TAKING STOCK:It is important to hear the voices of a significant
number of the disabled who live in the global South, a place where
development has greater meaning and impact. —PHOTO: THE HINDU PHOTO
ARCHIVES
The Hindu: April 30, 2013.
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-opinion/the-disconnect-with-disability/article4668526.ece
Friday, April 5, 2013, marked an important day in the global
development agenda. From this day, there would only be a thousand days
more to achieve the targets set by the Millennium Development Goals
(MDG) to the extent possible. Although the performance of the MDGs has
come under tremendous critique, it cannot be refuted that these goals
have given the world a unified development agenda on poverty,
education and gender issues.

There are two parallel tracks of discussions currently ongoing: one
that is more focused on the post-2015 agenda, and the other which
urges caution in shifting the focus to post-2015, underlining the fact
that it may be too soon to write-off the MDGs.

This is a good time for people with disabilities to take stock of things.

Discrimination

Although a substantial percentage of the world’s population is
affected by disability, there is no mention of disability in the MDGs.
This despite the well-established connection between disability and
poverty, the fact that children with disabilities are the ones who
have been left behind, and the fact that women with disabilities are
even more marginalised and face multiple discrimination.

In India, home to 70-100 million people with disabilities, a study in
2003 conducted by the National Centre for Promotion for Employment for
Disabled People (NCPEDP) showed that only 0.51 per cent of students
with disabilities were enrolled in mainstream schools. Likewise, a
survey of the top 100 companies of India in 1999 showed an average
rate of employment of 0.4 per cent for persons with disabilities.
These figures haven’t improved over the years. A review done by NCPEDP
recently shows that less than one per cent of students with
disabilities are in top colleges and universities, and less than one
per cent of people with disabilities are finding employment.

Today, the World Health Organisation says that one billion people, or
15 per cent of the world’s population, live with disability. Of them,
800 million or 80 per cent live in the global South.

People with disabilities comprise 20 per cent of the world’s poorest.
In this scenario, it is not only imperative that disability is
intrinsic to the processes for fulfilling the MDGs by 2015, but must
also be a significant part of debate, discussions and outcomes of the
post-2015 development agenda.

Steps forward

To do so, it is important for the global disability movement to take
into account a number of factors.

Looking South: if 800 million of the world’s one billion people with
disabilities live in the global South where development has a far
significant meaning and impact, it is essential that their voices are
heard, and heard loud and clear.

High-level meeting on disability and development: one of the most
significant milestones in the disability movement is the upcoming U.N.
High Level Meeting on Disability and Development in New York on
September 23, 2013. This meeting will hopefully set the tone for
inclusion of disability in the global development agenda. Advocacy is
required to ensure that governments take this meeting with the
seriousness it deserves. It is also important to connect this meeting
with the opening of the General Assembly debate on September 24, 2013
and the special event on MDGs on September 25, 2013.

Engaging with national governments: it is essential to garner the
support of Member States for disability and for them to include it in
their country’s priorities. Disability is a non-political issue and
the chances of it being opposed are less. However, the probability of
it not making to a majority of the countries’ list of priorities is
much higher.

Disability as a development issue: the fact that disability is a
crosscutting issue has by and large been well-established. But the new
argument put forward by disability rights advocates is that it is not
just a human rights issue but also a development issue. Therefore, it
needs to be looked from that point of view as well.

Going to the grassroots: to reach that last person with disability in
the remotest corner of our villages, it is essential that we focus on
the grassroots. We need to adopt a sense of caution at the sudden,
seemingly top down disability agenda and related advocacy.

Leaving disability out of the development agenda is a mistake the
world cannot afford a second time. It is time that all stakeholders
are nudged into action to avoid doing so.

 (Dorodi Sharma is programme manager at the National Centre for
Promotion of Employment for Disabled People and assistant to the
chairperson, Disabled People’s International, the world’s only
cross-disability disabled people’s organisation with membership in 130
countries.)





-- 
Avinash Shahi
MPhil Research Scholar
Centre for the Study of Law and Governance
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi India

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