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Participation
Ad Hoc Committee
on a Comprehensive and Integral International Convention on Protection
and Promotion of the Rights and Dignity of Persons with Disabilities
NGO contributions to the elements of a convention[1]
NATURE OF THE CONVENTIONDPI We demand a specific international human rights convention that is reflective of the full range of civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights. DPI supports the position that in order for this divide to be effectively bridged, a specific international human rights Convention for disabled people must be elaborated. Furthermore, DPI believes that this Convention must be based in, and draw from, existing human rights norms and standards and address in concrete terms the economic, social, political and cultural circumstances that adversely impact the human rights condition of disabled people. In addition, the new convention should not be limited to an anti-discrimination framework. DPI fully supports the adoption and implementation of non-discrimination legislation at the domestic level, and non-discrimination and equality of opportunity must be intrinsic components of any human rights convention for disabled people. Yet there must be scope for the full elaboration of human rights in the context of disability if the international human rights framework is to effectively incorporate the disability perspective. STRUCTUREDPI Japan Part I General Provisions Part II Civil Freedoms of persons with disabilities Chapter 1 Freedom from Discrimination Section 1 Local Community life Section 2 Movement Section 3 Housing and Access to buildings Section 4 Use and Access to Goods and Services Section 5 Information and Communication Section 6 Education Section 7 Work Chapter II Freedom from Ill Treatment Part III Social, Economic and Cultural Rights of persons with disabilities Part IV Duty of State Parties Part V International Measures for Implementation Part VI International Cooperation Part VII The Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against persons with disabilities PREAMBLEWNUSP Preamble WNUSP is concerned about the naming of instruments containing outdated or paternalistic norms, which might cause confusion in the interpretation of this convention. The World Programme of Action on Disability and the Standard Rules, as well as the Inter-American Convention on Disability and relevant ILO conventions, should be recognized as antecedents of this human rights convention on the rights of people with disabilities. STATEMENT OF PRINCIPLES AND OBJECTIVESDPI Japan Article 1 Purposes of the Convention (1) The Convention aims
at, the abolition of all forms of discrimination against persons with
disabilities in civil, economical, political, cultural domains. European Disability Forum EDF strongly supports the following recommendations made by the disability caucus which met throughout the first Ad Hoc Committee meeting in July-August 2002[2] in New York:
The Convention should also clearly state that no national or international legal instrument, provision of declarations or conventions or part of any such provision or any other legal text should be interpreted in a restrictive sense or in any other way that places persons with disabilities at a disadvantage in any context or offer them less protection than other persons. Other principles on which the Convention should be based are those of integrity, liberty, social justice, self-determination and self-representation. Inclusion International Key human rights principles to be included in a Convention
World Blind Union We at the World Blind Union urge governments, working within the context of the process to develop a Convention on the rights of people with disabilities, to ensure that the following fundamental principles are incorporated into the Convention. This will ensure that the world's blind, partially sighted and deafblind people, and other groups of disabled people have:
Right to Full Participation This includes:
Right of blind and partially sighted people to take control of their own lives This includes:
Right to Dignity, Tolerance and Inclusion This includes:
Right to Life: This includes: WNUSP Principles While the convention must deal with the obligations of states as well as necessary social and systemic changes, the focal point must be the rights of people with disabilities and their exercise under conditions of equality, self-determination (in the sense of making one's own decisions) and social solidarity. Basic Articles: Overarching Provisions The Convention should ensure that it supersedes outdated instruments, by means of a paragraph such as the following (which was included in the document "What Rights Should the Treaty Contain?" that was developed at the Expert Group Meeting in Mexico City):
DEFINITIONSDPI Japan Article 2 Definition of 'disability' For the purposes of this Convention, 'disability' shall mean any difficulty experienced, due to a social environment requiring some degree of ability and specific skills, without taking into account individual particularities related to, inter alia, injury or sickness. Article 3 Definition of 'persons with disabilities' (1) For the purposes of this Convention, 'persons with disabilities' shall mean persons who are in such a situation, that they experience, or might experience, difficulties in living, due to a long-term, temporary or future disabilities. 'Person with disabilities' shall mean people in such a situation that they are disadvantaged if compared to persons without disabilities, unless the environment undergoes adaptation measures to their disabilities. (2) For the purposes of this Convention, 'persons with disabilities' shall mean persons having in the past experienced a 'disability' as defined at paragraph 1, or considered as experiencing a 'disability'. Article 4 Definition of 'discrimination against persons with disabilities' (1) For the purposes of this Convention, 'discrimination against persons with disabilities' shall mean situations, in a political, economical, social, cultural or any other context related to living conditions, and in which, persons' right to equal access to social life is either denied or limited, because of their physical or psychological particularities. (2) 'Unintentional discrimination' is considered as 'discrimination' as defined in alinea 1. For the purposes of this Convention, 'unintentional discrimination' shall mean situations in which, due to ignorance, incomprehension or prejudice against persons with disabilities, administrative services, public or private association, or individual denies actual violations of the rights of persons with disabilities, or, in which the specific needs related to a disability is not given adequate consideration, and as result persons with disabilities are disadvantaged or suffers ill-treatment. Article 5 Definition of 'ill-treatment' Are constitutive of an 'ill-treatment', abuse, neglect and economic exploitation. Abuse includes physical, sexual and psychological abuse. Neglect includes care-neglect and medical neglect. (1) For the purposes of the Convention, 'physical abuse' shall mean use of material force, injury or confinement. (2) For the purposes of the Convention, 'sexual abuse' shall mean any sexual contact or behaviour either against the will of a capable person, or towards an uncapable person, regardless of its will. (3) For the purposes of the Convention, 'psychological abuse' shall mean all behaviour that does not match to alinea 1 and 2 and such as teasing, oppressive, insulting or any such behaviour. (4) For the purposes of the Convention, 'care-neglect' shall mean failure by the person who is in charge, according to a legislation, a contract or an administrative measure, of the care of a person with disabilities, to provide that person with the care needed by any person with disabilities or by him as an individual case. (5) For the purposes of the Convention, 'medical neglect' shall mean failure by the person who is in charge, according to a legislation, a contract or an administrative measure, of the medical care of a person with disabilities, to provide adequate medical treatment or opportunity of such a treatment to that person. (6) Economic exploitation: For the purposes of the Convention, 'economic exploitation' shall mean either, use, acquisition or release of the assets of a person with disabilities for purposes other than its well-being; non payment of the salary of a person with disabilities for its effective work; or enforcing an person with disabilities to accomplish tasks that are not assumed by any legal contract. European Disability Forum Definition of disability The definition of disability is a very complex issue and should not become an excuse for inaction. We therefore suggest not to deal with this issue at an early stage of the process. The new WHO classification International Classification of Functioning (ICF) is not a legal definition of disability and therefore not appropriate for a legal instrument. EDF considers it as very important that:
Definition of discrimination The definition of discrimination to be included in the Convention should broadly reflect the definition of discrimination used in the EC Directive on equal treatment in the workplace [3]. Direct discrimination, indirect discrimination and harassment need to be considered as forms of discrimination. Moreover, it is vital to ensure that the failure to provide reasonable accommodation, has to be considered as a form of discrimination. The definition of discrimination of the Inter-American Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Persons with Disabilities might also provide some elements for the definition of discrimination. It states: "The term "discrimination against persons with disabilities" means any distinction or restriction based on disability, record of disability, condition resulting from a previous disability, or perception of disability, whether present or past, which has the effect or objective of impairing or nullifying the recognition, enjoyment, or exercise by a person with a disability of his or her human rights and fundamental freedoms." Positive action aiming to ensure real equal opportunities for disabled people should in no way be considered discrimination against non disabled people and should therefore be allowed and promoted. Definition of equal opportunities A definition of equal opportunities needs also to be included in the Convention. Any such definition should be based on the definition included in the UN Standard Rules. The right for disabled people and their families, particularly in the case of people with complex dependency needs, to obtain the adequate governmental support (financial and in terms of assistive devices, services and time) is a key element to really ensure full access to all human rights. World Blind Union Taking inspiration from the broad definition of disability introduced by the Mexican government's delegation in its proposal to the Ad Hoc Committee, the World Blind Union proposes the following definition: " A physical, psychiatric, intellectual, or sensory impairment, (whether permanent or temporary, provided that it lasts for a significant period of time), that limits the capacity to perform one or more essential activities of daily life, and which can be caused or aggravated by the economic and social environment." WNUSP Basic Articles: Who is covered It is important to characterize this as a human rights and non-discrimination convention, and thus to protect everyone from discrimination on the basis of disability. It is important to define discrimination on the basis of disability for that reason. Based on the definitions in the Inter-American Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Persons with Disabilities, the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, and the contributions made by participants in the Quito seminar, we propose the following the definition:
Our primary concern about such a definition is that all people with disabilities, and all forms of disability, be covered. It would also be desirable to obtain a definition that is comfortable both for people with disabilities who identify with medical terminology and diagnosis, and for those who reject medical terminology and identify with disability as a social and political category only. It is also important that any definition of disability not give rise to extensive litigation, for example by naming the extent of functional limitation that constitutes disability. GENERAL OBLIGATIONSDPI Japan Part IV Duty of State Parties (Domestic Cooperation) 1. In order to abolish all
forms of discrimination imposed upon persons with disabilities, State
Parties have the duty to immediately implement the rights stated in
Part II (Civil freedoms of people with disabilities) of the Convention. 2. In order for persons
with disabilities to achieve an average-standard life of persons without
disabilities in a political, economical, social cultural or any other
context related to living conditions, State Parties shall take measures
to implement these rights stated in Part III (Social, Economic and
Cultural Rights of persons with disabilities) to the fullest extent
possible within the State's legislation and other available methods
within the State. 3. State Parties shall survey
the status of rights regarding this convention, examine the contents
of I mplementation measures carried out by the State Parties concerned,
additionally expressing their opinions to the State Parties concerned,
and establish a domestic monitoring committee to promote this convention. GUARANTEE OF EQUALITY AND NON-DISCRIMINATIONDPI Japan Chapter 1 Freedom from discrimination Persons with disabilities shall be free of all forms of discrimination Section 1 Local community life Right to local community life
Prohibition of discrimination related to community life
Section 2 Movement 1. Right to freedom of movement
2. Prohibition of discrimination related to movement
Section 3 Housing and access to buildings 1. Rights as to housing and access to buildings Persons with disabilities, regardless of the nature and the seriousness of their disabilities, have equal rights as persons without disabilities in use and residence of housing and buildings without suffering discrimination based on their disabilities. For the purposes of the Convention, 'buildings' shall mean any building, whether public or private. 2. Prohibition of discrimination as to housing and access to buildings
Section 4 Use and Access to Goods and Services 1. Right to Use and Access to Goods and Services Persons with disabilities, regardless of the nature and the seriousness of their disabilities, have equal rights as persons without disabilities to use and access to any goods, services and programs, such as commercial products, public installations and facilities, advantages, commercial and service trade, and shall not be discriminated on the ground of their disabilities. 2. Prohibition of Discrimination as to Use and Access to Goods and Services For the purposes of the Convention, 'discrimination against persons with disabilities as to use and access to goods and services' shall mean situations in which persons with disabilities, regardless of their identity or their number, experience differential treatment compared to persons without disabilities, and shall be prohibited. For the purposes of the Convention, 'differential treatment' shall mean such situations as follows. (1) Restrictions or denial of use and access to goods and services, on the ground of their disabilities. (2) Specific conditions of use and access against the will of persons with disabilities, and (3) Restrictions or denial of use and access to services and programs, on the ground of their disabilities. Section 5 Information and Communication 1. Rights to Information and Communication (1) Persons with disabilities have the right to use and access by all means to all kinds of information, and the right to express. (2) Persons with disabilities, have the right to require State parties and local governments to take measures to guarantee their rights to use the devices listed at Part I General Provisions, article 7. 2. Prohibition of Discrimination as to the Rights to Information and Communication Any attempt to restrict the rights of persons with disabilities mentioned at paragraph 1 alinea 1 and 2 on the ground of their disabilities, or any negligence to guarantee these rights shall be considered as discrimination against persons with disabilities as to these rights, and is prohibited. Section 6 Education 1. Right to Education
2. Prohibition of Discrimination in Education For the purposes of the Convention, 'discrimination against persons with disabilities as to education' shall mean such situations as follows. (1) Educational policies that, as a general rule, do not provide persons with disabilities with the opportunity to receive an education integrated to that of persons without disabilities. (2) Educational policies as described in alinea (1) that do not provide for education through sign language in schools designed for children with hearing-impairment. (3) Educational policies as described in alinea (1) that do not provide for the necessary individual support to persons with disabilities. (4) Shortage of information about the facilities and the support needed to receive the education demanded for by persons with disabilities and their representatives. Section 7 Work 1. Right to Work (1) Persons with disabilities have the right to work in any domains within the society, and shall not endure any discriminatory treatment. (2) Persons with disabilities have the right to be provided for the support necessary to its engagement and to the sustainability of their job, such as adjustments in the working environment and human assistance. 2. Prohibition of Discrimination as to Employment For the purposes of the Convention, 'discrimination against persons with disabilities as to work' shall mean situations as follows, and shall be prohibited. (1) A refusal of appointment or a dismissal of a person with disabilities, on the grounds of its disabilities. (2) Disadvantageous treatment of persons with disabilities, regarding working conditions or environment, such as employment, salary, and promotion, on the sole ground of their disabilities, (3) Non-revision of discriminatory provisions that are obstacles to the employment of persons with disabilities, such as provisions limiting access to specific qualifications or providing for the non-application of minimum on the ground of disabilities. (4) Lack of public services necessary for persons with disabilities to choose a vocation that corresponds to their wishes and needs, such as job assistance facilities and support to maintain their job. 8. Medical Treatment and Rehabilitation 1. Right to Medical Treatment and Rehabilitation
2. Prohibition against Discrimination of Medical Treatment For the purposes of the convention, discrimination against persons with disabilities shall mean situations as follows, and shall be prohibited.
9. Birth 1. Right to Birth
2. Prohibition against Discrimination in Birth
10. Sexuality 1. Right to Sexuality Persons with disabilities, regardless of its nature and seriousness, have the right to be respected as an individual with sexuality in the same way as people without disabilities, and the right not to be restricted or forced in any romantic or sexual relationships, and the right to pregnancy and giving birth. 2. Prohibition of Discrimination against Sexuality Discrimination regarding sexuality of persons with disabilities shall mean situations where the rights alinea 1 are denied or experience situations as follows. (1) Restriction or force in sexual relationships on the ground of their disabilities. (2) Forced to contraception or abortion, and denied the opportunity to give birth to a child on the ground of their disabilities. (3) Deprivation of means of reproductive functions by carrying out operations such as hysterectomy and sterilization on the ground of their disabilities. 11. Political Participation 1. Right to Political Participation Persons with disabilities, regardless of its nature and seriousness, have the right to political participation in the same way as people without disabilities, without any discrimination based on disabilities. 2. Prohibition against Discrimination in Political Participation Discrimination against persons with disabilities in political participation shall mean different treatment from people without disabilities, regardless of the identification or the number of the participants, and is prohibited.
12. Judicial Procedure 1. Right to Judicial Procedure Persons with disabilities,
regardless of its nature and seriousness, have the right to judicial
procedures guaranteed under Constitution, statutes and legislations
of the State Parties in the same way as people without disabilities,
without any discrimination based on disabilities. 2. Prohibition against Discrimination in Judicial Procedure Discrimination against persons with disabilities in judicial procedure shall mean that judicial institutions fail to provide general accommodation as exemplified below, or persons with disabilities are restricted of their inherent rights which should maintain their own rights as exemplified below, and is prohibited. (1) For the purposes of the convention, elements that need to be accommodated by judicial institutions are as follows.
(2) Rights particular to judicial procedures for persons with disabilities Persons with disabilities have a particular right to use necessary means, auxiliary apparatus, and assistants other than a legal expert in all levels of judicial procedures, and will not be restricted under any circumstances (including attendance. The same applies for the following) for their use. GUARANTEES OF SPECIFIC RIGHTSDPI The following list is by no means exhaustive, but reflects (in no specific order) some of the rights addressed by existing human rights instruments that should be further elaborated if the convention is to cover the full spectrum of human rights:
DPI Japan Article 6 Protection of the right to self-determination
Article 7 Rights concerning language and characters
Chapter II Freedom from Ill Treatment 1. Persons with disabilities have the right to be free from fear of damages to their lives, bodies, properties and spirits caused by ill treatment (abuse, neglect, economic exploitation). 2. All forms of ill treatment against persons with disabilities shall be prohibited. 3. Persons with disabilities have the right to claim judicial and administrative remedies should they receive maltreatment. Part III Social, Economic and Cultural Rights of Persons with Disabilities 1. Purposes of the Convention State Parties shall confirm
that persons with disabilities in their own States have the right
to claim measures to ensure them an average-standard life of persons
without disabilities in that state in all of the following: social,
economic, cultural and other aspects of life. 2. Right to income security
3. Right to assistance security
4. Right to demand measures to guarantee civil rights
5. Right to administrative law of remedies procedures
European Disability Forum Right to employment The article on employment would need to include the following elements, among others:
Right to health The article on the right to health would need to include the following elements, among others:
Right to vote The article on the right to vote to include the following elements, among others:
There are many other important elements that will need to be included in the future Convention, but EDF would like at this stage to draw the attention on the following specific issues that represent areas requiring further development. Right to life Current developments in population demography, ethics and medical technology present increasing challenges to the right to life for disabled people. Prenatal diagnosis aiming to prevent the birth of persons with disabilities and dangerous developments in the field of euthanasia, will require a special attention in the future UN Convention. Women with disabilities and other disabled people facing double or multiple discrimination Special attention needs to be given to women and girls with disabilities, as well as older people with disabilities, immigrants with disabilities and disabled people from ethnic minorities. Persons with disabilities in institutions One of the most striking human rights violations is that suffered by persons with disabilities confined in large residential institutions, mostly people with psychological and people with intellectual disabilities. The UN Convention must give particular attention to this group of persons with disabilities, by establishing a timeframe by which these large residential institutions must be replaced by alternative community based services. During this process of establishment of alternative services, the human rights of persons with disabilities in these institutions should receive special attention in the form of monitoring systems. Accessibility as a precondition to full enjoyment of human rights The lack of accessibility is for many persons with disabilities one of the most relevant barriers to the full exercise of their human rights. A Convention needs to both prevent new barriers and progressively eliminate existing barriers, if it really is to ensure the equal enjoyment of opportunities for persons with disabilities. Accessibility means different
things for different groups and must therefore always be understood
in a comprehensive way. It includes, among others: The Convention needs to tackle these different barriers by: -
prohibiting the establishment of any new barriers. This means that
new buildings, new transport modes, new public spaces, new communications
should conform to accessibility standards. IDA[5] 1) Civil and political rights; Right to live The lives of people with disabilities are threatened e.g. by denial of the necessities of life such as food and water, shelter, medical treatment (or conversely by the imposition of unwanted medical treatment) and eugenic threats. Freedom from torture and inhuman and degrading treatment Because disabled people are treated as objects they experience inhuman and degrading treatment in their everyday life, including sexual exploitation, physical violence and forced treatment. Disabled women are especially victimized. Bodily and psychic integrity Disabled people's right to refuse treatment is often denied and they are frequently subjects of medical experimentation. Liberty Disabled people's liberty rights are frequently infringed by institutionalization and exclusion. Thus, disabled people are denied the right to independent living and self-determination. Equality The main obstacle facing people with disabilities is discrimination not impairment. But disabled people can only enjoy full equality rights if governments adopt a structural equality approach and firmly base their policies on the principle of social inclusion. Association Disabled people are often prevented from forming their own organisations or joining political parties to protect their interests and are denied access to social organisations and existing political parties. Family/privacy rights Disabled children are often denied the right to grow up as a part of a family and disabled adults are often denied the right to marry and have and raise children. In particular, disabled women are often victims of forced sterilization and forced abortion. Recognition as a person before the law Persons deemed legally incapacitated are systematically denied their citizenship rights such as decisions about medical treatment, ability to sign contracts and to manage their finances. Because of the need for assistance in one area of their life disabled people are often deprived of rights in all areas of life. Because children with disabilities are devalued they are often not registered at birth and are denied a legal name and citizenship. Freedom of expression People with disabilities are often foreclosed from mainstream communication and thus are denied the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion as well as freedom of speech and expression. In particular deaf persons´ human rights are violated by denial or prohibition of sign language. Vote and stand for elections Disabled people are often denied the right to participate in democratic process by lack of access to voting and prohibition of standing as candidates for election. Blind people in particular are denied the right to secret voting. In addition institutionalized people are deemed incapable of voting. Citizenship People with disabilities are often denied full citizenship rights e.g. unequal treatment before the law or denial of effective legal remedies. They are often subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile. Immigration laws often discriminate against people with disabilities. Recognition of people with disabilities as a minority Because people with disabilities are not recognized as an insular discrete minority they are foreclosed from democratic processes. 2) Economic, social and cultural rights Traditionally attempts to recognize the economic, social and cultural rights of people with disabilities have been based on a model of charity and welfare. A convention must enshrine these rights as a basic for liberty and empowerment Education Most children with disabilities are denied access to any education and most who receive an education do so in inadequate and/or segregated settings. For example deaf, blind and deafblind children are denied the right to education in sign language or Braille. Work Most disabled persons are excluded from the workforce. The right to free choice of employment, to just and favorable conditions of work is denied among others by being relegated to sheltered workshops. In addition most disabled people do not get adequate vocational training. Health Most disabled people have no access to basic healthcare. Access Disabled people's right to freedom of movement and information is being violated through architectural, communicational and attitudinal barriers. A convention must oblige state parties to build inclusive systems. Standard of living The majority of disabled people live in poverty. They have no access to adequate food, clothing, housing and necessary social service such as rehabilitation. Having a disability should not mean having a lower standard of living, or having to accept unwanted services to obtain the necessities of life. Culture Disabled people's right to culture is often violated by being foreclosed from cultural life. In addition, elements of the culture of disabled people, such as sign language and Braille are not recognized and valued. Disabled people are stigmatized by the presentation of false images in popular culture, which creates prejudices and superstition. 3) Right to development The IDA would welcome the application of so-called 3rd generation human rights in the Disability Convention. Since there is a strong link between poverty and disability, disabled people need to benefit without discrimination from a right to development. World Blind Union We at the World Blind Union urge governments, working within the context of the process to develop a Convention on the rights of people with disabilities, to ensure that the following specific rights are incorporated into the Convention. This will ensure that the world's blind, partially sighted and deafblind people, and other groups of disabled people have:
Right to Universal Suffrage This includes:
Right to Freedom of Association and to Form Organisations to Represent the Specific Interests of blind and partially sighted people This includes:
Right to Judicial Equality and Protection This includes:
Right to Information and Communication This includes:
Right of Access to the Built Environment and Public Transport This includes:
Right to Education This includes:
Right to Health Services This includes:
Right to Rehabilitation This includes:
Right to Vocational Training and Employment This includes:
Right to Culture and Leisure This includes:
Right to Financial Support: This includes:
Right to Insurance This includes:
WNUSP Freedom from torture, right to life, liberty, bodily and mental integrity 2. Every human being is a person. The status of personhood shall not be deprived on account of actual or perceived disability. 3. No person shall be deprived of the right to life or the right to reproductive choice on account of actual or perceived disability. 4. No person shall be detained, interned or confined involuntarily on account of actual or perceived disability. 5. (a) Unwanted medical or related interventions, and/or corrective surgeries, shall not be imposed on persons with disabilities. (b) Persons with disabilities have the same right to self-determination as persons without disability, including the right to accept or refuse treatment. 6. Medical and/or related interventions shall not be used for the purposes of coercion, intimidation, punishment, obtaining information or a confession, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind. 7. No research shall be done on persons with disabilities absent their free informed consent. Research done in the disability field, and with persons with disabilities as subjects, shall conform to the standards of the Nuremberg Code. 8. All violence against people with disabilities shall be severely punished, whether it is done under state authority or otherwise, including violence in the home or by caregivers. Violence includes actions in violation of articles 4, 5, 6, 7 or 8 above, other physical assault, sexual assault, deprivation of food and water, etc. Equality under the law 9. Laws regulating civil status and rights, civic obligations and punishment of crimes shall not differentiate between people on account of actual or perceived disability. 10. No person shall be deprived of the legal capacity to assert rights in her or his own behalf, having particular regard to the rights enumerated in this Convention. 11. Coercive public health powers, for instance to vaccinate or quarantine, shall not be used to retaliate or discriminate against people with disabilities. Association and privacy 12. Persons with disabilities have the right to not have medical records or other records related to the disability disclosed to third parties without the person's prior consent. 13. (a) Persons with disabilities have the right to choice in living accommodations, such as the choice whether to establish a household as a single person or to establish a household with others of the person's own choosing, and the right to not reside in an institutional facility. (b) In order to facilitate exercise of this right, states shall ensure that persons with disabilities have an assured adequate income to maintain themselves in their own households, access to housing, and access to non-institutional services. 14. Persons with disabilities have the right to privacy in their homes or places of residence, including the right to choose and direct caregivers. 15. Persons with disabilities have the right to form families and to become parents, and to exercise parental rights and responsibilities, free from any form of discrimination. Participation and dignity 16. Persons with disabilities have the same right as persons without disability to decent and respectful interactions. 17. (a) Persons with disabilities have the same right as persons without disability to meaningful participation in all matters that affect them. Specifically for service programs that means significant participation in formulation, implementation, monitoring and evaluation. (b) The disability perspective shall be mainstreamed in all aspects of public affairs, assessment of public needs and development of public services. 18. (a) Persons with disabilities have the right to have access to mass media to promote disability-affirmative cultural values. (b) Hate speech against persons with disabilities shall be punished. Housing and other basic necessities 19. (a) Persons with disabilities have the right to enjoy access to the basic necessities of life for themselves and their families, including food, water, clothing, health care, personal care items, and housing as an independent household, and the right to an assured income that is sufficient to meet these needs. Services, devices and assistance for disability-related needs shall also be considered basic necessities of life for persons with disabilities. (b) Nothing in this article shall be interpreted to allow imposing any service or assistance on any person contrary to her or his own wishes. 20. Persons with disabilities have the right to temporarily leave their homes and enter a facility by choice for treatment or rehabilitation or respite, and to return to their former homes on completion of that purpose. Employment 21. (a) Persons with disabilities have the right to work at an occupation of their choosing, the right to receive equal pay for equal work, the right to non-discrimination in all aspects of employment and collective bargaining arrangements, and the right to reasonable accommodation in the workplace. (b) Reasonable accommodation in workplace includes, inter alia, flexibility in schedule, job routines, supervision and training, and leaves of absence. Health care 22. Persons with disabilities have the right to have access to a full range of health care and to exercise choice with respect to every aspect of their health care. Monitoring of institutions 23. Persons with disabilities who reside in institutional facilities retain all the rights enumerated in this Convention, including the right to leave the institution if they so choose. National human rights institutions shall have the power and authority to inspect such facilities and enforce the observance of this Convention within them. Non-discrimination and reasonable accommodation 24. Discrimination against people with disabilities in all its forms, including discrimination by public entities or in the provision of public services, shall be prohibited by law. 25. Disabled people have the right to enjoy access to goods and services on an equal basis with non-disabled people, and to participate on an equal basis in all governmental services and programs. Reasonable accommodation of persons with disabilities shall be provided to ensure such access and participation, and to ensure non-discrimination. Persons entitled to claim rights 26. Any person with a disability, and any person subjected to adverse treatment on account of actual or perceived disability, or who has a record or history of either of the above, is entitled to claim rights under this Convention. 27. All types of disability are included under this Convention, whether physical, sensory, intellectual, mental, emotional or psychosocial, visible or invisible, and of temporary, permanent, intermittent or undetermined duration. OTHER STATE OBLIGATIONSDPI Japan Part VI International Cooperation Taking into consideration that eighty percent of all persons with disabilities live in developing countries, in the process of examining this convention the importance of international cooperation contributing to promote and protect the dignity and rights of persons with disabilities need to be well examined. In that respect, along with the role of specialized organizations and other international organizations, the right to development need also be well considered. To that end, State Parties
pledge to ensure:
European Disability Forum Awareness raising and dissemination Attitudinal barriers faced by many persons with disabilities can only partly be overcome through legal action. Thus, awareness raising of the general population as well as training to more targeted groups on the rights of persons with disabilities can play a major contribution to the removal of negative stereotypes and social stigma encountered by persons with disabilities. The Convention should include a specific article, obliging States to undertake these actions in consultation with representative disability organisations. The Importance of the role of disability organisations Rule 18 of the UN Standard Rules foresees the right of persons with disabilities through their representative organisations to be involved in policy making processes. Consistent with principles of due process and participation under international human rights law and the UN Standard Rules, the UN Convention must provide for the meaningful participation of people with disabilities. In this regard, the Convention must provide for the involvement of persons with disabilities and their representative organisations in its implementation, and accordingly provide adequate support for this involvement. Development co-operation and the Convention The UN Convention shall undoubtedly influence the way development co-operation is provided. Both donor governments and
agencies and recipients of development co-operation funds, must ensure
that these funds contribute to the enforcement of the UN Convention
by:
Prevention of disability While there is no doubt that Member States should undertake actions to prevent disability, including public health campaigns, road security and other measures, the proposed Convention addresses the rights of persons with disabilities, and is not the appropriate instrument to focus on prevention concerns. World Blind Union The World Blind Union recognises there is substantial variation in the rights status of disabled people in different countries. This variation is due to economic, cultural and political factors. Inevitably the time taken to implement a Convention to protect the rights of disabled people will take longer in those countries where disabled people's rights are less developed. We at the World Blind Union therefore recommend that a process for implementing and monitoring the Convention be introduced that takes account of the differing levels of rights development in UN Member States. However, it will be essential to ensure that even though some Member States will need longer to fully implement the Convention, every State that is a signatory to the Convention should attain full implementation within an agreed period of time. During this period there must not be any regression in rights or any diminution in services. "Progressivity" should be a key aspect of the implementation of the Convention. With this in mind, the World Blind Union proposes that a staged process for the implementation of the Convention should be introduced. Every Member State would work through each of the stages and participate in the associated monitoring arrangements. However, some states would attain full implementation earlier than those States that begin the process with a less developed level of rights for disabled people. A staged process could work as follows: Stage 1 States accept a binding commitment, backed by national legislation, to fully implement the Convention. This commitment will recognise that the Convention constitutes an international standard for the establishment of rights for disabled people in each UN Member State. This legislation is to be enacted within two years of a country becoming a signatory to the Convention, providing the necessary minimum number of signatories has been met. WBU proposes that the number of signatory countries required to activate the Convention should be 20. WNUSP Obligations 1. Any international or national legal provision and/or administrative arrangement or decision in contravention with or derogation of the provisions of this convention shall be deemed void ab initio. Basic Articles: What are state obligations? The convention must require states to adopt anti-discrimination laws and repeal all laws which themselves perpetuate discrimination. The rights guaranteed by the convention must give rise to enforceable remedies in national tribunals, and states must also accept an obligation to protect against violation of rights by non-governmental agents. Such provisions are essential in a human rights treaty and comparable to obligations already undertaken in other treaties. MONITORING MECHANISMSDPI We demand a strong convention-monitoring
mechanism informed by the unique perspective of disabled people to
ensure the credibility, legitimacy and efficacy of the convention.
Any monitoring mechanism for the convention must be fully informed by disability and human rights expertise. Disabled people are the experts regarding our situation and it is therefore crucial that any monitoring body established under the convention include a majority of disabled people in its composition. DPI Japan Part V International Measures for Implementation 1. State Reporting Within a year of being a member of the State Parties concerned, and thereafter every five years, State Parties shall report to the Secretary-General of the United Nations the survey report regarding rights for persons with disabilities determined in this convention and measures taken to implement various provisions in this convention. 2. Individual Communications In the case where various provisions of this convention are violated, and remediation of the concerned individual rights cannot be achieved despite rendering available domestic remediation measures in the case where individual rights are violated, on the part of the qualification of the individual concerned, the afflicted party may report to the committee dealing with the abolition of discrimination again persons with disabilities, requesting for the facts of violation of rights and its remediation. Part VII The Committee on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Persons with Disabilities
European Disability Forum The Convention should also provide for a monitoring and enforcement mechanism that is comparable to the existing human rights treaties. The new Convention shall not be a second class treaty, but should have monitoring mechanisms that represent the latest developments in international law. A Treaty monitoring body, including a majority of persons with disabilities, will play a vital role in giving content to the Convention. The obligation for Member States to present periodic reports, as well as the possibility for individuals and representative NGOs to present individual complaints should be another feature of the Convention. The establishment of technical bodies to provide guidance on certain issues might also be foreseen in the future Convention in the areas of, for example, accessibility to the built environment and information technologies. IDA IV: Monitoring Mechanism Since the Disability Convention shall be a human rights instrument the monitoring mechanism should be similar to that for the existing six core Human Rights Treaties (especially CEDAW and CRC). This will entail state reports, complaint mechanisms (individual/group and state), NGO involvement and investigation powers of the treaty monitoring body. In addition the monitoring process should have the benefit of the involvement of the Special Rapporteur and the panel of experts throughout the monitoring process. World Blind Union Stage 2 Adoption of a monitoring process to establish current deficits in the rights of disabled people, compared with the provisions of the Convention. This stage to be completed within three years of the completion of Stage 1. The monitoring is to be organised and undertaken internally by the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights, ( UNHCHR) which should set up a secretariat dedicated to this purpose. This secretariat should be served by a panel of advisers in which international organisations of disabled people are represented. Disabled people themselves must work in the monitoring agency and serve on the advisory panel. The results of the monitoring process are to be published. Stage 3 States' governments are to discuss the results of the monitoring process with the national organisations representing the interests of disabled people, with the objective of preparing an agreed Plan of Action to bring the rights of disabled people within the Member States up to the standard of the Convention. Those rights considered by the organisations of disabled people to be most important should be accorded a high priority for implementation. The Plan of Action will identify the resources required to implement the introduction of each right and the time scale for full implementation. Stage 4 Five years after the publication of the monitoring process, the appropriate UN body as described in stage 2, will assess progress in relation to the plan of action. Its findings will be published and made available internationally. The body undertaking this work will use a standard of assessment, based on the provisions of the UN Convention, that will be applied to all signatory States. This process will incorporate the views of the organisations of disabled people in the Member States and be repeated every five years, so that continuous progress can be evaluated. Stage 5 When the result of the external monitoring is known, the Member States will consult with their organisations of disabled people to review and revise the Plan of Action. This consultation and review will be repeated after each external assessment has been undertaken. Stage 6 Once the monitoring established at stage 3 indicates that the Member State has attained the rights standards of the Convention, it will be required to present reports every 2 years, showing how it is upholding the rights established in the Convention. This report will then be analysed by the relevant UN body as described in stage 2. From this stage, the procedure is thus similar to the one used in the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Disabled people, either as individuals or through their representative organisations, will be given recourse to lodge complaints about alleged infringements of their rights under the Convention. If settlement is not reached to the satisfaction of both parties at a national level, there will be an option to lodge complaints to the dedicated UNHCHR Convention secretariat. As the final authority, it is the responsibility of this secretariat to investigate these complaints. WNUSP Implementation and Monitoring WNUSP advocates a comprehensive monitoring mechanism to include state reports, complaint mechanisms (collective and individual), participation by NGOís, and investigatory powers for the treaty body, as well as a special rapporteur and panel of experts. We also believe that a conference of states parties for the purpose of cooperation in mainstreaming disability in their development and policymaking could be beneficial so long as people with disabilities are involved through their NGOs and otherwise. These are all measures which have been proven useful in monitoring and implementation of other instruments. The monitoring committee should be composed of a diverse group of experts to be chosen from among people with disabilities who are leaders of national disability organizations or have otherwise demonstrated their competence in the promotion and protection of the rights of people with disabilities. People with disabilities will also need to be centrally and influentially involved in national institutions overseeing monitoring and implementation of the convention. Notes[1] This compilation contanis NGO contributions specifically made to draft elements of a convention, and is structured according to the Bangkok recommendations on the elaboration of a comprehensive and integral international convention to promote and protect the rights and dignity of persons with disabilities. [2] Recommendations for Final Report: Disability Caucus, UN Ad Hoc Committee, New York, July/August 2002. [3] Council Directive 2000/78/EC establishing a general framework for equal treatment in employment and occupation. [4] Council Directive 2000/78/EC establishing a general framework for equal treatment in employment and occupation. [5] IDA member organisations: Disabled People's International, Inclusion International, Rehabilitation International, World Blind Union, World Federation of the Deaf, World Federation of the Deaf-Blind, WNUSP. |