It is a testimony to how far we are from realising the dream of smart
cities that not even 1% of India’s 789 universities, 37,204 colleges
and 11,443 stand-alone
higher education institutions are disabled-friendly. This startling
statistic was revealed by a forum for disabled students. Since 1995,
when the government
made it mandatory for educational institutions receiving aid from the
State to reserve 4% seats for people with disability, there has been
little improvement
in the situation. Despite the enactment of the Right to Education Act
in 2009, which promised free and compulsory primary education to every
child in the
country, less than 0.1% of India’s 2.68 crore people with disabilities
are enrolled in schools. As they move from primary to secondary and
higher education,
the figure drops to a dismal .01%.
The dearth of infrastructure that facilitates access for the
physically challenged — ramps, railings and accessible wash rooms – is
just one of the reasons
which prevent them from pursuing their studies. There is the absence
of trained staff and alternative teaching aides. In order to compete
with their peers,
the partially sighted, for instance, need specialised books and
material in Braille. Those are seldom provided. In the last decade,
since the non-profit
Samarthyam’s Centre for Accessible Environments began conducting
access audits for educational institutions, co-founder Anjlee Agarwal
doesn’t recall coming
across even one college that can be termed disabled-friendly.
Despite the laws having acquired more teeth to deal with this issue,
our planners and builders remain apathetic. The Rights of Persons with
Disabilities
Bill passed in 2016 sets the government a two-year deadline to ensure
that those with disability get barrier-free access in infrastructure
and transport
systems. Additionally, it holds the private sector — builders and
developers — accountable for creating an accessible environment. This,
experts say, is
a departure from the 1995 act which was largely toothless. The
punitive action for non-compliance can be a five-year prison term. So,
in accordance with
National Building Code announced in 2016, any new school and college
being planned has to be 100 per cent accessible.

Since building by-laws are a state subject, implementation across the
country is uneven. The few exceptions to this appear to be
government-led initiatives
in Odisha, Gujarat and Tamil Nadu. Still, putting up a ramp here and a
disabled-friendly toilet there doesn’t really turn things around. One
measure of
a civilised society should be the sensitivity it displays towards the
disabled. If a chunk of the 2.68 crore physically challenged people in
the country
cannot board a train, watch a movie or operate an ATM owing to lack of
access, and if we make it difficult for many of them to attend
college, all the
talk of a demographic dividend amounts to little.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/editorials/with-not-even-one-per-cent-being-disabled-friendly-colleges-are-difficult-to-access-for-many/story-zfemcOhIWQhxiAVT1YNwWK.html

-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU

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