International focus on the disabled

The United Nations General Assembly is scheduled to adopt the International 
Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights and Dignity of Persons
with Disabilities - the first human rights treaty of this century - at its 61st 
annual session this month. The instrument, which aims at enhancing the
quality of the life of an estimated 650 million disabled people - 80 per cent 
of whom live in developing countries - is the latest among the global treaties
targeted at specific minority groups such as children, women, and migrant 
workers. The core objective of the convention, which is to guarantee equal 
opportunities
and freedom from discrimination, continues to be of immense relevance globally. 
Of particular importance to a country such as India is the article that
obliges governments to expand the reach of inclusive education - the education 
of disabled children together with the non-disabled ones. The convention
stops short of clamping a ban on the predominant, current mode of imparting 
learning for the handicapped in exclusive settings, euphemistically called
`special' schools, with the potential to enforce segregation. But even where 
the general education system cannot fully support the individual needs of
the disabled, the departure must nonetheless be consistent with the goal of 
inclusion.

While the effects of the 2004 Asian Tsunami and the situation in the 
perpetually strife-torn parts of the world have brought the issue of the 
disabled to
the fore and lent it a sense of urgency, the original clause providing for an 
international mechanism to monitor the implementation of the Convention has
been watered down to a mere authorisation of individuals and non-government 
organisations to forward complaints of violations. The United States has from
the start held back its support for the new Convention, voicing apprehension 
that its own law on disability might thereby be diluted. Such a position does
not stand to reason as U.N. instruments merely prescribe minimum standards and 
do not impinge on the status of domestic legislation. In fact, the U.S.
could continue to play a lead role on the global arena, given that its own 
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 has inspired similar legislation in
countries such as India and the United Kingdom.

http://www.hindu.com/2006/09/05/stories/2006090502970800.htm

Vikas Kapoor,
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