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U.N. pact on disabled rights signed


March 31, 2007 12:38:09 AM PST

In what the U.N. human rights chief called an unprecedented show of support to empower
the physically and mentally impaired, 80 countries signed a U.N. convention enshrining
the rights of the world's 650 million disabled.

The United Nations held a ceremony Friday on the first day the convention opened for signatures and not only did 80 countries and a representative of the European Union sign it but Jamaica announced that it had also ratified the convention. That means only 19 more ratifications are needed before the convention comes into force, and speaker after speaker urged speedy approval.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour announced the huge level of
support at a news conference afterward.  "It's certainly unprecedented in terms of support for a human rights instrument, but it's apparently setting records for the signature of any convention in the United Nations," she said.  The convention is a blueprint to end discrimination and exclusion of the physically and mentally disabled in education, jobs, and everyday life. It requires countries
to guarantee freedom from exploitation and abuse for the disabled, while protecting
rights they already have such as voting rights for the blind and wheelchair-accessible
buildings.

The convention guarantees that the disabled have the inherent right to life on an
equal basis with the able-bodied and requires countries to prohibit discrimination
on the basis of disability and guarantee equal legal protection. Countries must also
ensure the equal right of the disabled to own and inherit property, to control their
financial affairs, and to privacy over their personal lives.
The U.N. General Assembly adopted the 32-page convention by consensus in December,
culminating a campaign spearheaded by disability rights activists and the governments
of New Zealand, Ecuador and Mexico.
"We would not be here today without the sustained efforts of the disability community,"
Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro said at Friday's ceremony.
"In three short years, the convention went from dream to reality," she said. "On
its adoption by the General Assembly late last year, it became the first human rights
treaty of the 21st century, and the fastest negotiated international human rights
instrument in history."
Arbour said "it's very appropriate" that the first treaty of the new century "targets
a community that has been so marginalized for so long" and that it focuses on rights, not just social welfare and programs to meet the needs of the disabled.
She called the convention "a first step" in empowering the disabled, stressing that
once it comes into force governments will have to enact legislation and change practices
to ensure the rights of the disabled.

Yannis Vardakastanis, representing the International Disability Caucus which was
in the forefront of the campaign for the convention, congratulated the 80 countries
that signed "this unprecedented convention."
He said it represents "a very drastic" shift in the way the international community
looks at disabilities.  "The 650 million persons with disabilities around the world expect and anticipate that this convention will change the real living conditions, that this convention
will take away the discrimination, the exclusion, and all the obstacles that people
with disabilities are faced with in their daily lives," Vardakastanis said.

According to the latest U.N. figures, about 10 percent of the world's population,
or 650 million people, live with a disability and the number is increasing with population
growth. The disabled constitute the world's largest minority, and 80 percent live
in developing countries, many in poverty.
The convention advocates keeping the disabled in their communities rather than removing
them and educating them separately as many countries do.







Copyright 2007 Queens Independent Living Center