Ts fine to see they are demanding for assistance. But whenever you people
are talking or asking or demanding for some assistance, as far as I've
noticed, it's being asked, demanded or requested or even discussed all about
delhi blind alone. Please extend it to national level.

-----Original Message-----
From: AccessIndia [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of avinash shahi
Sent: Tuesday, June 17, 2014 1:40 PM
To: jnuvision
Cc: accessindia
Subject: [AI] Indian Express: how accessible are the Delhi Metro, DTC buses
and the railways to the disabled?

Timely written and published very handy...
http://indianexpress.com/article/cities/delhi/the-city-fails-them/99/
Mahesh Kumar (40) takes the Blue Line Metro daily from Uttam Nagar, where he
lives, to Tagore Garden, where he teaches in a government school. In
November 2013, this visually impaired man reached the Uttam Nagar (West)
Metro station to board the train as usual. He was in the lift going up to
the platform, when he heard the train. He asked a fellow passenger if the
train had arrived. On being told it has, Kumar decided to hurry. He did not
have a Metro assistant escorting him that day -- he had asked for one but
nobody was "free". So he walked unescorted towards the train. Before he knew
it, he lost his balance and fell onto the tracks. Mercifully, there was no
train coming on that track and Kumar escaped with minor injuries.

"I was walking at the very edge of the platform and yet nobody paid
attention. It was only after I fell that people screamed. That alerted the
DMRC staff who came and helped me get up. Usually, I get a Metro assistant
to escort me till the train. But if none are available, we have to walk
alone," Kumar said.

His plight is mirrored by other visually challenged persons who commute on
Delhi's Metro, buses and trains every day. In the past three years, more
than 30 visually challenged persons approached the National Federation of
the Blind with complaints after they fell off the platforms of various Metro
stations in the city.

But such incidents involving the disabled are not limited to the Metro
system alone. Similar accidents on Delhi's buses and at railway platforms
show clearly that the capital has a long way to go when it comes to making
its public spaces, particularly urban transport, disabled-friendly.

Needed: Preventive barriers on Metro platforms, helpers for visually
impaired

Vice-president of National Federation of the Blind Inder Singh says the most
critical problem the disabled, particularly visually challenged, face at
Metro stations is the problem of falling on the tracks due to the gap
between the coaches and  the platforms.

"The rubber-strips between the coaches and platforms are worn out. As a
result, many visually challenged people end up hurting themselves.
The most recent case is that of Sanjay Jha, a North Delhi resident who works
with the Railways. He fell on the tracks and fractured his left hand," Singh
said.

The other problem, he feels, is an absence of steel railings on several
platforms. "They have metal railings at the edge of platforms in Rajiv Chowk
station. Why can't they put them up at all stations?"
he says.

Also, Metro assistants who help disabled persons at stations are reportedly
unavailable most of the time. "Metro has no official post of assistants.
Usually, when a visually impaired or disabled person approaches a Metro
official for assistance, they ask one of their housekeeping staff --
sweepers, cleaners, guards -- to escort the person. Usually, we have to wait
for nearly 30 minutes for an assistant. But who has that kind of time to
spare? Many visually challenged students and employees are forced to board
the train alone rather than get late for school, college or work," Singh
says.

When Singh himself fell at the INA Metro station last year, he approached
the station manager with the issue. "I gave my feedback and suggestions and
was told that it would be forwarded to the persons concerned. But nothing
has been done so far," he says.

There are also those who feel that when it comes to aiding the disabled, the
Metro is far better than other urban transport modes.
 Rajive Raturi, in-charge of Asia-Pacific region of Disability Rights
Promotion International, and is visually-impaired himself, feels
accessibility is one of the most important concerns for people with
disability and the Metro does justice to the cause to some extent.

"The Delhi Metro is the latest urban transport mode, so it is more
accessible than others. It has tactile gradings to guide the blind and
colour markings for people with low vision. There are ramps and lifts for
the benefit of the wheelchair-bound. The audio-announcement systems are also
helpful."

Raturi describes the availability of helpers as a "good facility", which was
brought about by the efforts of young visually-impaired people.

"Metro has now introduced helpline numbers for the blind, so a person
receives them at the gate and escorts them till the coach," he said.

According to Singh, the Delhi Metro could look to airports to see how to
help the disabled. "At airports, a disabled person is given an assistant at
the gate. The assistant leaves only after the person is comfortably seated
in the aircraft. This must be emulated at bus stops and railway stations
too," he says.

'General passengers, RPF personnel travel in coach reserved for disabled'
Lakhs of passengers daily use the three railway stations in the capital --
the New Delhi, Old Delhi and the Nizamuddin railway stations. But, problems
for a disabled traveller begins even before he/she reaches the station.

The lack of lifts, ramps and assistants apart, one of the most critical
issues a disabled person travelling by train face is the difficulty in
ascertaining the train schedule and his/her compartment and seat. Most rely
on co-passengers to read the schedule out to them.

At present, Habibganj railway station in Bhopal is the only one in the
country equipped with a Braille time table. The station also has special
parking, ramps, toilets, accessible water facilities and a graded pathway on
the platform for the visually impaired. Also, in another first, the seat
numbers are listed in Braille in the ISO 9000-certified Bhopal Express.

Vice-president of National Federation of the Blind Inder Singh feels writing
coach numbers in Braille would help the visually-impaired find their seats
without any assistance.

Rajive Raturi, in-charge of the Asia-Pacific region of Disability Rights
Promotion International, says, "Habibganj is one of the most
disabled-friendly public spaces I have come across in India. In other
cities, inter-platform connectivity is a problem. Wheelchair-bound persons
have to go through luggage transport corridors. The coaches are at least six
to eight inches from the ground and a disabled person has to be lifted in
and out of coaches. Where is the accessibility?"

Another issue activists highlight is the misuse of the coach reserved for
the disabled by general passengers and railway staff. These coaches have
broader doors and come with berths and toilets that are convenient for both
the visually impaired and wheelchair-bound travellers.

Raturi says there were instances of disabled people being denied entry
-- in some cases "even being thrashed" -- when they demanded a berth in the
coach reserved for them. "It is usually occupied by Railway Protection Force
personnel. On several occasions, visually-impaired and the
orthopaedic-disabled have been asked to vacate the coach for the railway
staff."

Singh claims the Railways has removed the reserved coach from many trains.
"The seats are now enjoyed by general passengers who collaborate with
Railway officials and "buy" berths under staff quota," Singh said.



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Lack of separate ticket counters for the disabled is another issue,he says.
"One has to stand in a general queue to buy a ticket. At railway stations,
they have merged all groups -- disabled, women, senior citizens -- into
one," Singh said.

The e-ticket facility also cannot be used if one wants to avail the
disability concession. The Delhi High Court had reportedly taken note of the
issue, pulling up the Railways for the "discriminatory" nature of the rule.
So, essentially, if a disabled person wishes to avail the disability
concession, he/she must go to the station to book a ticket.

Singh also raises the issue of renewal of concession passes. "Why can't it
be done online? Why can't they have travel cards that can be used in all
modes of transport, rather than us having to run around?"
he says.

More than anything, activists feel people's attitudes need to change towards
those with special needs. Only then can everyday issues be sorted out.

DTC should have more 'friendly' low-floor buses: Rights groups

Most bus stops do not have ramps for the disabled Most bus stops do not have
ramps for the disabled Anjali Agarwal, the founder of NGO Samarthyam -- a
disability rights organisation which works closely with IIT Delhi's
Transport Research and Injury Prevention Programme (TRIPP) -- feels
low-floor buses are an important step towards ensuring equal accessibility
for disabled persons.

"One good sign is that they (DTC) have seats reserved for physically
handicapped persons on the lower level. The emergency exit is strategically
located near their seat to facilitate easy evacuation,"
she says.

But lack of 'audio clues', Agarwal says, is a problem. "Earlier, there used
to be conductors shouting the destination of the bus at each stop. The
visually challenged could then decide whether or not to board the bus. This
does not happen anymore," she says.

"The problem can be sorted out if an announcement system is installed on all
buses," she says.

According to v ice-president of National Federation of the Blind Inder
Singh, since the engine of the low-floor buses is at the rear, the visually
impaired can "hear" the bus only after it leaves a stop.
"Earlier, buses had engines in the front. So it would alert the visually
impaired. Also, not all buses are low-floor. The inter-state buses are
mostly the older ones. So, wheelchair-bound persons cannot travel on these,"
he said.

The Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPD) Act, 1995, specifies that
signal points must have different beeps to signify changes in the light.
Zebra crossings are also supposed to have specialised signs for the
convenience of the disabled. The suggestions were also approved by the
Indian Road Congress, 2012, but neither has ever been implemented.

The absence of ramps at bus stops too is an issue. "The BRT corridor bus
stops are on the middle of the road. How is a disabled person supposed to
make his/her way through the heavy traffic? If there are no ramps,
wheelchair-bound and persons on crutches cannot access a bus stop," Rajive
Raturi, who handles the Asia-Pacific region of Disability Rights Promotion
International, said.

Footpaths are another grey area. The yellow tactile-grading, which was
provided across Delhi ahead of the 2010 Commonwealth Games, were supposed to
guide visually-impaired persons away from danger. Agarwal, however, claims
that these tiles have been paved in such a way that instead of guiding them
away from danger, it causes them to bump into trees or fall into potholes
and drains.

Agarwal highlights how most benefits for the disabled would also indirectly
help other vulnerable sections of the society, including children, women,
senior citizens and those with medical conditions.

"When it comes to public transport, things are extremely haywire in the
capital. What the government needs to understand is that these facilities
will help the public at large," she says.

"We focus on four important principles -- accessibility, reliability, safety
and affordability. The government needs to provide a system that is safe and
efficient and affordable so that it serves the people it is meant to,"
Agarwal says.


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



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