Landmine Survivors and a Convention on the Rights of Persons With Disabilities |
Since the 56th Session of the General Assembly, advocates have worked hard to gain rights for persons with disabilities. Decisions made at the session have a provided a number of opportunities for landmine victims and other disabled persons around the world.
by Akiko Ikeda, UNMAS Introduction Over 600 million people, or approximately 10 percent of the world’s population, have a disability of one kind or another. This includes the many survivors of landmine accidents. According to the Landmine Monitor Report 2002, approximately 20,000 innocent victims continue to be killed or maimed each year by landmines in over 70 affected countries.3 Since landmines are primarily designed to cause severe injuries to their victims, they are considered “a major cause of disability.”4 Most persons with disabilities do not have access to adequate medical care, rehabilitation services, trauma care programmes and employment opportunities. Furthermore, they face discrimination from the societies in which they live and are de facto excluded from both formal and informal labour markets. Such discrimination and exclusion is a clear violation of the fundamental human rights enshrined in the United Nations Charter, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other legal instruments. Within the framework of these instruments, all persons with disabilities ought to be recognised as full members of their societies with equal dignity. This article examines how recent international developments have tried to further promote and protect the rights of persons with disabilities by shifting the attention away from a strictly medical/social welfare focus and bringing in a social and human rights approach to the problem. It also examines the implications of these developments for landmine survivors and the victim assistance community. Historical Review – From the Medical to the Human Rights Approach In the 1940s and 1950s, the United Nations as well as the wider international community approached the disability issue primarily from a medical and social welfare standpoint.5 It was then thought that what persons with disabilities needed most was a medical cure. As a result, persons with disabilities received some medical attention, but remained socially isolated—in mental institutions, for example, in the case of persons with mental disabilities. The policies developed at that time did little to address the exclusion problem, leading instead too often to institutionalisation.6 In the 1970s, a broader “social model” emerged, recognising that the medical model alone could not fully address the needs of persons with disabilities.7 This social model focuses on the social discrimination and barriers with which persons with disabilities are confronted, instead of focusing on their physical disabilities. It sees the problem not as residing in the persons with disabilities themselves, but as resulting from structures, practices and attitudes that prevent the individual from exercising his or her capabilities. Thus, the social model gives priority attention to the way persons with disabilities want to live and to the right they have to participate fully and equally in society. A number of United Nations initiatives and meetings shaped the development of a human rights approach to the disability issue in the 1970s and 1980s.8 These include the adoption by the General Assembly, in 1982, of the World Programme of Action concerning Disabled Persons, which considered “equalization of opportunities” as a guiding principle.9 Eleven years later, in 1993, the General Assembly adopted the Standard Rules on the Equalization of Opportunities for Persons with Disabilities, a major outcome of the United Nations Decade of Disabled Persons (1982-1993).10 The Standard Rules consists of 22 Rules aimed at ensuring that all persons with disabilities can exercise their rights in the societies where they live. By adopting the World Programme of Action and the Standard Rules at the UN General Assembly, governments committed themselves to work towards the goal of equal opportunities for persons with disabilities. Although both instruments are “soft,” i.e., non-binding, they have played a critical role in supporting the development of strategies, policies and programmes that advance the disability agenda locally, nationally and internationally.11 According to the results of a survey reported by Mr. Bengt Lindqvist, the Special Rapporteur on Disability of the Commission for Social Development, 81 percent of the respondents’ countries indicated that the Standard Rules had led to governmental initiatives promoting awareness and equality of persons with disabilities.12 The Ad Hoc Committee on Rights and Dignity of Persons with Disabilities and a New International Convention Since there are already a number of international instruments protecting the rights of persons with disabilities, the question of why we need a new international convention can be legitimately raised. As indicated earlier, the World Programme of Action and the Standard Rules are important and useful tools, but they are not binding. Governments may or may not respect and use them. The disabled community has therefore concluded that what is now required is a legally binding document, which will ensure that the human rights of persons with disabilities are recognized, protected, and reflected in national laws and practises—a new instrument that should be comprehensive and based on the input of the persons with disabilities themselves. In 2001, at its 56th session, the General Assembly adopted Resolution 56/168, which called for the establishment of an ad hoc committee to “consider proposals for a comprehensive and integral international convention to promote and protect the rights and dignity of persons with disabilities.”13 The first meeting of the Ad Hoc Committee was organized at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, from 29 July to 9 August 2002. The Disability Unit, Division for Social Policy and Development, of the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs acted as secretariat for the Ad Hoc Committee.14 Overarching principles and rights, equality in civil and political rights, equality in economic, social and cultural rights, monitoring mechanisms, and other issues were discussed. Several non-governmental organizations (NGOs), such as Disabled Peoples’ International, Inclusion International, Madre Inc, Landmine Survivors Network (LSN), Support Coalition International, World Blind Union and World Federation of the Deaf, participated in the work of the Committee. In a significant development, the disability and human rights communities joined forces for the first time, as a “newly emerging community,” to promote the fundamental and universal human rights of persons with disabilities.15 Differences of opinion remain, however, particularly amongst governments, regarding the need to elaborate a new convention. While the government of Mexico is a strong advocate of the pro-convention movement and wants to see a concrete output at the end of the process (i.e., a convention), other governments merely support a “process” and work “toward” a convention. To facilitate further discussions on this and other issues, the Ad Hoc Committee recommended the adoption of a new resolution at the 57th Session of the General Assembly in the fall of 2002, and the organisation of additional meetings of the Ad Hoc Committee and of regional technical and expert groups.16 The Human Rights Perspective and Victim Assistance According to the “Guidelines for the Care and Rehabilitation of Survivors” developed by the International Campaign to Ban Landmines, victim assistance consists of nine activities: emergency medical care, continuing medical care, physical rehabilitation, prostheses and assistive devices, psychological and social support, employment and economic integration, capacity building and sustainability, legislation and public awareness, accessibility, and data collection.17 There have been in-depth discussions on most of these nine areas of activities, including medical and socio-economic reintegration issues. It seems, however, that the latter has received increased attention within the victim assistance community as a result of the development of the human rights approach to disability. Earlier this year, for instance, a survey was conducted at the request of the co-chairs of the Standing Committee on Victim Assistance and Socio-Economic Reintegration to identify priority areas of work in which the Committee could make meaningful contributions over the next two years. The questionnaires were distributed to all focal points identified by States Parties to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention, to major international organizations and non-governmental organizations, to group of survivors, and to experts in the field of disability. In their responses to the survey questionnaire, landmine survivors consistently ranked employment18 and economic reintegration as their top priorities,19 while placing medical assistance in the sixth position from the list of nine proposed categories. World Rehabilitation Fund, an NGO that implements socio-economic reintegration programmes for persons with disabilities and landmine survivors, confirms that what landmine survivors need most is socio-economic support:
A case study conducted in Cambodia by the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining (GICHD) in 2002 supports the same viewpoint. It notes that physical rehabilitation is “fairly well covered” in Cambodia, where it is accessible to at least 80 percent of all persons with disabilities.21 There are 16 workshops across the country, operating in most of the mine-affected provinces. The Study indicates that what a landmine survivor needs is a job:
Socio-economic issues were discussed from a human rights perspective at the January and May meetings of the Standing Committee on Victim Assistance and Socio-Economic Reintegration. Rehabilitation professionals, landmine survivors and other experts stressed that the right to income generation and gainful employment is a fundamental human right and is key to complete reintegration.23 An overview of disability norms and standards was also presented, as well as updates on on-going efforts to elaborate a convention on the rights of persons with disabilities.24 This will be further discussed at future Standing Committee meetings. Jerry White, executive director of LSN, has been a particularly vocal advocate of a human rights approach to disability and victim assistance. On 12 June 2002, he presented his vision during a Forum of U.S. Grassroots Disability Organizations on the Development of an International Convention of the Rights of People with Disabilities:
The participation of LSN in the work of the Ad Hoc Committee established under Resolution 56/168 is essential in that it is the only participating organization that represents landmine survivors. Implications of the Proposed Convention for the Victim Assistance Community The adoption of a convention on the rights and dignity of persons with disabilities would have potentially three positive implications for the victim assistance community, landmine survivors in particular. First and foremost, it would draw additional international attention to persons with disabilities and help promote victim assistance activities. Significant progress has already been made in this regard with the entry into force of the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention where, for the first time, the aspirations and needs of persons with disabilities—mine victims in this instance, are specifically addressed in an international humanitarian and disarmament law instrument.26 Under Article 6 of the Convention, States Parties “in a position to do so” have an obligation to “provide assistance for the care and rehabilitation, and the social and economic reintegration of mine survivors.”27 However, Article 6 does not impose an absolute obligation upon States Parties; it does not commit an affected State Party to provide assistance to its own citizens when they fall victim to landmines.28 The proposed convention on the rights of persons with disabilities could therefore play a complementary role by making it legally binding for governments to assume responsibilities with regard to persons with disabilities and landmine survivors, and for providing them with the assistance they need. The adoption of a convention on the rights and dignity of persons with disabilities could also have positive financial implications for landmine survivors. It could make it easier for landmine survivors to claim additional resources from existing social funds. A fund such as the Trust Fund for Human Security (TFHS) supports initiatives to address the protection of human security, various threats to human lives, livelihoods, and dignity, including poverty, environmental degradation, conflicts, landmines, refugee problems, illicit drugs, and infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS.29 Because landmines pose a serious threat to human beings, TFHS is interested in projects related to survivor assistance. This interest would likely be enhanced by a new convention on persons with disabilities. Similarly, it is possible that a new convention could also benefit the United Nations Voluntary Fund on Disability30 and other existing funds, which provide grants to initiatives for persons with disabilities, including landmine survivors. Finally, it is hoped that a new convention on the rights and dignity of persons with disabilities would provide additional policy guidance to the victim assistance community. Many of the policy principles that need to be respected in order for victim assistance activities to be effective are now well understood. They would benefit, however, from their inclusion in a legally binding international instrument. A new convention would recognise, for instance, that persons with disabilities and landmine survivors should be involved in the design, implementation, and evaluation of development programmes as equal partners. According to Ronald Wiman, the process of development will be more effective and sustainable if “an inclusive approach” is adopted.31 In fact, such an approach is “a necessary prerequisite” for the achievement of economic and social development for a society as a whole.32 The convention would, therefore, promote the participation of persons with disabilities and landmine survivors in the development process. Conclusion The international community’s approach to the disability issue has evolved significantly during the past decades. Instead of looking at the problem from a purely medical perspective, it now integrates a human rights perspective. This new perspective has received renewed attention with the proposal made by Mexico to elaborate a new international convention aimed at promoting and protecting the rights of persons with disabilities. Such a convention would help the victim assistance community by focusing on drawing increased attention to all persons with disabilities, including landmine survivors; by providing additional resources in support of survivor assistance; and by confirming a number of important policy principles. It is therefore essential to ensure that landmine survivors, who are not just passive recipients of social welfare and charity but bearers of rights and freedom, are fully involved in all ongoing discussions concerning the new convention. As was recently noted by Adnan Al Aboudy, director of LSN in Amman, Jordan, himself an amputee, “support for the human rights of landmine survivors is crucial in expediting their reintegration back into society as full and equal participants….”33 Endnotes
Contact Information Ms. Akiko Ikeda |
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