The Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission (‘the Commission’) welcomes the detailed examination of Ireland by the UN Committee against Torture (‘the UN Committee’) which took place in Geneva in July, and the associated “concluding observations” published on the 11th August, which offer detailed recommendations to the State.
The Commission, as Ireland’s national human rights and equality institution, appointed by the President and accountable to the Oireachtas, submitted an independent report to the UN Committee to inform the expert UN Committee’s assessment of Ireland under the Convention against Torture. The Commission also travelled to Geneva in July to appear before the UN Committee on its independent monitoring of the State.
Improvements identified by the UN Committee since Ireland’s first examination in 2011, include; establishing, resourcing and ensuring the independence of the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission; the closure of St Patrick’s institution for the detention of juveniles; providing additional protections for victims of crime; developing a new strategy on domestic violence; legislating to criminalise female genital mutilation (FGM); reforming the law on international protection, and adopting legislation on capacity.
The UN ‘concluding observations’ however reflect crucial gaps in Ireland’s compliance with the UN Convention against Torture highlighted by the Commission’s monitoring, these include:
On Ireland’s non-ratification of the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture (OPCAT) – The failure, after almost a decade to ratify OPCAT, exposes gaps in the national preventive monitoring of places where people are deprived of their liberty, including in Garda stations.
- The Commission welcomes the UN Committee recommendation that the State ratify OPCAT and establish a National Preventative Mechanism.
- The UN Committee also echoed the Commission’s concerns regarding the absence of a statutory right to legal representation during police interrogation
- The Commission welcomes the clear direction from the UN Committee to ensure that detention of asylum seekers should be established in legislation as a measure of last resort, and for as short a period as possible, and that those detained for immigration purposes should be separated from convicted and remand prisoners.
- The Commission has acted under its legal powers as amicus curiae (friend of the court) in four cases involving allegations by children that they have been detained in conditions amounting to solitary confinement at the Oberstown Detention Centre. The UN Committee has recommended that the State: ‘Abolish solitary confinement of minors as a disciplinary measure, strengthen existing and develop new educational and rehabilitation programmes aimed at encouraging pro-social behaviour and improve extra-regime activities for minors’ (para 18(d)).
- The Commission welcomes the State’s commitment to invite the UN Special Rapporteur on the Promotion of Truth, Justice, Reparation and Guarantees of Non-Recurrence in seeking to finally secure accountability and redress for past wrongs. Cognisant of the age of many of the survivors of historical abuse, early interaction with the UN Special Rapporteur is recommended.
- The Commission, following on from its 2016 national consultation on the rights of women, emphasised the need for protections and supports for victims of gender-based violence, including an explicit offence of domestic violence to be established in law, and to ensure that victims of domestic violence are able to access justice and protection in a timely way.
- The Commission has emphasised in its engagement with the UN Committee the need for Ireland’s ratification of the UNCRPD. With ratification promised, the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission has been identified as a formal national monitoring mechanism, in addition to the Commission having an advisory committee made up of people with lived experience of disabilities.