Senate human rights panel notes progress
In its annual briefing for the 2025-26 parliamentary year, the Senate Functional Committee on Human Rights outlined notable gains in oversight, legislative reform, and protection of vulnerable communities, highlighting a more robust approach to safeguarding constitutional rights.
From early 2025 to early 2026, the committee convened 11 sessions, reviewed eight referrals from the Senate, and submitted six reports to the House.
The leadership emphasized continued focus on defending the rights of women, children, minorities, workers, detainees and other at‑risk groups, while reinforcing mechanisms for accountability, improving law implementation, and strengthening coordination among institutions addressing human rights issues.
Crucial concerns noted included child protection, gender-based violence, harassment in the workplace, abuses in custodial settings, and broader public safety matters. The panel also pursued detailed briefings from federal and provincial authorities to ensure timely action and transparency.
Child welfare remained a central priority, with case reviews covering kidnapping, trafficking, and violence against minors, alongside assessments of how relevant agencies were performing to boost preventive and investigative capacities.
Progress was also reported on key legislative items, including deliberations around amendments linked to the National Commission on the Rights of the Child, established in 2023.