The Bill now placed before Parliament is the best chance yet to enact a 
ground-breaking law for an estimated 70 million people with impairments —
 an overwhelming majority of whom, and their care-givers, live in 
conditions of abject poverty and deprivation. The definition of 
disability in the Bill is a big departure: it means all long-term 
physical, mental, intellectual and sensory impairments which, in 
interaction with barriers in the environment, hinder persons’ effective 
participation in society on an equal basis. As many as 19 impairments 
are sought to be accorded legal protection, as opposed to seven under 
the 1995 Persons with Disabilities Act. Correspondingly, the proportion 
of reservations is proposed to be increased to 5 per cent from the 
existing 3 per cent. The provision to ensure that the disabled enjoy 
legal capacity on an equal basis with every other person is a strong 
protection, especially for people with mental retardation. And finally, 
the incorporation of penal provisions to ensure accountability for law 
enforcement — a lacuna in the current law — could potentially bridge the
 gap between professed intentions and practice.
The issue of disabilities has seldom in the past been regarded as 
politically divisive and the Bill stands a fair chance of mustering the 
support of parties across the political spectrum. Moreover, the 
constituents in the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic 
Alliance government were instrumental in the incorporation of the 
question on disability in the 2001 decennial population census. This was
 a step that perhaps has permanently reversed the earlier exclusion of 
this segment from a crucial national exercise in post-Independence 
India. Similarly, the political parties of the Left had always supported
 the passage of important social legislation. Members of both Houses 
should demonstrate a strong sense of purpose, urgency and sensitivity to
 make a new law a reality during the current term of Parliament, 
overcoming the continuing impasse on various other counts. While the 
concerns expressed by well-meaning non-governmental organisations may be
 valid in principle, they should weigh the huge practical gains to be 
made from seeing through this Bill, rather than wait for eternity for 
the perfect piece of legislation. Parliament could consider 
incorporating a provision in the new law, mandating that revenues from 
the levy on corporate social responsibility be channelled to promote 
employment for the disabled. The disabled are said to constitute the 
single largest minority in society, as per the World Health Organization
 and the World Bank report of 2011. Legal protections would go a long 
way to promote their full participation in society as equal members.
Source : The Hindu , 11th feb 2014
Source : The Hindu , 11th feb 2014
 
 
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