All,
Find time to read this very insightful, and researched op-ed published
in The Hindu today. The contents suggest the author has done a serious
research and Good The Hindu gave it a space when the deadline ends
today for submission.
Pasting for those who don't have The Hindu's subscription.
The Department of Empowerment of Person with Disabilities (DoEPwD)
recently released the draft of the national policy for persons with
disabilities (“Policy”) — public comments have been invited till July
15, 2022 (at: panda...@nic.in). The necessity for a new policy which
replaces the 2006 policy was felt because of multiple factors such as
India’s signing of the United Nations Convention on Rights of Persons
with Disabilities; enactment of a new disability legislation (Rights
of Persons with Disabilities Act 2016) which increased the number of
disabilities from seven conditions to 21 and being a party to the
Incheon Strategy for Asian and Pacific Decade of Persons with
Disabilities, 2013-2022 (“Incheon commitment”). The last was prepared
under the aegis of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission
for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) which identifies 10 goals for
Asia-Pacific countries to ensure the inclusion and the empowerment of
persons with disabilities and conformity with the Sustainable
Development Goals 2030.

These commitments have changed the discourse around disability by
shifting the focus from the individual to society, i.e., from a
medical model of disability to a social or human rights model of
disability.

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The principle of the draft policy is to showcase the Government’s
commitment to the inclusion and empowerment of persons with
disabilities by providing a mechanism that ensures their full
participation in society.

In furtherance of this commitment, the policy document highlights a
detailed commitment to education, health, skill development and
employment, sports and culture, social security, accessibility and
other institutional mechanisms. However, a glaring omission is the
absence of any commitment to the political uplift of persons with
disabilities.

About political participation
Article 29 of the Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities
mandates that state parties should “ensure that persons with
disabilities can effectively and fully participate in political and
public life on an equal basis with others, directly or through freely
chosen representatives....” The Incheon goals also promote
participation in political processes and in decision making. The
Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act 2016 embodies these principles
within its fold. The anti-discrimination commitment under this Act
recognises the political domain wherein disabled people should be
allowed to realise their human rights and fundamental freedoms. The
documents fail to take cognisance of such mandates.

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Political empowerment and the inclusion of the disabled are an issue
that has not found traction in India’s democratic discussion. India
does not have any policy commitment that is aimed at enhancing the
political participation of disabled people.

The exclusion of disabled people from the political space happens at
all levels of the political process in the country, and in different
ways. For instance, the inaccessibility of the voting process,
barriers to participation in party politics or a lack of
representation at the local, State or national levels have all
aggravated the marginalisation of the disabled.

Ground realities, no data
Section 11 of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act prescribes
that “The Election Commission of India and the State Election
Commissions shall ensure that all polling stations are accessible to
persons with disabilities and all materials related to the electoral
process are easily understandable by and accessible to them”. Although
this mandate has been in existence for a few years, the disabled
people still report accessibility issues before and on election day.
There is often a lack of accessible polling booths in many locations.
There is still no widespread adaptation of braille electronic voting
machines and even wheelchair services at all polling centres. The
Election Commission of India has developed its own procedures for
handling PwDs during the electoral process.

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Government advisory board on disability not re-constituted since November 2020
Political parties in India still do not find the disabled as the large
electorate to specifically address their needs.

The lack of live aggregate data on the exact number of the disabled
people in every constituency only furthers their marginalisation. The
lack of accessible space for party meetings, inaccessible transport
for campaigning or an attitudinal barrier among voters and party
leaders can be termed as contributing factors. Thus, we seldom see
disability being highlighted in the manifestos of parties.

Inadequate representation
Representation plays an imperative role in furthering the interests of
the marginalised community. Our Constitution makers recognised this
when they provided for reservation for Scheduled Caste/Scheduled
Tribes in the legislature. Disabled people are not represented enough
at all three levels of governance. The response to a right to
information filing by this writer to the Parliamentary Affairs
Ministry showed that the Government does not maintain data on the
disability aspect of members. The first visually disabled Member of
Parliament in independent India, Sadhan Gupta, hardly finds mention in
our political or disability discourse. We have often failed to
acknowledge disabled political personalities who have overcome the
myriad barriers in India’s political space.

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However, few States have begun the initiative at local levels to
increase participation. For instance, Chhattisgarh started the
initiative of nominating at least one disabled person in each
panchayat. If a disabled person is not elected then they are nominated
as a panchayat member as per changes in the law concerned. This is a
step that has increased the participation of the disabled in the
political space at local level.

‘Make the right real’
The goal of the policy document — of inclusiveness and empowerment —
cannot be achieved without political inclusion. The policy can follow
a four-pronged approach: building the capacity of disabled people’s
organisations and ‘empowering their members through training in the
electoral system, government structure, and basic organisational and
advocacy skills’; the creation, amendment or removal of legal and
regulatory frameworks by lawmakers and election bodies to encourage
the political participation of the disabled; inclusion of civil
societies to ‘conduct domestic election observation or voter education
campaigns’; and a framework for political parties to ‘conduct a
meaningful outreach to persons with disabilities when creating
election campaign strategies and developing policy positions’.

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The document lays emphasis on the point that central and State
governments must work together with other stakeholders to “make the
right real”. This right can be made real only when it includes
political rights/political participation within it. This will only
conform to the universal principle on disability, i.e., “Nothing about
us. Without us.”

Shashank Pandey is a Javed Abidi Fellow at the National Centre for
Promotion of Employment for Disabled People (NCPEDP). He was a
Legislative Assistant to Members of Parliament (LAMP)
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/the-great-omission-in-the-draft-disability-policy/article65640519.ece?homepage=true

-- 
सादर/ Regards

अविनाश शाही/ Avinash Shahi
सहायक/ Assistant
मानव संसाधन प्रबंध विभाग/ Human Resource Management Department
भारतीय रिजर्व बैंक/ Reserve Bank of India
New Delhi

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