Copying below a report from Midday Mumbai, thought this will be of interest
to members of this group.

Shampa Sengupta

Ex-army major is first disabled Indian at UN agency*By:* Vinod Kumar Menon *
Date:*  2012-03-25 *Place:* Mumbai

*Former Indian Army officer who suffered severe visual impairment and
survived two years in the hospital post an operation in Kashmir in 2000
becomes first disabled Indian to be appointed to UN agency*

Major Gopal Mitra (41) may desire to borrow vision for few moments to
salute the Indian tricolour flying high at the UNICEF headquarters in New
York on his first day of a new job tomorrow.

A former Indian Army officer, Mitra is the first disabled person from India
to be appointed at the headquarters of a major UN agency.

Mitra is joining the UNICEF as programme specialist, and his role will
involve providing technical support to enhance the inclusion of children
with disabilities in policies and programmes at global, regional and
national levels. The UNICEF works for child rights in more than 190
countries.

Speaking exclusively to SMD from the UK, Mitra said, "Had I not lost my
vision in the insurgency operation in J&K, done my Masters in social work
from the Tata Institute of Social Science (TISS) and followed that with an
MSc in Development Management from the London School of Economics (LSE), I
would not be where I am today."

After graduating from the LSE, he joined Leonard Cheshire Disability (LCD),
an international disability NGO in the UK as the inclusive education
manager for the South Asia Region and provided technical support to
inclusive education programmes in India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and
Bangladesh. His work in the region helped facilitate access to education of
children with disabilities in regular schools.

Major Mitra is also an ardent campaigner of disability rights. He moved to
LCD's central office in London in 2008 as the international campaigns
coordinator where he looked after the Young Voices project which brings
together young persons with disabilities from 18 countries across Asia,
Africa and Latin America as future leaders of the disability movement to
campaign for the implementation of the UN Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities.

Mitra feels, "Young people with disabilities are among the poorest and most
marginalised of the world's youth. Estimates suggest that there are between
180 and 220 million youth with disabilities worldwide, and nearly 80 per
cent of them live in developing countries. So our point is if people with
disabilities are not included by the government in programmes and policy
making, it is not a only violation of human rights of the disabled, but
also a huge loss of potential to the nation."

Today, many progressive countries have signed international treaties passed
by the UN General Assembly in December 2006 adopting the UN convention on
the rights of person with disability. More than 100 national governments
across the world have ratified this treaty, which makes it obligatory for
national government to reach out and reduce the barriers that disabled
people face to live as equal members in the society.

*From the Indian Army to London*
> Mitra joined the Indian Military Academy and was commissioned in the
Indian Army in June 1995. He served extensively in Counter Insurgency
operations both in North East India and Kashmir. He was also engaged in
active operations during the Kargil War in 1999.

> In 2000, he was severely injured while leading a "search and destroy"
operation in the Kupwara district of Kashmir, and suffered profound visual
impairment. Mitra survived many near-fatal injuries, 60 stitches across his
face, several reconstructive surgeries and almost two years in the hospital.

> During this period, the Army sent him to the National Institute for the
Visually Handicapped (NIVH) in Dehradun for a rehabilitation programme. At
the National Association for the Blind (NAB, Delhi) he also received
training in using JAWS (Job Access with Speech), a software which enables
persons with visual impairment to use regular computers by vocalising the
keystrokes and reading out the text on the screen.

> In 2003, he married Sreerupa, who is the daughter of Capt. (Retd) Jayanta
Kumar Sengupta, who was also visually impaired in the 1965 Indo-Pak War.
Mitra too decided to take up a career in development and the Indian Army
supported him to undertake an MA in Social Work at the Tata Institute of
Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai from 2003-2005.

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