The States Parties to
the present Protocol,
Noting
that the Charter of the United
Nations reaffirms faith in
fundamental human rights, in the
dignity and worth
of
the human person and in the equal
rights of men and women,
Also noting
that the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights Resolution 217
A (III).
proclaims that all human beings are
born free and equal in dignity and
rights and that everyone is entitled
to all the rights and freedoms set
forth therein, without distinction
of any kind, including distinction
based on sex,
Recalling
that the International Covenants on
Human Rights Resolution 2200 A (XXI),
annex. and
other international human rights
instruments prohibit discrimination
on the basis of sex,
Also recalling
the Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Discrimination against
Women4 (?the Convention?), in which
the States Parties thereto condemn
discrimination against women in all
its forms and agree to pursue by all
appropriate means and without delay
a policy of eliminating
discrimination against women,
Reaffirming
their determination to ensure the
full and equal enjoyment by women of
all human rights and fundamental
freedoms and to take effective
action to prevent violations of
these rights and freedoms,
Have agreed as
follows:
Article 1
A State Party to the
present Protocol (?State Party?)
recognizes the competence of the
Committee on the Elimination of
Discrimination against Women (?the
Committee?) to receive and consider
communications submitted in
accordance with article 2.
Article 2
Communications may be
submitted by or on behalf of
individuals or groups of
individuals, under the jurisdiction
of a State Party, claiming to be
victims of a violation of any of the
rights set forth in the Convention
by that State Party. Where a
communication is submitted on behalf
of individuals or groups of
individuals, this shall be with
their consent unless the author can
justify acting on their behalf
without such consent.
Article 3
Communications shall
be in writing and shall not be
anonymous. No communication shall be
received by the Committee if it
concerns a State Party to the
Convention that is not a party to
the present Protocol.
Article 4
1. The Committee
shall not consider a communication
unless it has ascertained that all
available domestic remedies have
been exhausted unless the
application of such remedies is
unreasonably prolonged or unlikely
to bring effective relief.
2. The Committee
shall declare a communication
inadmissible where:
(a) The same matter
has already been examined by the
Committee or has been or is being
examined under another procedure of
international investigation or
settlement;
(b) It is
incompatible with the provisions of
the Convention;
(c) It is manifestly
ill-founded or not sufficiently
substantiated;
(d) It is an abuse of
the right to submit a communication;
(e) The facts that
are the subject of the communication
occurred prior to the entry into
force of the present Protocol for
the State Party concerned unless
those facts continued after that
date.
Article 5
1. At any time after
the receipt of a communication and
before a determination on the merits
has been reached, the Committee may
transmit to the State Party
concerned for its urgent
consideration a request that the
State Party take such interim
measures as may be necessary to
avoid possible irreparable damage to
the victim or victims of the alleged
violation.
2. Where the
Committee exercises its discretion
under paragraph 1 of the present
article, this does not imply a
determination on admissibility or on
the merits of the communication.
Article 6
1. Unless the
Committee considers a communication
inadmissible without reference to
the State Party concerned, and
provided that the individual or
individuals consent to the
disclosure of their identity to that
State Party, the Committee shall
bring any communication submitted to
it under the present Protocol
confidentially to the attention of
the State Party concerned.
2. Within six months,
the receiving State Party shall
submit to the Committee written
explanations or statements
clarifying the matter and the
remedy, if any, that may have been
provided by that State Party.
Article 7
1. The Committee
shall consider communications
received under the present Protocol
in the light of all information made
available to it by or on behalf of
individuals or groups of individuals
and by the State Party concerned,
provided that this information is
transmitted to the parties
concerned.
2. The Committee
shall hold closed meetings when
examining communications under the
present Protocol.
3. After examining a
communication, the Committee shall
transmit its views on the
communication, together with its
recommendations, if any, to the
parties concerned.
4. The State Party
shall give due consideration to the
views of the Committee, together
with its recommendations, if any,
and shall submit to the Committee,
within six months, a written
response, including information on
any action taken in the light of the
views and recommendations of the
Committee.
5. The Committee may
invite the State Party to submit
further information about any
measures the State Party has taken
in response to its views or
recommendations, if any, including
as deemed appropriate by the
Committee, in the State Party?s
subsequent reports under article 18
of the Convention.
Article 8
1. If the Committee
receives reliable information
indicating grave or systematic
violations by a State Party of
rights set forth in the Convention,
the Committee shall invite that
State Party to cooperate in the
examination of the information and
to this end to submit observations
with regard to the information
concerned.
2. Taking into
account any observations that may
have been submitted by the State
Party concerned as well as any other
reliable information available to
it, the Committee may designate one
or more of its members to conduct an
inquiry and to report urgently to
the Committee. Where warranted and
with the consent of the State Party,
the inquiry may include a visit to
its territory.
3. After examining
the findings of such an inquiry, the
Committee shall transmit these
findings to the State Party
concerned together with any comments
and recommendations.
4. The State Party
concerned shall, within six months
of receiving the findings, comments
and recommendations transmitted by
the Committee, submit its
observations to the Committee.
5. Such an inquiry
shall be conducted confidentially
and the cooperation of the State
Party shall be sought at all stages
of the proceedings.
Article 9
1. The Committee may
invite the State Party concerned to
include in its report under article
18 of the Convention details of any
measures taken in response to an
inquiry conducted under article 8 of
the present Protocol.
2. The Committee may,
if necessary, after the end of the
period of six months referred to in
article 8.4, invite the State Party
concerned to inform it of the
measures taken in response to such
an inquiry.
Article 10
1. Each State Party
may, at the time of signature or
ratification of the present Protocol
or accession thereto, declare that
it does not recognize the competence
of the Committee provided for in
articles 8 and 9.
2. Any State Party
having made a declaration in
accordance with paragraph 1 of the
present article may, at any time,
withdraw this declaration by
notification to the
Secretary-General.
Article 11
A State Party shall
take all appropriate steps to ensure
that individuals under its
jurisdiction are not subjected to
ill treatment or intimidation as a
consequence of communicating with
the Committee pursuant to the
present Protocol.
Article 12
The Committee shall
include in its annual report under
article 21 of the Convention a
summary of its activities under the
present Protocol.
Article 13
Each State Party
undertakes to make widely known and
to give publicity to the Convention
and the present Protocol and to
facilitate access to information
about the views and recommendations
of the Committee, in particular, on
matters involving that State Party.
Article 14
The Committee shall
develop its own rules of procedure
to be followed when exercising the
functions conferred on it by the
present Protocol.
Article 15
1. The present
Protocol shall be open for signature
by any State that has
signed,
ratified or acceded to the
Convention.
2. The present
Protocol shall be subject to
ratification by any State that has
ratified or acceded to the
Convention. Instruments of
ratification shall be deposited with
the Secretary-General of the United
Nations.
3. The present
Protocol shall be open to accession
by any State that has ratified or
acceded to the Convention.
4. Accession shall be
effected by the deposit of an
instrument of accession with the
Secretary-General of the United
Nations.
Article 16
1. The present
Protocol shall enter into force
three months after the date of the
deposit with the Secretary-General
of the United Nations of the tenth
instrument of ratification or
accession.
2. For each State
ratifying the present Protocol or
acceding to it after its entry into
force, the present Protocol shall
enter into force three months after
the date of the deposit of its own
instrument of ratification or
accession
Article 17
No reservations to
the present Protocol shall be
permitted.
Article 18
1. Any State Party
may propose an amendment to the
present Protocol and file it with
the Secretary-General of the United
Nations. The Secretary-General shall
thereupon communicate any proposed
amendments to the States Parties
with a request that they notify her
or him whether they
favour a
conference of States Parties for the
purpose of considering and voting on
the proposal. In the event that at
least one third of the States
Parties favour
such a conference, the
Secretary-General shall convene the
conference under the auspices of the
United Nations. Any amendment
adopted by a majority of the States
Parties present and voting at the
conference shall be submitted to the
General Assembly of the United
Nations for approval.
2. Amendments shall
come into force when they have been
approved by the General Assembly of
the United Nations and accepted by a
two-thirds majority of the States
Parties to the present Protocol in
accordance with their respective
constitutional processes.
3. When amendments
come into force, they shall be
binding on those States Parties that
have accepted them, other States
Parties still being bound by the
provisions of the present Protocol
and any earlier amendments that they
have accepted.
Article 19
1. Any State Party
may denounce the present Protocol at
any time by written notification
addressed to the Secretary-General
of the United Nations. Denunciation
shall take effect six months after
the date of receipt of the
notification by the
Secretary-General.
2. Denunciation shall
be without prejudice to the
continued application of the
provisions of the present Protocol
to any communication submitted under
article 2 or any inquiry initiated
under article 8 before the effective
date of denunciation.
Article 20
The Secretary-General
of the United Nations shall inform
all States of:
(a) Signatures,
ratifications and accessions under
the present Protocol;
(b) The date of entry
into force of the present Protocol
and of any amendment under article
18;
(c) Any denunciation
under article 19.
Article 21
1. The present
Protocol, of which the Arabic,
Chinese, English, French, Russian
and Spanish texts are equally
authentic, shall be deposited in the
archives of the United Nations.
2. The
Secretary-General of the United
Nations shall transmit certified
copies of the present Protocol to
all States referred to in article 25
of the Convention.