27 January 2006 – Attitudes, rather than resource constraints,
often create the strongest barriers to the enjoyment of rights by
persons with disabilities, the United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights today told a UN committee in New York that is drafting
the first-ever treaty on disability rights.
“Rules that block persons with disabilities from obtaining
personal documentation or from voting in elections can be modified,
often at little expense,” Louise Arbour told the negotiators
hammering out a disability convention, adding that simple and inexpensive
regulatory changes could often improve access to education or employment.
She also acknowledged that lack of money often blocks poor countries
from providing equal treatment to their citizens with disabilities,
and that putting into practice the provisions of the convention
will be costly. States parties will be required to make progressive
and proportional changes depending on resource availability, she
said, but some obligations must be met immediately.
International cooperation, she stressed, must play a role in ensuring
that progress is made everywhere, since empowering persons with
disabilities to claim their human rights is a collective obligation.
States bear the primary responsibility for ensuring equality and
eliminating discrimination, but all “must also acknowledge
our own responsibility and act accordingly,” she said.
“I have had experience as a judge in confronting the unique
and invidious difficulties persons with disabilities face,”
said Mrs. Arbour, the former Chief Prosecutor at the UN International
Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and for Rwanda.
“We face an urgent task in addressing stereotypes and prejudices
that are at the root of so many of the barriers faced by persons
with disabilities ? barriers that prevent them from obtaining equal
access to education, to employment, to full participation in decision-making
and to all their other rights,” she said.
Some 400 delegates and disability advocates are attending the current
session of the Ad Hoc Committee on a Comprehensive and Integral
International Convention on Protection and Promotion of the Rights
and Dignity of Persons with Disabilities. The Committee is expected
to conclude a second reading of the 34-article draft by 3 February,
the last day of the session.
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