pasting below the article written by amita dhanda from indian express.
http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/a-policy-of-activism-and-restraint/2/

 Disability Rights on the Ordinance Route
AmitaDhanda

The last one month has been contentious and controversial in the realm
of disability rights. The government obtained cabinet approval for the
Rights of Persons with Disabilities Bill 2014 which fell way below the
standard of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities as it reinforced popular stereotypes instead of
challenging them and permitted discrimination instead of prohibiting
it. It also moved backwards on questions of autonomy, choice and
liberty. Due to these various regressive features large segments of
the disability sector criticized the Bill. The supporters of the Bill
pointed to its having included 13 new impairments and the enhanced
percentage of job reservation.  Since the losses were outweighing the
gains and the number of provisions which required fixing innumerable,
the Chairperson of the RajyaSabha referred the Bill for due
consideration by a House Committee. In the circumstances the most
appropriate solution.
The dust had barely settled on this decision, before another
controversy engulfed the disability rights legislation. There are
rumours running rife that the government is planning to enact the Bill
of 2014 as Ordinance in order to meet the long pending concerns of the
disability sector. Two questions are on everyone's lips: can the
government enact the Bill of 2014 through the Ordinance route after it
had been referred to the House Committee; and two, should the
government take this route?
Under Article 123 of the Indian Constitution the President has power
to make law through Ordinance provided: one, both Houses are not in
session; and two, the President is satisfied that circumstances exist
which render it necessary that immediate action should be taken. Once
both these conditions are satisfied then the President may authorize
the promulgation of any Ordinance which the circumstances may require.
Insofar as the two Houses are not in session, the first condition is
satisfied. However the second condition is not met. The Bill was sent
to a House Committee and not passed by Parliament because it was
accepted that it needed more work.  The Bill was only introduced in
the House and sent to the Committee. No other urgency to enact the
Bill was either expressed or demonstrated. In such circumstances, it
cannot be contended that there was any circumstance which showed that
urgent enactment of the Bill was required. In fact any effort to enact
the Bill as Ordinance, after it has been referred to the House
Committee would, in the light of the Supreme Court's ruling in DC
Wadhwa,be seen as a colourable exercise of power and a fraud on the
Constitution. Both on a plain reading of the Constitution and by
relying on judicial decisions, it can be stated that the President
cannot enact the Bill of 2014 by promulgating an Ordinance.
Ordinarily, the inquiry on this question should stop with the above
answer. However since many may consider the above response a purely
technical one, it is important to also ask whether the Government
should enact the Bill of 2014 by using the Ordinance route? To answer
this question, it is important to appreciate that disability rights is
not an unoccupied field. The Persons with Disabilities (Equality of
Opportunity, Full Participation and Protection of Rights) Act 1995
already controls the area. If the Bill of 2014 is promulgated as
Ordinance, it cannot become operable unless the Act of 1995 is
repealed. The Act of 1995 has empowered a series of individual, bodies
and authorities to implement the statute; all these entities would
become dysfunctional if the Act of 1995 is repealed but there would be
no time to establish and render functional the new authorities because
an Ordinance can remain operable for a maximum period of seven and a
half months without obtaining parliamentary approval. The enactment of
the Bill through the Ordinance route will obtain no benefit to the
freshly included impairments but would create an enforcement vacuum
even for the disabilities already included in the 1995 Act. It can
thus be concluded that it is not desirable to enact the Bill of 2014
through the Ordinance route because this procedure would usher
confusion and chaos and could cause all disabilities to lose
legislative protection.
However, the reference of the Bill of 2014 to the House Committee puts
the freshly included disabilities at a special disadvantage. Since
1999, when a Committee set up to suggest amendments to the Act of 1995
highlighted the need for inclusion, the battle has been on, to
recognise excluded impairments. The disabilities which stand included
in the Act of 1995 await the passage of the new law, whilst continuing
to obtain the benefits and entitlements provided in the Act of 1995;
the disabilities, which are not so included get nothing. It is
important that all disabilities are similarly positioned so that they
can work on the passage of a robust CRPD consonant legislation from a
level playing field. This is a situation of inequity which needs to be
immediately remedied. Since the two Houses are not in session and the
enactment of the new law will necessarily take some time, the
government should use its power under Article 123 to amend the
Disability Act of 1995 to include all those impairments which would
have obtained inclusion through the Bill of 2014. At the same time the
inadequacies of the Bill of 2014 would be rectified by the House
Committee. By adopting this hybrid policy of activism and restraint
the Government could do right by all sections of the disability
community.



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