*Do leave comments on the shared google drive file
<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1sHsU6kHyeL_5FaJGVZk3hKWK88Uwz6OB/view?usp=sharing>
(embedded
below) so we can all benefit!*:

*30 August 2024* is deadline for inputs on draft revised disability
certification.  Email Vineet Singhal, Director DEPwD -
[email protected]

Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities, Ministry of Social
Justice and Empowerment has published Draft Rights of Persons with
disabilities (Amendments) Rules, 2024 for seeking public opinion/comments
in the Extra Ordinary Gazette (ID = CG-DL-E-31072024-255937) Part
II-Section 3-Sub-Section (i) published 31-Jul-2024 :
 Source : https://egazette.gov.in/WriteReadData/2024/255937.pdf

 20240729 Gazette Disability Certification Amendment 255937-en.pdf
<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1sHsU6kHyeL_5FaJGVZk3hKWK88Uwz6OB/view?usp=drive_web>


Centre plans stricter norms for disability certificates; activists fear
fresh hurdles
thehindu.com
/news/national/centre-proposes-to-tighten-requirements-for-disability-certificates/article68469556.ece
<https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/centre-proposes-to-tighten-requirements-for-disability-certificates/article68469556.ece>
July 31, 2024


In the wake of the Puja Khedkar row, Centre publishes draft amendments to
RPwd Act Rules, proposes longer process, more documentation; disability
acivists say changes will hurt genuine applicants
Abhinay Lakshman
<https://www.thehindu.com/profile/author/Abhinay-Lakshman-16287/>

In a bid to tighten the requirements for obtaining a disability
certificate, the Union government on Wednesday published draft amendments
to the Rules of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act (RPwD Act) of
2016.

The proposed changes — including mandatory identity proof, medical
authority involvement, and a longer process — come in the wake of the row
over Puja Khedkar, a dismissed IAS probationer
<https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/upsc-cancels-puja-khedkars-candidature-for-cse-2022-debars-from-all-future-exams/article68468224.ece>
accused
of faking her disability certificate, among other transgressions.
Government sources told *The Hindu* that this controversy was among the
factors considered while drafting the amendments.

The amended Rules will require people with disabilities to mandatorily
submit proof of identity, a photo not older than six months, and an Aadhaar
card. The draft amendments propose that only medical authorities be
considered competent to receive and process applications for disability
certificates, further suggesting that the time taken to process each
application should be increased from one to three months.
‘Will hurt genuine applicants’

Experts and activists in the disability sector said that these proposed
amendments will not do much to tackle the menace of fake disability
certificates, which they argued was a result of systemic corruption.
Instead, they said, the potential new Rules will make it harder for genuine
applicants to get through the system.

These amendments to the Rules governing the RPwD Act, 2016 were published
by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment in The Gazette of India
as a draft and made public on Wednesday for objections and suggestions from
members of the public. Comments must be sent to Vineet Singhal, Director,
Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities within 30 days.
More documents

Last year, the government had first made it mandatory for all PwDs to have
a UDID card for availing benefits, and then made Aadhaar a requirement for
all UDID cards.
Defending disability reservations
<https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/defending-disability-reservations/article68456680.ece>

While the current Rules require applicants for a disability certificate to
submit only proof of residence and recent photographs, the proposed
amendments make more documentation mandatory, specifying that the photos
must not be older than six months, and adding the requirement for a proof
of identity and an Aadhaar number (or enrolment number).
Medical authorities only

The government proposes to standardise the requirements to apply for a
disability certificate and a UDID card. In subsequent amendments, the
government has proposed that the applications can only be received by “a
medical authority or any other notified competent medical authority” as
opposed to “a medical authority or any other notified competent authority”.

Further, Rule 18 (2), which mandates the medical authority to process each
application within one month of receiving it, has been proposed to be
amended as follows: “The medical authority shall issue the Disability
certificate and UDID card within three months, in case any disability is
diagnosed.”

The government has also proposed colour-coded UDID cards for people with
disabilities. The draft amendments have suggested White cards for people
with below 40% disability, Yellow cards for those with disability between
40% and 80%, and Blue cards for those with more than 80% disability.

The draft amendments have also inserted a clause in Rule 18 that allows for
an application to lapse or become “inactive” if the concerned medical
authority is unable to decide on it for over two years - following which
the applicant will have to re-apply or approach the authority to
re-activate it.
Invisible disabilities

V. Muralidharan of the National Platform of the Rights of the Disabled
told *The
Hindu*, “These amendments would not help cut the corruption that leads to
fake certificates, no amount of rules might help this. It will only make
things unnecessarily complex and difficult for genuine applicants to obtain
their disability certificates.”

He added that the colour-coding of UDID cards was another redundant
proposal that will most likely add to hostility, discrimination, and
harassment faced by people with disabilities. “The UDID database will have
disability details of the people anyway. Why make it overt and visible? It
will create a whole lot of more problems for people with ‘invisible’
disabilities such as mental illnesses,” Mr. Muralidharan said.

He also questioned why the time taken to process each application was being
increased instead of being reduced, arguing that UDID applications are
currently taking more than six months to be processed anyway. “I had
applied for a UDID card on January 4, 2024 and am yet to get any response
from the authorities,” he said.

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