Dear Friends

Its good to notice these days issues of accessibility in Delhi are
widely covered in EnglishPrint media with some research. If you
remember few days I shared four page news which was published in
Indian Express in which all people quoted were blind. Then that item
travelled like bullet across many platforms in the disability sector...
And yesterday, Business Standard published 3 page feature piece
highlighting the accessibility concerns.This news which I'm sharing
today and very useful for me personally, sounds better researched.
Majority of people quoted are disabled activists. Great going all.
Just carry on the momentum... Afterall PWD Act is approaching its 20th
birthday. Huh?

Delhi's public transport - a hurdle for the disabled
IANS  |  New Delhi
http://www.business-standard.com/article/news-ians/delhi-s-public-transport-a-hurdle-for-the-disabled-feature-114070100311_1.html
July 1, 2014


Varun Mahato, a 24-year-old visually impaired, boards a bus to his
Noida office every day. His journey is a "struggle" because he often
travels standing as the seats reserved for those with disability
remain occupied by the abled who often callously refuse to offer him a
seat.
Mahato ends up missing his bus on various occasions, as other
commuters at bus stops nudge and push, making it impossible for him to
climb on.
Mahato is not alone in his despair.
Wheelchair-bound Ismail Sheikh, 22, a vocalist by profession at a
restaurant in South Extension, too faces the same fate as he often has
to wait for help to board the bus.
"The ramps which are mandatory at all the bus stops to help people
like us board the bus are never available," Sheikh told IANS.
They also face the insensitive behaviour of the driver and conductor,
who many a time charge more than the designated fare, despite travel
for visually impaired being free in all state-run Delhi Transport
Corporation (DTC) buses and the National Capital Region (NCR).
This is however not restricted to Delhi or the NCR area alone. The 70
million disabled in India face similar problems in other parts of the
country too and, possibly, things are much worse.
According to Merry Baruah, founder of Action for Autism: "Not just in
Delhi, transportation in every Indian city and town has failed
disabled citizens to access a smooth life.
"It is the lack of awareness among people along with lapsed policies
that has become hurdle for the people with disabilities," Baruah told
IANS.
She said that while the low floor buses in cities like Delhi, Mumbai
and Bangalore are initiatives for making transportation smooth, it has
hardly helped in easing the woes of the disabled.
Said Javed Abidi, director, National Centre for Promotion of
Employment for Disabled People in India: "Despite it being a norm,
there are no ramps to get on to the bus stands in the national
capital."
"It's a shame that the DTC plays hoax on us by painting
disabled-friendly pictures and signages at bus stops, as they never
practise what they preach," Abidi, who works for the rights of the
disabled in the country, told IANS.
He added that despite writing to the DTC that existing bus stands in
the city are not disabled-friendly, hardly anything has been done to
address the issue.
"Even the advertisement boards near the ramps are a big hurdle for a
wheelchair-bound person as it restricts movement," said Abidi.
Though many new pavements and sidewalks in most New Delhi Municipal
Council and Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) areas are spacious
and well-laid - though they are not tactile-friendly as pavements in
cities around the world - they are blocked by bollards through which a
wheelchair can't pass.
"As a result, wheelchair-bound persons cannot move about on the
pavements. When we can't provide accessibility to disabled people, why
call the capital city a disabled friendly one," Abidi questioned.
According to disabled rights organisations, the special ramps
constructed on many roads have faulty design and don't meet
international standards.
For a height of one metre the ramps should be 18 metres long (1:18
gradient). But the ramps are built on a 1:12 gradient and are steep.
Moreover, they also do not provide a landing after every five metres.
However, Ravinder Minhas, senior manager, DTC, told IANS that the DTC
is "not responsible for the construction of the ramps".
"DTC is not responsible for the construction of the ramps. It is the
Delhi State Industrial and Infrastructure Development Corporation
Limited (DSIIDC) which is responsible for the construction," Minhas
told IANS.
"We cannot do anything about the disabled unfriendly pavements. In
case people with disability face any kind of difficulties they can
register a complaint by calling at our toll free numbers," Minhas
stated.
Mahato and Ismail's anguish are, however, not limited to only
travelling in the city buses. It unfortunately also extends to the
Delhi Metro, which is considered to be a "boon" for daily commuters.
The duo share that the house keeping staff recruited who assist people
with disability to board the metro are not "easily available".
"Every time I want to board the Metro, I have to wait for at least 20
minutes until the house keeping staff comes for assistance. It is
ironical, but at times announcements are made to call the house
keeping staff," Sheikh told IANS.
Boarding the metro at overcrowded interchange Metro stations like
Rajiv Chowk, New Delhi and Kashmere Gate makes it more difficult for
the disabled.
"As there are a limited number of house keeping staff at every Metro
station, it sometimes becomes difficult for the house keeping staff to
be available," Anuj Dayal, chief spokesperson of the Delhi Metro, told
IANS.
"To make every station disabled-friendly, the Delhi Metro is planning
to install steel railings at all its stations. The Phase 3 Metro
stations will have railings, which have been designed keeping in mind
the problems faced by the differently-abled," he added.
Installing such steel railings will prove to be beneficial for the
disabled, says Sheikh.
"There is an urgent need for the installation of such steel railings,
as not just the disabled, but even the general public will be
benefited," said Sheikh.
Both Mahato and Sheikh, who have fallen on the tracks of the Delhi
Metro in the absence of railings, have been victims of the
government's apathy towards the 70 million disabled of the country.
(Rupesh Dutta can be contacted at rupes...@ians.in)



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



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