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EIGHT MINUTE DATING NEAR BANGUI CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC

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U.S. Department of State Country Report on Human Rights Practices 2005 - Central
African Republic Navigation menu U.S. Department of State Country Report on
Human Rights Practices 2005 - Central African Republic Take an IELTS test in or
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The government took some significant steps to combat corruption. For example in
July the government created judicial structures within the public prosecutor's
office of a Bangui court tribunal de grande instance to conduct a targeted
campaign against embezzlement, money laundering, and other forms of financial
fraud. In August the government began publishing periodic declarations by
government officials of their personal assets and wealth; the declarations were
intended to prevent embezzlement and other forms of government corruption.

According to the constitution, the president, government ministers, members of
the National Assembly, and judges are required to declare publicly their
personal assets. On September 15, the minister of mines indefinitely suspended
the granting of mining permits for gold and diamonds and prohibited foreign
nationals from traveling in mining zones. The prohibition followed the
government's discovery in July and August of numerous irregularities in mining
zones, as well as the presence of numerous foreigners, many of whom did not have
mining permits.

The government-owned and independent media began facilitating a public
information campaign to underline corruption's effects and solicit anonymous
public collaboration in the investigation, which was intended to measure
corruption's severity and scope, as well as the harm it had done to the
country's development. In October the government suspended without pay three
ministers following a probe into government employee salaries.

The probe was intended to reduce the country's inflated public sector wage bill
and resolve some of the government's salary arrears. The three suspended
officials — the ministers for communications, tourism, and public works — were
suspected of falsely claiming pay, bonuses, or benefits. The suspensions came a
week after the government published a salary census of approximately 1,
employees.

The census exposed 1, ghost workers, or civil servants illegally receiving
salaries. Several ghost workers were using fake documents and had no connection
with public service. Prime Minister Dote announced in a radio address that civil
servants caught receiving illegal salaries would lose three months of pay and
have to appear before a public sector disciplinary board, which could forward
their cases to a court of law. By year's end a civil service disciplinary
commission had not yet decided whether to terminate their employment and forward
their case to a court.

During the year the government took some steps to monitor timber exports and the
payment of taxes on forestry products, and to increase transparency in the
allocation of timber industry permits. The government also continued to work
with the IMF to further improve tax collection on timber products. The law
provides for access by journalists to "all sources of information, within the
limits of the law"; however, it does not specifically mention government
documents or government information, and no mention is made of access by the
general public.

Furthermore, the government was often unable or unwilling to provide
information, and lack of access to information continued to be a problem for
journalists and the general public.


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE COUNTRY REPORT ON HUMAN RIGHTS PRACTICES 2005 - CENTRAL
AFRICAN REPUBLIC

WiFi available in all areas. Central African Republiclandlocked country located
in the centre of Africa. Some human rights observers said they believed that
many of the armed groups were comprised of the same rebels and mercenaries,
including Chadian ex-combatants, who helped Bozize seize power in the coup;
these observers said that because Bozize had been unable to pay the
ex-combatants what they considered a proper compensation after he seized power,
the ex-combatants were collecting payments from civilians by force. One OCRB
detainee had a three-day-old wound from his shoulder to his wrist that was
visibly very infected and received medical attention only after international
visitors convinced the guards of the risk of death. The only way to leave a
review is to first make a booking. Corruption continued to contribute to the
country's incapacity to pay more than 45 months of government salary arrears,
which the International Monetary Fund IMF and local human rights activists said
was a major threat to the country's security, stability, and advancement of
human rights. Detainees were usually informed of the charges levied against
them; however, many waited in prison for several months before seeing a judge.
Approximately 10 percent of the country's population had disabilities, eight
minute dating near Bangui Central African Republic due to polio. Corruption
among detention center guards, who had not been paid in months, was rife.
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government did not take effective action to punish abusers, and impunity
remained a severe problem. On December 2, the minister of communication banned
the diffusion by media of songs, programs, or articles deemed to have a
"misogynist character" or to disrespect women. One case involving three persons
was deferred and still under investigation as of August.

Furthermore, several years of political and economic instability and conflict
have made information difficult to collect, even for the government,
particularly in the countryside. Information on the humanitarian situation, for
example, was hard to come by and sometimes contradictory. Several domestic and
international human rights groups generally operated without government
restriction, investigating and publishing in press releases their findings on
human rights cases.

Government officials were somewhat responsive to their views. In general, local
NGOs were weak, although there were a few that were active and had a sizable
impact on the promotion of human rights.


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Some local NGOs, including the LCDH, the Human Rights Observatory, the
Association Against Torture, and the Association of Women Jurists actively
monitored human rights problems; worked with journalists to draw attention to
human rights violations, including those allegedly committed by the army;
pleaded individual cases of human rights abuses before the courts; and engaged
in efforts to raise the public's awareness of citizens' legal rights.

In addition, many members of civil society monitored the conduct of national
elections in March and May. The destruction or loss of scarce resources, such as
automobiles and computers, during fighting and looting in and limited local
human rights NGOs, although they continued gradually to rebuild their capacity
during the year.

The potential impact of local human rights NGOs continued to be weakened by the
failure of most members to pay membership dues and the noticeable dearth of
international development organizations and foreign diplomatic missions, which
once provided them with training and some financial support. For these reasons,
the activities of local human rights NGOs were quite modest in scope and limited
almost exclusively to Bangui. Several NGOs alleged that the government rigged
run-off elections in May to prevent Tiangaye from winning a National Assembly
seat see section 3.

During the year human rights organizations and some political parties called for
the trial of Chadian combatants accused of crimes, especially those committed
during the rebellion that culminated in a coup in International human rights
NGOs and international organizations operated in the country without
interference from the government; however, there were very few operating in the
country.

Due to insecurity caused by unidentified armed groups in many parts of the
country, the activities of international groups were limited to Bangui and
sometimes a few other locations. Humanitarian workers reportedly did not operate
at all in the north. Access was so limited during the year that a UNDP
humanitarian specialist said that humanitarian workers "have no idea what is
going on in 95 percent of the CAR. During the year BONUCA's human rights section
continued to actively monitor human rights practices, assist the government in
capacity building, sensitize the public to human rights, conduct visits to
prisons and detention centers, and conduct human rights training for hundreds of
government security agents.

BONUCA continued to receive complaints of killings and other violations
committed by security forces, which it researched and documented. It worked very
closely with the Ministry of Justice, often visiting the public prosecutor of
the republic to submit for judicial investigation complaints it received about
security agents. On June 18, UNDP and government officials began collecting
weapons from ex-combatants and reintegrating thousands of them into civilian
life.

In Bangui alone, the disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration DDR program
had demobilized more than 1, ex-combatants, including women, and reinserted more
than ex-combatants by the end of August. The program expected to conduct DDR for
more than 7 thousand ex-combatants by the time of its conclusion. The program
had collected more than small arms, as well as numerous munitions, rocket
launchers, grenades, and land mines by the end of August.

Although the exact number of small arms in the country remained unknown, the
government's estimate of 50 thousand small arms circulating nationally, beyond
its control, could have underestimated the scale of the problem, according to a
small arms survey published during the year by the Graduate Institute for
International Studies in Geneva, Switzerland.

The High Commission of Human Rights and Good Governance, which is attached to
the presidency, conducted human rights training for members of the security
forces. Each week, the commission received and investigated an average of 10
citizen complaints of human rights violations committed by members of the
government, and it sometimes forwarded cases to the Ministry of Justice.

In addition, during the year it conducted more than 30 investigations of
government ministries to combat human rights violations, including corruption.
During the last four months of the year, the commission conducted a campaign to
combat the use of and physically remove illegal road barriers constructed by
members of the military.


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE COUNTRY REPORT ON HUMAN RIGHTS PRACTICES 2005 - CENTRAL
AFRICAN REPUBLIC

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Having approximately 30 persons employed in its Bangui headquarters and in the
countryside, the commission did not have adequate resources and lacked the means
to conduct proper training of its investigators. Some human rights observers
criticized the commission for its lack of independence and its lack of
effectiveness in reducing impunity in the security forces. In an interview
during the year, the head of the commission rejected these criticisms and said
that impunity was not a problem. However, he also said that the OCRB continued
to commit extrajudicial killings during the year because they were effective in
deterring violent crime and were supported by the general public due to a lack
of confidence in the judicial system's ability to punish criminals.

The Human Rights Commission HRC in the National Assembly sought to strengthen
the capacity of the legislature and other government institutions to advance
human rights. Among their human rights priorities, HRC members said they aimed
to stop extrajudicial killings by the OCRB, improve conditions in detention
centers, reduce prolonged detentions without trial, fight corruption, expand
women's and minorities' rights, and combat the worst forms of child labor.

The commission said it suffered from a severe lack of resources. The prosecutor
said an analysis would be carried out to determine whether to initiate an
investigation; however, although the ICC had collected information during the
year, he had not made a determination by year's end. Local and international
human rights groups accused the government of "dragging its feet" and not
cooperating fully with the ICC's prosecutor, and they criticized the government
for not incorporating into national law provisions related to the ICC's founding
statute to punish war criminals and perpetrators of crimes against humanity.

According to local and international human rights NGOs, between and , pro-Bozize
rebels and soldiers and rebels loyal to then President Patasse committed war
crimes and crimes against humanity. Rebel and loyalist fighters committed
summary executions, systematic rape, and widespread looting. As a result of the
fighting in and , there were more than registered cases of rapes of women and
registered cases of sodomized men. Hospitals had lists of individuals injured
and killed during the fighting in the capital, including women and children.

Government officials said an investigation had been made difficult by the
insecurity still present in the north. Participants included local NGOs, male
and female rape victims, judges, members of the National Assembly, members of
the security forces, international legal experts, journalists, and other
citizens. Many victims in attendance spoke of social ostracism that had torn
their families apart and called for the government to provide them with free
psychological, medical, and social care and protection from the alleged
perpetrators they had accused of rape.

Following the seminar, unidentified individuals made telephone threats, some of
them death threats, against four persons who participated in the seminar and
told them not to cooperate with the FIDH in its attempts to collect information
for the ICC. The constitution stipulates that all persons are equal before the
law without regard to wealth, race, or sex; however, the government did not
enforce these provisions effectively, and significant discrimination existed.

Although the penal Code does not specifically mention spousal abuse, it
prohibits violence against any person, and penalties could consist of up to 10
years' imprisonment; however, domestic violence against women, including wife
beating, reportedly was common.

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Inadequate data made it impossible to quantify the extent of domestic violence.
Spousal abuse was considered a civil matter unless the injury was severe.
According to the Association of Women Jurists, a Bangui-based NGO specializing
in the defense of women's and children's rights, victims of domestic abuse
seldom reported incidents to authorities, and when incidents were addressed, it
was done within the family or local community.

The courts tried very few cases of spousal abuse, although litigants cited these
abuses during divorce trials and civil suits. Some women reportedly tolerated
abuse to retain financial security for themselves and their children. The
government did not address this problem during the year. The law prohibits rape,
and rape remained a problem. The law does not specifically prohibit spousal
rape. Rape is punishable by imprisonment with hard labor, although the law does
not specify a minimum sentence, and judges decided on the length of a prison
term to be served by a perpetrator.

Police sometimes arrested men on charges of rape; however, the social stigma
induced many families to avoid formal court action. During the year members of
the security forces continued to commit rape, including collective rape, often
in school buildings at night; however, there were fewer reports that security
forces raped women than in the previous year see section 1. Although the law
prohibits FGM, which is punishable by up to 10 years' imprisonment, girls
continued to be subjected to this traditional practice in certain rural areas,
and, to a lesser degree, in Bangui.

According to the Association of Women Jurists, anecdotal evidence suggested that
fewer girls and women had undergone FGM as a result of efforts to sensitize
women to the dangers of the practice. The law does not prohibit prostitution;
however, the law prohibits the incitement of someone to prostitution and the act
of profiting from an individual's prostitution, and prostitution existed during
the year. The law designates a fine and imprisonment for three months to one
year for those found guilty of procurement of individuals for sexual purposes
including assisting in prostitution.

For cases involving a minor, the penalty of imprisonment is between one and five
years.


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Some young girls reportedly engaged in prostitution for economic reasons,
particularly in urban centers. The practice had reportedly grown more common
since The law prohibits sexual harassment; however, the government did not
effectively enforce the law, and sexual harassment was a problem. The law does
not discriminate against women in inheritance and property rights, but a number
of discriminatory customary laws often prevailed, and women's statutory
inheritance rights often were not respected, particularly in rural areas.

The family code further strengthened women's rights, particularly in the courts;
however, access to the judicial system remained very limited throughout the
country. Women were treated as inferior to men both economically and socially.
Single, divorced, or widowed women, including those with children, were not
considered to be heads of households.

Only men were entitled to family subsidies from the government. Women in rural
areas generally suffered more discrimination than women in urban areas. There
were no accurate statistics on the percentage of female wage earners. Women's
access to educational opportunities and to jobs, particularly at higher levels
in their professions or in government service, was limited. Polygyny is legal,
although this practice faced growing resistance among educated women.

The law allows a man to take up to four wives, but a prospective husband must
indicate at the time of the first marriage contract whether he intends to take
additional wives. In practice many couples never married formally because men
could not afford the traditional bride payment. The family code authorizes the
use of bride payments, but it neither requires them nor sets a minimum payment
amount. Women who were educated and financially independent tended to seek
monogamous marriages. Divorce is legal and can be initiated by either partner.

The Association of Women Jurists advised women of their legal rights and how
best to defend them and filed complaints with the government regarding human
rights violations.


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Contents:

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On average, women now marry at In addition to the rising number of marriages in
recent years, data from Destatis also shows that divorce rates are steadily
declining.

Marriages also appear to last longer now than in previous decades. T hose who
split up these days have been together on average nearly 15 years, while couples
who separated 20 years ago stayed together on average 12 years. As previously
mentioned, same-sex marriage became legal in Germany in October Since then, more
than 10, same-sex couples have tied the knot.

According to a survey by German press agency DPA, more than 10, same-sex couples
got married in the first year after the law changed.


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Of these couples, 1, held their wedding in Cologne, which had proven to be
particularly popular for same-sex weddings. You can also discover the most LGBT
friendly countries for expats. To marry in Germany, you have to be at least 18
years old. If you or your partner is not German, there are a few extra things to
bear in mind.

You must have been living in the locality for at least 21 days before visiting
the town hall to give your intention to marry. Foreigners who are not from the
EU cannot usually get married in Germany on a visitor visa. Instead, they will
need a visa that is valid for three to six months. If they are marrying a German
citizen, they can normally obtain a residence permit.

To begin the marriage process you need to submit an application at the local
registry office standesamt located in the town hall rathaus , and give notice of
the impending marriage Antrag auf Eheschlielung. You then need to make an
appointment at the town hall and attend a meeting; here they will explain the
process and documentation you need to submit.

Ideally, both partners should attend the meeting in person. However, if one
partner is unable to attend, the other may go on their own; as long as the
absent partner has given them power of attorney to act on their behalf. Make
sure to check the opening hours before you visit, as offices are often only open
for a couple of hours during the week. After approval, you must marry within six
months; otherwise, you will have to start the process all over again.

The documentation that you must submit in order to get married in Germany varies
according to the region. During the demonstrations 18 demonstrators and two
police officers were injured. Harassment of foreigners and members of racial
minorities such as Roma remained a problem throughout the country. Hostility
focused on the increasing number of asylum seekers, refugees, and migrants from
the Middle East and Africa.

According to the NGO, most of the incidents occurred in contact with public
authorities such as job centers, educational institutions, and healthcare
centers. Persons of foreign origin faced particular difficulties finding
housing. FADA reported cases of landlords denying rental apartments to persons
not of ethnic-German origin, particularly of Turkish and African origin, in
order to maintain a majority ethnic-German population in certain neighborhoods.
In May the food bank announced new membership rules, stating that individuals
who were handicapped, single parents, single and older than 50, and families
with children would receive preference.


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In June a court in Hagen, North Rhine-Westphalia, sentenced a year-old man to a
two-year suspended sentence for grievous bodily harm. According to the ruling,
police cannot conduct identity checks solely based on skin color. He claimed he
was wrongfully diagnosed as having mental disabilities when he entered
elementary school in Bavaria.

The law prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender
identity. In December parliament passed a law allowing for a third sex marker on
government forms for intersex individuals. The law also allows intersex
individuals to update retroactively their first name and sex marker on their
birth certificates. Individuals are required to present a medical certificate
when electing to use the intersex sex marker. Activists expressed concern that
the new sex marker would apply only to those with a medical certificate and to
intersex, and not transgender, individuals.

Groups of men reportedly drove up to the victims, threw objects at them, and
threatened them with knives. The Bremen Police State Protection unit
investigated. The chair of the Fatih Mosque, Zekai Gumus, called on the Bremen
senate and authorities to solve the crime, noting police had not identified
suspects responsible for a attack on the mosque. In July in Berlin an unknown
person or persons poured a flammable substance over two homeless individuals
while they were sleeping and set them on fire. Both men suffered severe burns.
Civil society organizations continued to report discriminatory identity checks
by police on members of ethnic and religious minorities.

Rape and Domestic Violence : The law criminalizes various forms of rape,
regardless of the gender of a victim. The law also criminalizes custodial rape
of a minor younger than age The law does not deny spousal rape, but no court has
ever ruled on such a case, except in situations of marital breakdown i. The law
mandates a minimum sentence of five years in prison. In the past, courts
interpreted the law to mean that physical resistance by the victim is necessary
to find that a sexual encounter was rape. Domestic violence is also a crime for
which victims may seek restraining orders.


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NGOs and legal experts pointed out a lack of training for judges, prosecutors,
and lawyers about sexual crimes and victims. Rape and domestic violence are
believed to be significantly underreported crimes, although no recent data are
available. Victims of abuse by domestic partners, spouses, and former spouses
could receive protection at shelters. Sexual Harassment : The law does not
criminalize sexual harassment but includes measures to identify companies that
fail to prevent it. Prefectural labor offices and the Ministry of Health, Labor,
and Welfare provided these companies with advice, guidance, and recommendations.

Companies that fail to comply with government guidance may be publicly
identified, but the government has not publicized any company for sexual
harassment since , when a private hospital was identified for dismissing a woman
employee due to pregnancy. Sexual harassment in the workplace persisted. In the
first survey of its kind, in the ministry reported that 30 percent of women in
full- and part-time employment reported being sexually harassed at work.

Among full-time workers, the figure was 35 percent. In April a senior career
official at the Finance Ministry resigned after allegations that he sexually
harassed a female journalist and following public criticism that the ministry
initially mishandled the matter. The government has since released a set of
measures to prevent sexual harassment, including requiring all senior national
government officials to take mandatory training courses, as well as setting up a
consultation mechanism in each ministry and agency where the general public can
report sexual harassment see section 7.

From January to October, seven individuals, both female and male, who were
involuntarily sterilized from to under a policy that targeted people with
disabilities under the defunct Eugenic Protection Law, sought damages from the
government. The Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare estimated approximately
25, people underwent sterilization surgeries under that law.

Discrimination : The law prohibits gender discrimination and generally provides
women the same rights as men. The Gender Equality Bureau in the Cabinet Office
continued to examine policies and monitor developments. Despite these policies,
NGOs continued to allege that implementation of antidiscrimination measures was
insufficient, pointing to discriminatory provisions in the law, unequal
treatment of women in the labor market see section 7. Tokyo Medical University
admitted in August that it had deliberately altered entrance exam scores for
more than a decade to restrict the number of female students and ensure more men
became doctors.

In response, MEXT undertook a study of all medical universities in Japan, 81 in
total, to examine if any others had altered entrance exam results to limit
female students. MEXT concluded that 10 medical universities had altered
entrance exam results to limit female students and instructed the universities
to rectify the inappropriate practice. The law requires registration within 14
days after in-country birth or within three months after birth abroad, and these
deadlines were generally met.

Individuals were allowed to register births after the deadline but were required
to pay a fine. The law requires birth entries in the family registry to specify
whether a child was born in or out of wedlock, but the law no longer denies full
inheritance rights to children born out of wedlock.

Child Abuse : Reports of child abuse increased due to increased public
awareness, according to the Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare. Sexual abuse
of children by teachers was reported.


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Child assistance experts advocated the need for MEXT to actively share
information on teachers involved in child molestation with the police to prevent
further victimization of children in schools. The law provides for a simplified
process to inspect homes where child abuse is suspected; requires child welfare
offices to have legal, psychological, and medical experts on staff; allows more
municipalities to have child welfare offices; and raised the age of eligibility
for staying at public homes.

Early and Forced Marriage : The law stipulates that to marry, the male partner
must be age 18 or older and the female partner 16 or older. The Act to Partially
Amend the Civil Code, which will create parity between men and women for the
legal age to marry, setting it at 18 for both sexes, was promulgated in June and
will come into force in Sexual Exploitation of Children : Child prostitution is
illegal, with penalties including prison sentences or fines.

Statutory rape laws criminalize sexual intercourse with a girl younger than age
13, notwithstanding her consent. Additionally, national law and local ordinances
comprehensively address sexual abuse of minors. Possession of child pornography
is a crime. The country was a site for the production of child pornography and
the exploitation of children by traffickers.

In January police arrested and charged the head of an entertainment industry
job-placement agency and the operator of a pornographic video-production company
for inducing women and girls to engage in sexual intercourse for the purpose of
profit—the first application of this criminal statute in more than 80 years. No
law addresses the unfettered availability of sexually explicit cartoons, comics,
and video games, some of which depicted scenes of violent sexual abuse and the
rape of children.

No official statistics of the Jewish population in the country were available.
According to a Jewish community representative, approximately households are
active members of the community. The representative reported there were rare
protests by a handful of individuals that involved anti-Semitic speech. The
Basic Act for Persons with Disabilities prohibits discrimination against persons
with physical, intellectual, mental, or other disabilities affecting body and
mind and bars infringement of their rights and interests on the grounds of
disability in the public and private sectors.

The law requires the public sector to provide reasonable accommodations and the
private sector to make best efforts in employment, education, access to health
care, or the provision of other services. The laws do not stipulate remedies for
persons with disabilities who experience discriminatory acts nor do they
establish penalties for noncompliance. Other law mandates that the government
and private companies hire minimum proportions 2 percent of persons with
disabilities including mental disabilities or be fined.

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BANGUI, Central African Republic – Eight months after Muslim rebels of weak
government control – outdated land laws dating back to