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A - 88.84. Continue with its efforts to promote and protect the right to work, the right to health and the
right to education of its people in order to maintain an adequate standard of living for all (Brunei
Darussalam);
A - 88.85. Continue its on-going positive efforts for the promotion and protection of economic, social
and cultural rights, and especially the priority given to health and education (Cuba);
A - 88.86. Ensure equal access to education, social security, health care and economic opportunities
for women, including Muslim women and women entering early marriages (Slovenia); 1
A - 88.87. Continue to address remaining social inequalities and unequal access to opportunities and
services by the poor and the marginalized (Bhutan);
A - 88.88. Continue improving the health security system to further minimize discrepancies and to
provide equitable access (Sri Lanka);
A - 88.89. Continue to develop the health system so as to strengthen the enjoyment of the right to
health in all segments of society (Saudi Arabia);
A - 88.90. Address the problems of maternal mortality and child malnutrition in remote areas of the
country (Slovenia);
A - 88.91. Continue enhancing the quality of the access to education, including equal access to
education for all children (Sri Lanka);
A - 88.92. Continue efforts to strengthen the right of education for all, focusing on poor populations in
rural and distant areas (Saudi Arabia);
A - 88.93. Take measures with a view to preventing and combating of arbitrary arrest, violence, abuse
and exploitation of migrants (Brazil);
A - 88.94. Strengthen law enforcement in order to provide adequate protection, guarantee the
minimum wage and work safety, and to ensure equal access to health services and justice for migrant
workers (Indonesia);
A - 88.95. Continue to focus its efforts on ensuring full protection of the human rights for all migrant
and foreign workers, particularly to enhance their safety and welfare (Myanmar);
A - 88.96. Continue its efforts to promote and protect rights of migrants (Bangladesh);
A - 88.97. Continue efforts in protecting the interests of migrant workers, including through
appropriate legislative measures (Nepal);
A - 88.98. Continue to strengthen cooperation with the High Commissioner for Refugees as well as
donors and non-governmental organizations in order to provide necessary humanitarian aid and
fundamental rights’ protection to the displaced people hosted by the Kingdom of Thailand (Qatar);\
A - 88.99. Enable the participation of civil society and NGOs also in the follow-up process to this
review (Austria);
A - 88.100. Translate into Thai and make public the recommendations received during its UPR and
broadly engage civil society in the process of follow-up and implementation of accepted
recommendations (Canada).
89. The following recommendations will be examined by Thailand, which will provide
responses in due time, but no later than the nineteenth session of the Human Rights Council
in March 2012:
A - 89.1.Study the possibility of ratifying the International Convention on the Protection of All Persons
from Enforced Disappearance (CED); the Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR-OP2); the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture (OP-
CAT); the Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR-OP1);
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