes concerning cultural and recreational
activities and take practical steps and measures to meet the increasing
requirements for such services. Account should be taken of the following
principal component elements of any effective strategy to develop
and modernize those activities:
(a) Provision of the material resources needed to increase the effectiveness
of cultural and recreational activities;
(b) Provision of the trained and qualified human resources needed
to work in this field, particularly in girls' schools, since it
has been found that most of the persons responsible for the organization
of these activities are not specialists and lack the requisite technical
skills and experience;
(c) Improvement and development of the facilities intended for these
activities, such as halls for cultural activity, gymnasiums and
school theatres etc., in accordance with carefully studied plans
and programmes;
(d) Provision of information material and publications to further
the aims of cultural activities;
(e) Establishment of liaison and coordination channels with information
institutions with a view to the production of local cultural material;
(f) Intensification of cultural and recreational activity programmes
for girls, particularly in areas that are deprived of these services;
(g) Optimization of the role that the information media play in
supporting and publicizing the numerous cultural activities offered
by educational institutions;
(h) Planning and coordination of joint endeavours by educational
and cultural institutions and harmonization of their working methods
and procedures so that they can contribute to the development of
cultural activities for children;
(i) Coordination of the endeavours of local organizations to disseminate
culture.
177. The overall situation of children in Yemen is therefore undergoing
many positive changes, which require international support and assistance.
The State must also include child welfare and support programmes
among the development priorities in the next five-year plan.
Table 4
Number of students enrolled at the various stages of education during
the academic years 1990/91-1994/95
|
Educational stages |
Sex |
1990/91 |
1991/92 |
1992/93 |
1993/94 |
1994/95 |
Annual
growth rate % |
|
Kindergartens |
Male
Female
Total |
5 194
4 653
9 847 |
6 607
6 013
1 262 |
7 135
6 566
13 701 |
5 849
5 210
11 059 |
5 152
4 623
9 775 |
0.2
0.2
0.2 |
|
Basic
education |
Male
Female
Total |
1 543
817
532 321
2 076 138 |
1 698
238
588 407
2 286 645 |
1 661
039
600 156
2 260 195 |
1 920
805
727 795
2 648 600 |
2 001
743
764 512
2 766 255 |
6.7
9.5
7.4 |
|
Secondary
education |
Male
Female
Total |
120 876
19 222
140 098 |
152 532
28 363
180 895 |
187 514
28 087
185 601 |
200 693
43 222
243 091 |
240 097
53 103
293 200 |
18.7
28.9
20.3 |
|
General |
Male
Female
Total |
97 060
16 659
113 719 |
116 355
25 010
141 445 |
115 514
23 510
139 024 |
153 291
35 997
189 288 |
187 434
45 072
232 506 |
17.9
28.2
19.6 |
|
Institutes |
Male
Female
Total |
6 823
707
7 530 |
8 150
1 100
9 250 |
12 193
1 483
13 676 |
15 930
2 535
18 465 |
24 141
3 739
27 880 |
37
516
38.7 |
|
Teacher
training |
Male
Female
Total |
12 007
1 437
13 444 |
22 989
1 621
24 610 |
25 095
2 567
27 662 |
29 883
4 315
34 198 |
23 871
3 874
27 745 |
18.7
28.1
19.9 |
|
Technical
and vocational |
Male
Female
Total |
4 986
419
5 405 |
5 038
552
5 590 |
4 712
527
5 239 |
1 589
375
5 140 |
4 651
418
5 069 |
1.7
0.05
1.5 |
Source: Ministry of Education.
Table 5
Number of schools, academic branches and students, by sex, at all
stages of general education in the academic year 1994/95
|
Stage |
Basic |
Secondary |
Total |
|
Schools |
9 579 |
1 224 |
10 803 |
|
Academic branches |
78 789 |
5 678 |
84 467 |
|
Male students |
1 776
273 |
187 434 |
1 963
707 |
|
Female students |
716 744 |
45 072 |
761 816 |
|
Total students |
2 493
017 |
232 506 |
2 725
523 |
Source: Statistical Yearbook for 1995.
Table 6

Expenditure on basic services in 1992 and 1995
|
Year
|
Public expenditure
|
Percentage
expenditure on services |
|
Education |
Health |
Other |
|
1992 |
57 043 |
19.6 |
3.9 |
5.3 |
|
1995 |
124 140 |
17.6 |
4.7 |
8.3 |
Source: Central Statistical Office.
Table
7
Statistics concerning juvenile rehabilitation and welfare (social
orientation) centres for 1993
Table 8
Number of inmates at institutions for the disabled
|
Name of centre |
Academic
section |
Vocational
section |
Total |
|
Al-Nur, Sana'a |
75 |
None |
75 |
|
Al-Nur, Aden |
6 |
30 |
36 |
|
Al-Nur, Hadhramaut |
45 |
35 |
80 |
Source: Centre for the Disabled.
Table 9
Penalties for violations of the provisions of the Labour Act concerning
the employment of young persons
|
Type
of violation |
Penalty |
|
Employment of young persons under 15 years of age,
for more than 7 hours per day, or for more than 42 hours
per week |
Fine of 20 000 rials |
|
Failure to interrupt the daily working hours of
young persons by a rest period of not less than one hour,
or requiring a young person to work more than four consecutive
hours |
Fine of 5 000 rials, multiplied by the number of
persons in respect of whom the violation was committed |
|
Failure to calculate the hours which the young
person spends in training as part of the official working
hours |
Fine of 20 000 rials, multiplied by the number
of persons in respect of whom the violation was committed |
|
Employment of a young person on overtime or night
work except where authorized by decision of the Minister |
Fine of 20 000 rials, multiplied by the number
of persons in respect of whom the violation was committed |
|
Employment of a young person during weekly rest
days, official holidays or other periods of leave |
Fine of 10 000 rials, multiplied by the number
of persons in respect of whom the violation was committed |
|
Employment of a young person without the approval
of his or her parents or guardian or without notifying the
Ministry or its competent office |
Fine of 11 000 rials, multiplied by the number
of persons in respect of whom the violation was committed |
|
Employment of young persons in remote and undeveloped
areas |
Fine of 20 000 rials |
|
Failure to provide a healthy and safe working environment
for young persons in accordance with the terms and conditions
specified by the Minister |
Fine of 20 000 rials |
|
Employment of young persons in heavy work, hazardous
industries or socially dangerous jobs, as specified by decision
of the Minister |
Fine of 20 000 rials |
|
Failure to grant the young person, on the due date,
annual leave of 30 days in respect of each year of actual
service |
Fine of 17 000-20 000 rials, which is doubled each
time the violation is repeated |
|
Failure to maintain a record of young employees
specifying the young person's name, age, parent or guardian,
date of entry on duty, place of residence and any other
details required by the Ministry |
Fine of 10 000-20 000 rials, which is doubled each
time the violation is repeated |
|
Failure to post the regulations concerning the
employment of young persons in a prominent location at the
workplace |
Fine of 10 000-20 000 rials, which is doubled each
time the violation is repeated |
|
Remuneration of a young person at less than two
thirds of the minimum wage for adults in similar occupations
or at less than the minimum levels for jobs and occupations
in which young persons work, as specified by decision of
the Minister |
Fine of 20 000 rials |
|
Failure to carry out the preliminary or periodic
medical examinations in order to establish the young person's
physical fitness for work, or failure to open a health file
for each young person |
Fine of 20 000 rials, multiplied by the number
of persons in respect of whom the violation was committed |
Table 10
Number of young offenders in detention in 1996
|
Governorate |
Number |
|
Remarks |
|
Sana'a |
48 |
|
These figures indicate the number of young offenders
detained in penal institutions throughout the Republic.
However, a large proportion of juvenile offenders are not
detained in these penal institutions, many of them being
admitted to juvenile welfare and rehabilitation centres.
Others are unable to benefit from these institutional services
in view of the limited number of those centres |
|
Aden |
15 |
|
|
Ta'izz |
22 |
|
|
Ibb |
21 |
|
|
Hodeida |
27 |
|
|
Dhamar |
13 |
|
|
Hadhramaut |
0 |
|
|
Sa'dah |
8 |
|
|
|
Hajja |
5 |
|
|
|
Mahwit |
6 |
|
|
|
Mahra |
2 |
|
|
|
Al-Baida |
4 |
|
|
|
Abyan |
8 |
|
|
|
Shabwah |
5 |
|
|
|
Al-Jawf |
8 |
|
|
|
Total |
192 |
|
|
Sources:
1. Legislation (the Civil Service Act, the Insurance and Pensions
Act, the Prisons Regulatory Act, the Personal Status Act, the Penal
Code, the Labour Act, the Vocational and Technical Training Act,
the Juveniles Act, the Yemeni Universities Act, the Nationality
Act, etc.).
2. The UNICEF report The State of the World's Children (1997).
3. Reports of centres for the disabled and juvenile welfare centres.
4. Statistical data compiled by the Central Statistical Office.
5. Documents of the Second National Conference on Population Policies,
1996, (Development of human resources).
© Copyright 1999
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Geneva, Switzerland

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