The biggest barriers are in the minds of the implementers. They are 
ill-informed and are on charity mode. The bureaucracy and the baboos  have 
to be sensitised and mobilised. Unless that happens, nothing will move. We 
will continue to fight micro battles and gain micro victories.

Regards,

George
George Abraham
CEO
Score Foundation
17/107, LGF
Vikram Vihar, Lajpatnagar 4
New Delhi 110024

PH:91 11 26472581, 91 11 46070396
Mob: 91 9810934040, 91 9810001181
Email: [email protected]
Skype: georgeabraham13




----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Vikas Kapoor" <[email protected]>
To: "Access India" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, July 02, 2011 10:39 AM
Subject: [AI] Removing barriers


Removing barriers

Creating an enabling environment for people with disability should be among 
the foremost policy concerns for India, as it makes large investments in 
infrastructure. The national approach to the question of improved 
accessibility and opportunity for the disabled has - barring a few 
exceptions such as access to polling booths - been one of half-measures. 
Last year, the Centre took the welcome step of constituting a committee to 
draft a new law to replace the ineffective Persons with Disabilities (Equal 
Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full Participation) Act, 1995 but 
failed to press ahead. The Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment should 
hasten the framing of this law with emphasis on removing barriers that 
affect people with disabilities of different kinds. This is no doubt a 
demanding task but the World Report on Disability by the World Health 
Organisation offers comprehensive resources for policy-making. The 
overarching goal must be to help the disabled achieve physical mobility, 
social interaction, and gainful employment.

Universal design is the core principle guiding accessibility. For that to 
become the norm, India must adopt a culture of accessibility at all levels 
of government. It must also set mandatory standards. The benefits of changes 
produced by such measures as friendly footpaths, properly designed toilets, 
ramp-equipped public buildings, and easy-to-use transport will not be 
confined to the disabled but will cover a broader range of citizens, 
including parents with small children and the elderly. Transport access 
brings new opportunity, and in the case of people with disability the entire 
travel chain has to be considered for modification. Mainstreaming these 
goals would require a robust law and a regime of audits and certification. 
For existing public facilities, an active retrofitting programme will be 
necessary. Information and Communication Technology has immense potential to 
assist the disabled, and legal standards would make many more gadgets 
accessible; the United States has laws that lay down such requirements for 
telephones, television, and information kiosks. Beyond physical and systemic 
barriers, though, there is the attitudinal. A glaring example of prejudice 
is discrimination in employment, which the United Nations Convention on the 
Rights of Persons with Disabilities prohibits. These are major challenges, 
but there is no reason why they cannot be addressed with sufficient 
political will, given the assertive national mood seeking measures to 
benefit different classes of citizens.



http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/article2151117.ece

Vikas Kapoor,
MSN Id: [email protected], Yahoo&Skype Id: dl_vikas,
Mobile: (+91) 9891098137.
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