Friends
Pasting below a post which failed to get to the list.
Regards
Harish Kotian
Quoting:

January 28, 2014

Amba Salelkar




One of the most inexplicable things about the Rights of Persons with 
Disabilities Bill is the incredible perceived public pressure to introduce the 
bill in the next, and for this Lok Sabha, last, session of Parliament. Many of 
us who refused to join the clamour did so on the grounds that we did not know 
what changes had been made to the bill since its 2012 avatar (not to say that 
the 2012 draft was perfect) and that we feared for the worst. Judging by the 
copy of the bill that has been released, our fears were not unfounded.

The bill, which sets out to implement the United Nations Convention on the 
Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD), gets most things wrong - 
including the definition of persons with disabilities - and is sloppily 
drafted. Almost every principle of the UNCRPD, which India ratified without 
reservations, has either been diluted or violated outright by this bill - be it 
the right to equality and non-discrimination, the right to independent living, 
the right to inclusive education or the right to political participation.

One of the most important rights the UNCRPD guarantees is that of full legal 
capacity to all persons with disabilities. At present in India, the National 
Trust for the Welfare of Persons with Autism, Cerebral Palsy, Mental 
Retardation and Multiple Disabilities Act (NTA), 2009, creates a presumption 
that persons with cerebral palsy, autism, mental retardation or multiple 
disabilities require a guardian to function. The Mental Health Act, 1987, also 
provides for the appointment of a guardian for a person found to be "mentally 
ill" and incapable of handling their own assets.

The UNCRPD mandates that persons with disabilities have the right to be 
recognised as persons before the law, and enjoy the same legal capacity as 
others in all aspects of life. Neither of these mandates is reflected in the 
bill. Though persons with disabilities are granted the right to own or inherit 
property, control their financial affairs and obtain access to bank loans, 
mortgages and other forms of financial credit, there is no effective manner of 
realising these rights and no provision for safeguards whatsoever.

In any case, these provisions only apply to persons who have legal capacity, 
and there are exclusions to this, perhaps unprecedented in Indian law. There is 
no shift from substituted decision-making to supported decision-making. The 
"mentally ill" who are unable to take care of themselves or make legally 
binding decisions will have all decisions taken on their behalf by guardians. 
The position of persons governed under the NTA does not change at all. And 
then, more categories of persons with disabilities may have their legal 
capacity threatened. The bill creates the category of persons with "high 
support needs". Any person with more than 40 per cent of a disability and who 
needs "intensive support, physical, psychological and otherwise,... for 
activities of daily living; independent and informed decision-making; accessing 
facilities and participating in all areas of life including education; 
employment; family and community life; and treatment and therapy" is included 
in this categor
 y - effectively all persons with over 40 per cent disabilities. An assessment 
board gets to take decisions on the nature of "support" to be given to these 
persons, with no obligation to consult the person concerned. The scope of 
"support" is not defined under the bill, which means it could include 
guardianship or even institutionalisation, neither of which are barred.

Undoubtedly, the bill opens up various opportunities - there are incentives for 
the private sector to accommodate persons with disabilities, and with that will 
come requirements for training the persons who are employed, sensitising other 
staff members and making workplaces accessible. These measures are beneficial 
to many. However, is it worth shutting the door on discussions in order to - 
quoting the Centre for Advocacy in Mental Health - "secure maximum rights for 
maximum people with disabilities; and lay to rest the original inclusive 
concern about all rights for all persons with disabilities"? One could possibly 
argue that other concerns could be addressed in the form of amendments at a 
later stage - but these amendments would be fragmented discussions, running 
contrary to the cross-disability movement that the drafting of the bill and the 
UNCRPD have come to symbolise. Like charity, inclusion starts from home.

For a flailing government trying its best to play to the gallery, enacting a 
"social welfare" legislation like the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Bill 
is a marvellous opportunity. Something as serious as an all-encompassing 
legislation for all persons with all disabilities deserves more than to be 
reduced to a bullet point on an election poster.

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/for-us-without-us/

Summary : In the hurry to pass the disabilities bill, its flaws have been 
buried.

The writer is an advocate, and fellow, Inclusive Planet Centre for Disability 
Law and Policy, Chennai [email protected]



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