Monday 12 December 2016

Love, war and hope - a year in photos.

2016 will stand in history as a 'critical juncture' with Brexit and a Trump administration, history will be shaped by how we respond as a global community. In 2017 we need to stand together to protect our human rights and work together to battle against this turning political tide. 


Eddie Ndopu, disability activist and inspiration
Source  http://mg.co.za/article/2016-07-11-00-eddie-ndopu-is-ready-willing-and-able



'We fell in love': relationships and people with learning disabilities – in pictures
Source  https://www.theguardian.com/social-care-network/gallery/2016/jun/20/learning-disability-week-relationships-love-friendship 




2016 has been marked with a fundamental change in war and consequently how the international community has responded, this young girl lost both of her legs during the Yemen war.
Source  https://www.icrc.org/en/document/scars-war-yemens-disabled




This year we celebrated the 2016 Paralympics
Source  http://www.telegraph.co.uk/paralympic-sport/2016/08/25/paralympics-2016-jonnie-peacock-insists-rio-should-be-ashamed-of/ 




'We fell in love': relationships and people with learning disabilities – in pictures
Source  https://www.theguardian.com/social-care-network/gallery/2016/jun/20/learning-disability-week-relationships-love-friendship 





Another year plagued with cuts in the UK, protesters in Brighton come to the streets.
Source http://www.disabledgo.com/blog/2016/07/protesters-bring-rotten-pip-message-to-the-core-of-westminster/#.WEx6FqKLSRs 





Saturday 3 December 2016

What we can do for International Day of Persons with Disabilities (IDPD)

Today we mark the International Day of Persons with Disabilities (IDPD). Since 1992, the United Nations of International Day of Persons with Disabilities (IDPD) has been celebrated annually on 3rd December around the world. The theme for this year's International Day is "Achieving 17 Goals for the Future We Want".

This marks the recent adoption of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the role of these goals "in building a more inclusive and equitable world for persons with disabilities". The UN state that this year's objectives include assessing the current status and foundation for a future of "greater inclusion for persons with disabilities". 

The message this year from the United Nations General Secretary, Ban Ki Moon, states that the SDG's is based on a pledge that no one is left behind. Achieving this requires the full inclusion and effective participation of persons with disabilities in society development. So what does this mean for us and how can we play a role?

1. Support charities with specific development targets and indicators which assist disabled people. 

Development policy should be inclusive this means including disabled people with development discourse and policy. If you decide to donate to a charity try to investigate if the policy is inclusive of disabled people. Far too often disabled people are neglected from development programmes and are overlooked. 

If we all called for inclusive development policy then perhaps we can make it towards the UN's goal for 2030 and nobody will be left behind. 

2. Ensure access to al mainstream services 

For us to meet the SDG in 2030 every global citizen needs to help bring changes to laws, policies and institutions and society to ensure that disabled people have access to all mainstream education, health, employment, transportation, information/communication and social services equally with dignity. 

3. Empower women and girls with disabilities 

Women and girls are facing double discrimination and this needs to end. Empowering women and girls with information about their rights and how they can claim them are essential for development. They must have access to the legal system and have equal rights to hold property and inherit. We must keep campaigning and working together to ensure women are included, every step of the way. 

4. Employment 

To be an inclusive society, we must promote the employment of disabled people within in all sectors and support entrepreneurship development. The development sector hand in hand with governments should support necessary development initiatives for people with disabilities aimed at overcoming barriers they face in seeking employment, including vocational training. 

5. Health and rehabilitation 

We need to ensure all disabled people have access to health and rehabilitation services that respect their physical and mental integrity and dignity. This includes providing information, services and counselling on sexual and reproductive health issues. 

On this International Day of Persons with Disabilities, we need to urge national and local governments, businesses and everyone in society to maintain efforts to end discrimination against disabled people. By working together, raising awareness and campaigning together we can achieve an inclusive society where no one is left behind. 

This week campaign is dedicated to the children at Thuy An Centre, Viet Nam and the boys at Home of Hope, Cambodia. 

Friday 2 December 2016

Women and disability

About 650 million people in the world - or 10% of the world's population - live with disabilities, and frequently encounter a myriad of physical and social obstacles. The majority often lack the opportunities of their non-disabled peers and are usually among the most marginalised in society.

A UN report noted, "Girls and women of all ages with any form of disability are among the more vulnerable and marginalised of society". Women and girls with disabilities are subject to double discrimination. Marginalised both on account of their disability and their gender, they face social isolation and rejection and are taught that they are inferior to their peers.  This has a clear impact on both their own aspirations and their family's aspirations for them in the future.

It is estimated over 200 million women with disabilities live below the poverty line. As discussed in this blog, there is no mention of disability in any of the eight Millennium Development Goal (MDG) to promote gender equality and empowerment of women with disabilities. This has significantly held back the progress of disabled women and girls in developing countries.

Due to the double discrimination, they are less likely to receive the health and rehabilitative care they need to remain economically or socially independent and they face reduced access to education, employment or social inclusion compared to both disabled men or non-disabled women. Despite these clear links, gender and disability have persistently been treated separately in development discourse.

Although the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) recognises that women and girls with disabilities are subject to multiple discrimination. However, the CRPD is very unique in recognising women and girls with disabilities as a distinct group. Theoretically, disabled women are in all human rights agreements, the sad reality is that they rarely referenced specifically and are often overlooked in development policy.

This often means disabled women are isolated from educational programmes, healthcare and food during humanitarian crises. Disability causes poverty, and poverty can lead to disability. Women are more likely to have limited resources and are more likely to be deprived of basic necessities and unable to access their rights.

A recent report by Action on disability and development (ADD ) on displaced populations in post-conflict Norther Uganda, a disabled woman describes how "when food is given being given, sometimes persons with disabilities are given what others leave behind on their plates".

The same report found that many disabled women remaining in camps longer after many others have returned home because they are physically and economically unable to leave as a result of their disability. This is yet another example of why governments and all organisations which work in development need to ensure they are focusing on working with, and listening to disabled people. (Human Rights Watch,2010)

 In order to tackle systematic violations of women's human rights more needs to be done to tackle this discrimination throughout the international system. The develop sector needs to develop specific development targets and indicators to measure the impact on women and girls with disabilities. These should be a cross-cutting aspect of all global and national development goals which should be at the top of the development agenda.

If the UN is going to meet the Sustainable Development Goals the development sector, leading international institutions such as the UN and World Health Organisation (WHO) need to work closely with governments to ensure women are included in  all aspects of development policy.





Thursday 1 December 2016

Violation of disabled rights in the UK with government 'reforms'

Austerity policies introduced into welfare and social care by the coalition government amount to “systematic violations” of the rights of people with disabilities, a UN inquiry has concluded.

The report says a range of measures aimed at reducing public spending since 2010, including the controversial changes such as changes to Employment and Support Allowance, the scrapping of the Independent Living Fund, cuts to the Access to Work scheme, the under-occupancy deduction from Housing Benefit or ‘bedroom tax’ and the Benefit Cap.

The highly critical report, published in Geneva on Monday 7th November, says the “rights of disabled people to live independently, to work and achieve an adequate standard of living have been negatively affected by austerity measures”.

It makes eleven recommendations, including a key statement calling on the UK government to carry out a study of the cumulative impact of all spending cuts on disabled people and to ensure the human rights of disabled people are upheld.

The UK government, however, rejected the UN report, the work and pensions secretary Damien Green saying that the report was “patronising and offensive” and presented an outdated view of disability in the UK. He said Britain was “a world leader in disability rights and equality”.
However, disability activists and charities welcomed the report, saying it accurately highlighted the real economic and social pressures faced by disabled people after years of harsh cuts to social security and social care.

The report is damning about the actions in which ministers have conducted welfare and social care reforms, arguing that parliament pushed ahead with changes with the knowledge they would have an extreme impact on disabled people.

The inquiry highlighted that the personal independence payments and the independent living fund had “hindered various aspects of [disabled people’s] right to live independently”, it says making them more reliant on family and carers and in some instances forcing them into institutional care which has also seen significant cuts.

The highly controversial bedroom tax and other housing support such as Disabled Facilities Grants (DFG) had led to debt and eviction. The bill has hit many families as tenants in social housing have their benefits reduced by 14% if they have a spare bedroom, or 25% if they two or more.

The bedroom tax hit families who needed a spare room for an overnight carer, families such as the Rutherford’s. Paul Rutherford, the grandfather of a disabled child from Pembrokeshire has been fighting a legal battle for three years with the government. Warren needs an extra bedroom for an overnight carer. The court appeal ruled that the bedroom tax was discriminatory in the cases of the Rutherfords. However, the Department for Work and Pensions appealed against the decision and the supreme court announced the case of the Rutherfords and several other bedroom tax challenges would be heard. 

Government attempts to decrease the disproportionately high levels of unemployment among disabled people have had little impact. It is highly critical of what is calls the ‘functional assessments’ of disabled people who have applied for social security benefits. The report stresses that their experience tended to be one where they were “merely processed rather than being listened to or understood”.

Alarmingly the report highlighted that disabled people had suffered from a climate in which they were portrayed as “lazy and putting a burden on taxpayers”. The blame game which politicians have relied on to win votes and the Tories election posters with slogans such as ‘Let’s cut benefits for those who refuse work’ have had an extremely negative effect. The report noted that disabled people have continued to experience “increasing hostility, aggressive behaviour and sometimes attacks to their integrity”.

The report, issued by the committee on the rights of persons with disabilities concludes: “There is reliable evidence that the threshold of grave or systematic violations of the rights of persons with disabilities has been met”.

The investigation was instigated by the charity Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) who contacted the committee in 2012 – since then other charities have also confirmed that they had contact with the UN. After two years of deliberations, the UN committee on the rights of persons with disabilities gave the green light to the inquiry in May 2014.

After extensive interviews and hearings from the 11-day inquiry tour of the UK undertaken by two UN envoys in October in 2015. The inquiry team met with more than 200 individuals, including officials, MPs, activists and academics.