http://m.timesofindia.com/india/Disabled-divided-over-Rights-of-Persons-with-Disabilities-Bill/articleshow/29911510.cms
Feb 5, 2014, 06.52PM IST TNN[ Divya Chandrababu}

CHENNAI: The UPA government is likely to introduce the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities Bill in the Parliament during the second leg
of the winter session which began on Wednesday.

The bill has driven a wedge between disabled rights activists who have
widely divergent opinions on the bill, which many see as a watered
down version of the document made available by the government on the
website of the ministry of social justice and empowerment.

While some activists are rallying against this new version, others
have held candlelight vigils across the country pressing for the Bill
to be passed.

Disability rights activists have sought the intervention of senior
Congress leaders to include decisive amendments to the bill. "Most
crucial concerns have been addressed and the modified bill is what
will hopefully be tabled," Disability Rights Group convener Javed
Abidi said.

"We identified 20 non-negotiable amendments and met Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh, Congress president Sonia Gandhi, the ministers for law
and social justice," he said. "Modifications have been made on the
issue of legal capacity, definitions of disability, employment and
education."

The Delhi-based group has led the movement to press for the bill, and
the process of drafting the law was set in motion five years ago.
However, the group is at loggerheads with other disabled rights
activists and groups, who say it is not in accordance with the UN
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

The groups against the bill in its current form say it is just old
wine in a new bottle. The bill does not ensure full legal capacity,
they say, authorities in charge of enforcement of disabled rights are
not given the full powers they need and the bill's penal provisions
are weak.

Disability Rights Alliance has written to the Centre on behalf of
various NGOs, noting that the bill contained "legal infirmities'. "The
bill is the antithesis of what it was meant to be. We want in to be
withdrawn," said Amba Salelkar, fellow, Inclusive Planet Centre for
Disability Law and Policy.

"The Supreme Court in 2009 ruled that a mentally challenged woman can
choose to have children, but the current bill says a severely disabled
woman's pregnancy can be terminated with her guardian's consent," she
said.

The bill has a provision for increasing quota in government jobs from
3% to 5% and enables accountability in private sector and educational
institutions. It also has particular focus on psycho-social disability
and developmental disorders.

-- 
Avinash Shahi
M.Phil Research Scholar
Centre for The Study of Law and Governance
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi India

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