Opening remarks by Ms Frances Fitzgerald TD, Minister for Justice and Equality: Ireland’s appearance before the UN Human Rights Committee on International Convention on Civil and Political Rights
4th July 2014 - Ken Gaughran
Thank you Chairperson. I would like to thank you for your words of welcome
and Ambassador Patricia O Brien who is our Permanent Representative to the
UN in Geneva, for her words of introduction. I very much welcome the
opportunity to be here. On a personal note, I was until very recently
Minister with responsibility for children and youth affairs and for just
two months now, I have responsibility for the Department of Justice and
Equality.
I want to start by introducing the other members of our delegation today.
These are: Mr. Paul Hickey, Assistant Secretary, of my own Department who
has overall responsibility for equality and migrant integration issues.
Also from my Department, Mr. Deaglán Ó Briain, Head of Division with
responsibility for equality legislation, including the establishment of our
new Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission. We have Mr. Noel Dowling
who heads our Refugee Reception and Integration Agency and we have Mr.
Kevin O Sullivan from the Irish National Immigration Service (INIS). Ms
Layla de Cogan Chin has responsibility for coordination on our
international human rights reporting obligations within my Department is
here as is my Private Secretary Mr. Chris Quattrociocchi, and my Press
Officer, Roisin Eccles,
Mr. Richard Barrett, Advisory Counsel with our Attorney General’s Office
will deal with any questions of a constitutional nature that members might
raise.
Turning to our Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, we have the Head of
the Human Rights Unit, Mr. Colin Wrafter and Mr. Peter White Assistant
Legal Adviser based in Dublin. Ms Mary Jackson from our Department of
Health, will deal with questions that relate to that Department’s policy
responsibilities. And from our Mission here in Geneva, we have Ms Nuala Ní
Mhuircheartaigh Deputy Perm Rep., Mr. James O Shea, First Secretary, Ms
Breda Lee First Secretary and Mr. Cathal Loughney, Attaché.
Mr. Chairman, Ireland has a great respect for and attaches great
significance to the UN human rights treaty monitoring process. Support for
the role of the Treaty Monitoring Bodies is a cornerstone of Irish foreign
policy in respect of the promotion of human rights globally and as members
currently of the Human Rights Council we see the very real importance of
this work.
I am proud that Ireland played an instrumental role in the recently
concluded treaty monitoring body strengthening process, which has resulted
in greater resources for and helped secure the integrity and independence
of the various Committees, which occupy such an important place in the UN
human rights infrastructure.
We have attempted throughout the reporting process on this Convention to be
transparent and consultative, and we held civil society consultations in
February and May 2012 and in June 2014. The June meeting was the first
time we held a consultation at this stage of the process, and I understand
that it was extremely useful and productive. We greatly value the
submissions by Irish and international civil society to your Committee, as
well as that of the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission. Civil
society activism provides impetus to our continued efforts to respect,
protect and fulfil the rights of all those living in Ireland. I also
welcome the hearings organised by and the useful report prepared by my
parliamentary colleagues in the Seanad Public Consultation Committee.
I want to outline some significant developments since we provided our
answers to the Committee’s written questions last February.
As I said at the start, I am in my new Justice and Equality portfolio for
just over two months. Reform of police accountability and oversight
mechanisms is my central priority. We are progressing a package of
measures aimed at restoring confidence in the performance, administration
and oversight of policing in Ireland. The Government has decided that a
Garda Síochána Authority will be created. Just very recently (on 1 July
last), the Government agreed the Heads and General Scheme of the Garda
Síochána (Amendment) Bill 2014 which proposes a number of reforms to the
remit, functions and operation of the Garda Síochána Ombudsman Commission
(GSOC).
The Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission Bill is nearing completion
of the enactment process – we finished all stages of parliamentary debate
last Friday and now await the President’s signature. There were a number
of significant amendments agreed to the Bill as it made its way through
both Houses of the Oireachtas (our national parliament), including that the
Director of the Commission will be appointed as Accounting Officer for the
Vote of the Commission, to further underpin its financial independence, and
a strengthening of text that relates to the duties of public bodies and the
Commission’s work with public bodies in improving standards of compliance.
We expect to be able to appoint a Chief Commissioner shortly – following a
Paris Principles-compliant process independent of Government – and formally
establish the new body in the autumn.
The Gender Recognition Bill is being progressed, with a view to publishing
it later this year. This will be a very significant reform for a
particularly vulnerable group of people. The revised General Scheme of the
Gender Recognition Bill – recently approved by the Government – includes an
amendment to the requirement for an applicant for gender recognition to be
18 years or more. This will mean that:
· a person aged 16 or 17 years may, with parent/guardian consent, apply
for a Court order exempting them from that requirement;
· the application by that 16 or 17 year old will be accompanied by
confirmation from the treating physician and an independent physician
that the person is sufficiently mature to make the application.
There have been a number of significant recent developments in relation to
access to lawful termination of pregnancy in Ireland. The Protection of
Life During Pregnancy Act 2013 has been enacted to regulate access to
lawful termination in accordance with the X case and the judgment of the
European Court of Human Rights in the A, B and C v Ireland case. The 2013
Act followed extensive consultation with stakeholders and detailed
examination in parliament. Article 40.3.3 of the Constitution, as
interpreted by the Supreme Court in Attorney General v X, provides that it
is lawful to terminate a pregnancy in Ireland if it is established as a
matter of probability that there is a real and substantial risk to the
life, as distinct from the health, of the mother, which can only be avoided
by a termination of the pregnancy. The purpose of the new legislation is
to confer procedural rights on a woman who believes she has a
life-threatening condition, so that she can have certainty as to whether
she requires this treatment or not.
The Act upholds the right to life of the unborn where practicable, and the
right to life of a pregnant woman whose life is threatened by her
pregnancy, as required by Article 40.3.3. The Act also creates procedures
which apply to the lawful termination of pregnancy. The objectives of these
procedures are firstly to ensure that, where lawful termination of
pregnancy is under consideration, the right to life of the unborn is
respected where practicable, and secondly to ensure that a woman can
ascertain by means of a clear process whether she is entitled to medical
treatment to which the Act applies.
A Guidance Document to assist health professionals in the implementation of
the Act has been prepared and will be published very shortly. The Guidance
Document identifies referral pathways to fulfil the requirement of the Act
and other relevant operational matters. It brings the necessary clarity
for medical professional to implement the revised legislative regime.
The Act is a very important recent development, but I also want to set our
position in its historical and constitutional context. Abortion has been
a highly politicised and divisive issue in Ireland for a number of decades.
The question of the right to life of the unborn and the extent of that
right has been the subject of five constitutional referenda held in 1983,
1992 and 2002. The issue of the extent of any entitlement to lawful
abortion has been extensively debated in the political sphere. Not only has
the Irish public and their political representatives considered the
domestic legal framework’s impact on the availability of abortion, but the
possible effect of international instruments signed by the State on this
question has also been the subject of extensive public debate. Thus, the
issue of abortion arose in the context of the ratification by the State of
the Treaty on European Union (“the Maastricht Treaty”) and the Treaty of
Lisbon. Each of these Treaties was voted upon by the Irish people,
consulted by way of referendum. The Government of Ireland negotiated a
protocol to the Maastricht Treaty, approved by the people by way of
Referendum ensuring that nothing in the Treaty on European Union would
affect the application in Ireland of Article 40.3.3 of the Constitution.
The question of abortion also was a factor impacting on the electorate’s
decision to vote against the ratification of the Lisbon Treaty. As a
result, the Irish Government sought and obtained certain guarantees from
the European Council, including guarantees to the effect that the Treaty of
Lisbon would not impact upon Article 40.3.3 of the Constitution. These
guarantees contributed to the “Yes” vote in favour of the ratification of
the Lisbon Treaty when the people were again consulted by way of referendum
in October 2009.
Accordingly, the constitutional and legislative framework in Ireland
reflects the nuanced and proportionate approach to the considered views of
the Irish Electorate on the profound moral question of the extent to which
the right to life of the unborn should be protected and balanced against
the rights of the mother.
I want to turn to the dreadful situation of the survivors of symphysiotomy.
The Government has decided to establish an ex-gratia scheme for the
survivors. The main advantage of this is that it offers a more flexible
solution in terms of the mix of pecuniary and non-pecuniary elements of any
award to applicants. This non adversarial approach will also ensure that
the women concerned will not have to pursue cases in the High Court or risk
the burden of an adverse costs order. This seems particularly desirable
given that a large percentage of the women are now aged between 75 and 91
years of age. I should also say that the women are receiving and will
continue to receive a range of health and social care supports from the
State.
These services include the provision of full General Medical Services
eligibility on medical grounds, independent clinical assessments/advice
(including, where requested a home assessment by an occupational therapist
or physiotherapist), the arrangement of appropriate fast tracked follow-up
care where possible, the provision of counselling, physiotherapy and home
help services and the arrangement of home modifications where necessary.
One of the elements of our existing employment equality framework that has
come in for criticism is section 37 of Employment Equality Act 1998.
Section 37 is the provision that allows religious-owned institutions to
discriminate against employees or prospective employees if that is
necessary to protect the religious ethos of the institution (i.e. a school
or hospital). When this provision was introduced into our law in 1998, the
Supreme Court had found, in an earlier judgment, that it represents a fair
balance between the competing rights of freedom of religion and the right
of employees to be protected from discrimination.
Experience subsequently has shown that the balance has not been a fair one
in practice – the provision has been described as having a chilling effect
on LGBT teachers in particular. We have a commitment in our Programme for
Government to ensure that
“people of non-faith or minority religious backgrounds and publically
identified LGBT people should not be deterred from training or taking
up employment as teachers in the State”.
Last year, the Government agreed to support a Private Members’ Bill that
seeks to restore a fair balance to the equation. Given the constitutional
implications, the Bill was of course examined very carefully by our
Attorney General’s Office. Just last week, we completed that scrutiny
process when the Government approved the Heads of a number of technical
amendments to the Bill. These amendments will be published later in the
year, with a view to the Bill being enacted before end-2014. The Bill as
published is essentially sound and the amendments are largely technical in
nature.
As members know, we are also reforming our institutional arrangements for
adjudication and redress in relation to employment and equality complaints.
I am glad to inform the Committee that the Workplace Relations Commission
Bill will be published very shortly.
The key point I want to draw to your attention is that persons with
potential claims under both employment equality legislation and equal
status legislation that they will, on the merger of the Equality Tribunal
into the new Workplace Relations Service, continue to be able to pursue
formal complaints before the new body and that these complaints will be
dealt with as effectively as by the Equality Tribunal. There will be no
change to rights under the Equal Status Acts as a result of the structural
reforms.
I am delighted to be able to inform the Committee that the Government has
decided to develop a national plan for the implementation of the UN Guiding
Principles on Business and Human Rights.
Turning to issues of gender equality, the Government accepts the need to
amend the language in Article 41.2 of the Constitution on the role of women
in the home. I have established a task force in my Department to look at
these issues, collaborating with other Departments and the Office of the
Attorney General as necessary, with a view to completing the task and
reporting back to Government by 31 October 2014 and to preparing for a
constitutional referendum at the earliest opportunity after that.
I want to mention the Civil Partnership and Certain Rights and Obligations
of Cohabitants Act 2010, which extended the application of domestic
violence orders to civil partners, and in 2011 we introduced further
reforms, including that a parent may now apply for a safety order against
the other parent of their child, even where the parents do not live
together and may never have lived together. This ensures that the full
protection of the law is available where access to a child is an occasion
of intimidation or even violence between disputing parents. In addition,
the protections of the Act are available on the same basis to unmarried
opposite-sex couples and same-sex couples who have not registered a civil
partnership; and couples who are not married or are not in a registered
civil partnership are no longer required to have lived together for a
particular minimum period of time before one of them can obtain a safety
order against the other. The Irish Naturalisation and Immigration Service
has published Immigration Guidelines for Victims of Domestic Violence. The
guidelines apply to any foreign national with an immigration status that is
dependent on another individual (Irish, EU or other citizens) and who is a
victim of domestic violence.
Members will recall that the Report of the Inter-Departmental Committee to
establish the facts of State involvement with the Magdalen Laundries – the
McAleese Report was published on 5 February 2013. The contents of the
report have been fully accepted by the Irish Government as a comprehensive
and objective report of the factual position prepared under the supervision
of an independent chairperson. On 19 February 2013, on foot of the
findings of the report, the Taoiseach made an apology in Dáil Éireann.
We have put in place on an ex gratia basis, a scheme of payments and
benefits for those women who were admitted to and worked in the Magdalen
Laundries, St Mary’s Training Centre, Stanhope Street, and House of Mercy
Training School, Summerhill, Wexford. The Office of the Ombudsman will
provide an independent appeals procedure in line with the seventh
recommendation of Mr Justice Quirke.
New legislation expected to be enacted this year, the Fines (Payment and
Recovery) Bill 2013, provides for a new fines recovery regime that will
ensure to the greatest extent possible that persons are not committed to
prison for an inability to pay fines. It provides for an attachment of
earnings order in most cases where a fine defaulter is in employment or in
receipt of an occupational pension. Provisions also allow for the making of
a recovery order (directing a receiver to recover the fine or assets to the
value of the fine) or a community service order as an alternative to
imprisonment for defaulting.
Turning to the issue of asylum, legislative reform aimed at establishing a
single application procedure in the area of international protection
remains a key priority which has been reconfirmed in the Statement of
Government Priorities 2014-2016 agreed last week. The intention is that a
Protection Bill will provide for the introduction of a single application
procedure for the investigation of all grounds for protection and any other
grounds presented by applicants seeking to remain in the State. This
re-organisation of the protection application processing framework in this
way should substantially simplify and streamline the existing arrangements
and reduce the length of time persons have to spend in direct provision.
The Government is also committed to ensuring that our policies in the area
of integration remain capable of responding to current and future
challenges which an increasingly diverse society presents Ireland in which
non Irish nationals now make up 12% of our population. That is why my
Department was tasked in March to lead a cross Government review of our
integration strategy in order to ensure that our approach to integration in
full keeping with the Government’s commitment to promote policies which
promote social inclusion, equality, diversity and the participation of
migrants in the economic, social, political and cultural lives of their
communities. My intention is that the review will be completed and the
Review Group will report to me in 2015.
It is equally important that we address the particular needs of some of the
more disadvantaged of our new communities. That applies in particular to
the Roma community in Ireland. On 1 July last, I published the Report of
the Inquiry by our Ombudsman for Children, Ms Emily Logan, into the
circumstances surrounding the removal of two Roma children from their
families. The Report highlighted the distress that was caused to these
children and their families for which I, the Acting Garda Commissioner and
our Prime Minister, Taoiseach Enda Kenny apologised.
I should stress that the Report has not found that the Gardaí involved were
motivated by conscious racism, or that there is evidence of
institutionalised ethnic profiling. Indeed, in relation to the
aforementioned Tallaght Case, the Report highlights the Garda Officer’s
extensive community policing work and his voluntary engagement with
minority communities.
The Report does make some important recommendations which will guard
against similar situations arising in the future and on how government
services might better cater for the needs of the Roma community which I on
behalf of the Government have accepted. I have established an
Implementation Group to oversee the actions being rolled-out in response to
the Report’s recommendations and to report to me by the end of the year.
These are some of the main changes and developments since we provided you
with our written replies. We have a lot of positive developments to report
on, but I have tried to keep my opening remarks short to allow for a full
engagement with you and to leave as much time as possible for your
questions.
Thank you Chairperson and members for your attention. I am looking forward
to our engagement this afternoon and tomorrow morning and to addressing
your questions and expanding on the necessarily concise material we have
provided already.
Related news
Time to get ambitious about the potential of remote work – Currie
The €8m investment in digital hubs contained in Budget 2021 is very welcome and shows more than ever the need…
14th October 2020New literacy strategy must put stronger emphasis on digital literacy - Naughton
The new Literacy and Numeracy strategy due to be updated at the end of 2020 must include a heavy emphasis…
4th January 2020Speech of An Taoiseach, Leo Varadkar T.D., at the 15th Fine Gael Presidential Dinner 2018
A theachtaí, a sheanadóirí, an Íar-Thaoiseach, a comhlachaí. Óiche maith agaibh. Good evening and welcome to the 15th Presidential Dinner.…
6th October 2018