The Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment must wield the stick against indifferent State governments and service agencies
You might have noticed that the Government of India's Ministry of Social
Justice and Empowerment, which now has a separate department for
Disability Affairs, announced awards for the disabled on Wednesday,
February 6, for last year (2012).
President Pranab Mukherjee presents the National Award for the
Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities 2012 to Anjanadevi B. from
Karnataka, in New Delhi. Photo: Shanker Chakravarty
There were awards for individuals, organisations, best employers, role
models, research and product development, creation of barrier-free
environment, best district (it is South Goa), and so on.
But here is the ground reality: on a visit to the premier bus stand in
Asia in Chennai’s Koyambedu, I found the toilet meant for the disabled
firmly locked. On an earlier occasion, I noticed that the Park Railway
Station in the city has a similar facility and that was also firmly
shut, no one obviously accountable for its upkeep.
In a country where the average person finds it a challenge to locate a
useable toilet in public space, what is so surprising about point number
two, you might ask. That would be a perfectly reasonable question to
ask.
Actually, that argument could be extended. When you have buses that the
disabled cannot board in that same CMBT bus terminus, of what use is a
special toilet? This is a point that needs to be elaborated. In spite of
a law that is meant to protect the rights of persons with disability
that dates back to 1995, no government takes it seriously. Currently,
the country is waiting for a new disability law that could make things a
little better.
All this brings us to the question of universal design. This is the
principle that when you build structures and services that are friendly
to those who have some disability, it serves the general population as
well. Equally, when you make things better for the general population,
it makes things easier for the disabled too.
Such a message is of course difficult for our political class to grasp,
used as it is to more privileges and comforts than the average citizen
is. If a particular politician finds it difficult to board an aircraft
in the normal course, the vehicle goes to the tarmac and the passage is
smooth. Most of our successful politicians have no need to walk on a
footpath, so they have scant regard for issues affecting pedestrians.
Thus, we live in a country where the average road has no pedestrian
facility worth the name, no sane crossing points for walkers at traffic
intersections, and a public transport infrastructure that is positively
hostile to people with disability (just look at the suburban railway
stations in Chennai as an example).
People with disability can neither enter nor alight from railway coaches
easily, nor can they have an easy entry into one of our World War II
design buses. You cannot even be confident that all aircraft operating
in India will offer you an ambulift facility.
So when we return to the question of awards for those who are doing
their best to improve access and equity for the disabled, can our
government departments even make a claim? Generally not.
I would contend that the outdated model of awarding people for
voluntarily working to improve the quality of life of the disabled needs
to be replaced with legal requirements that would compel State and
local governments to set things right. What we need is a punitive regime
for official agencies that fail to provide facilities that a civilised
society out to have, more so when it has a disabled population of 21
million (2001) and counting (read this interview).
The disability figures for the 2011 census are not yet available, but
when they are, they will only strengthen the case for such mandatory
provisions.
Source : The Hindu , 7th Feb 2013
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