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NEW DISABILITY LAW Draft leaves many questions unanswered

10 March 2011

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*Rajiv Rajan*

DOUBTS over what the government, the legislature and the new disability law
drafting committee are doing about discrimination we hear from various
quarters are raised every now and then. Are people with mental illness not
disabled people? The draft says that it is a law that covers all rights for
all disabled people but there is not a single mention about those with
mental illness. What happens to their rights?
The government and the drafting committee say that they want a law in line
with UNCRPD. Can this law be a sufficient one without dealing with legal
capacity?

The draft says that plenary guardianship is to be abolished. If the basic
functions of the National Trust, appointment, monitoring, dismissal and
reappointment of guardian, are taken away from the trust what would be the
work of the trust and why should it exist as a separate legislation at all?
Or is it that despite abolishing plenary guardianship, the National Trust
would continue to do these things?

There is yet another perception in the disability sector that if one
comprehensive law comes into existence the National Trust won't exist. It is
not a true perception. Instead the National Trust would become stronger and
wealthier, and would serve more disabled people who need support.
For inclusion to be a way of life reasonable accommodation (to create an
equal playing field) is mandatory . What would ensure reasonable
accommodation?

Where does human resource for reasonable accommodation come from? Does the
government mean to say that only special educators and care givers can make
our country inclusive for disabled people? What about legal capacity? What
about access? What about employment?
What about other aspects of life?

Speaking about inclusive education, why is information technology in
communication and access not a part of reasonable accommodation? When the
whole world is moving towards inclusion and cross disability, why at all do
we need a separate clause on establishing special schools? What about
special education being a compulsory part of teachers' training at all
levels and languages? There are a few men tions about the choices of parents
and caretakers. There is also a mention of the word `custody'. What does
this mean? Are we forgetting the child rights' convention?

What happens to the evolving capacity of the child? Without the consent of
the child how can one decide on a crucial subject such as education?
The new Act speaks about National Disability Commissioner's court and State
Disability Commissioner's court in the chapter on the Disability Rights
Authority. Are we striving towards inclusion or towards segregation? Don't
we want our judiciary to be accessible for all, including the disabled
people?
Do the disabled people need a separate judicial system?

The draft says that one can approach the district commissioners for
disabilities for violation of legal capacity. There is no mention about the
District Disability Commissioner in the draft. How can one approach a
nonexistent authority?

The draft law reserves 6 per cent in employment for disabled people
according to their disabilities. How did the committee arrive at this
number? What is the logic behind the figure? Doesn't this mean that a
visually impaired woman in the remotest of the villages without any
qualification, without any support services is being treated as equal to her
counterpart in a metropolis with all support service and educational
facilities? How fair is this? What about people with other disabilities such
as mental illness, mental retardation, autism and disability in movement? It
is worth keeping in mind that most of the service providers in all these
categories are urban based or semi urban based.

A group of members in the committee are against the concept of one
comprehensive law. Do they realise what they are doing by this? Why don't
they want the implementation, monitoring and redressal mechanism in the same
law as the same one that recognises all rights of all disabled people?
Why do we need a law only to recognise the rights of disabled people when
the Constitution says all citizens are equal before the law? If the law only
recognises the rights, then who will protect these rights and how?

*If we look at why all these questions have come up about the draft law
there can be only one answer -the drafting committee is full of
rehabilitation professionals and parents when it should have been a
committee of disabled people, legal experts with representation for parents
and rehabilitation professionals.*

The drafting committee claims to hold consultations with stake holders.
How does one consult with stake holders when one doesn't know anything as to
what is there in the draft? How did the consultation take place in Gujarat,
Jammu & Kashmir and Madhya Pradesh without the draft being translated in the
regional languages? How did the committee expect a 115page legal document to
be read by the stake holders in 5 to 7 days as is happening in Uttar
Pradesh, Delhi and Haryana? If two three states are clubbed together why is
it being called a state consultation?

In Tamil Nadu why is the so-called local coordination committee not willing
to pay TA/DA and give accommodation for out-station participants? It is
worth noting that the state is having only a twoday consultation schedule.

*(The writer is a disability rights activist)*

http://expressbuzz.com/opinion/op-ed/draft-leaves-many-questions-unanswered/254835.html
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