6
Innocenti Digest No. 13
Promoting the Rights of Children with Disabilities
potentially preventable, thus offering the opportunity
to reduce the levels of disability as well as of poverty.
Such factors include malnutrition and micronutrient
deficiencies, preventable diseases such as measles,
lack of sanitation and clean water, as well as violence,
abuse and exploitation, including through labour. Lack
of access to all levels of education and low levels
of family support in any community are also closely
linked to both poverty and disability.
Significant progress is being
made in eliminating ma-
jor causes of impairment such as iodine deficiency
and lack of access to safe water. On the other hand,
the last decade has seen a persistence or rise in
other factors that have contributed to the incidence
of impairments, including HIV/AIDS, environmental
pollution, accidents and drug abuse.
10
War and civil
strife are also major causes of impairment among
children, largely affecting countries in the developing
world. UNICEF has estimated that between 1990 and
2001, 2 million children around the world were killed
and as many as 6 million disabled by armed conflict.
11
The prevention of disability
caused by landmines and
unexploded ordnance needs to be given higher prior-
ity in the regions most affected.
The additional burden placed on families with mem-
bers, including children, with disabilities, deepens the
impact of economic poverty and may further perpetu-
ate discriminatory attitudes towards these groups.
In the light of the inextricable link between poverty
and disability, effective action to reduce poverty must
address disability concerns in a systematic manner.
12
This fundamental principle of inclusive planning was
recognized by former
President of the World Bank
James Wolfensohn:
If development is about bringing excluded peo-
ple into society, then disabled people belong in
schools, legislatures, at work, on buses, at the
theatre and everywhere else that those who are
not disabled take for granted. Unless disabled
people are brought into the development main-
stream, it will be impossible to cut poverty in half
by 2015 or to give every
girl and boy the chance
to achieve a primary education by the same date-
goals agreed by more than 180 world leaders at
the United Nations Millennium Summit in Sep-
tember 2000.
13
The World Bank has promoted a broad and inclusive
approach to disability issues, including through the
appointment of an experienced disability adviser and
the recruitment of disability experts. A guidance note
released in 2007, which includes consideration of
issues relevant to children and youth,
has the aim
to “assist Bank projects in better incorporating the
needs and concerns of people with disabilities, as
well as integrating a disability perspective into ongo-
ing sector and thematic work programs, and to adopt
an integrated and inclusive approach to disability.”
14
Similar initiatives, developed with non-governmental
organizations (NGOs), are also being pursued by the
European Union.
15
© UUNICEF/HQ06-1260/Azhar Mahmood
7
Promoting the Rights of Children with Disabilities
Innocenti Digest No. 13
Over
four decades, the United Nations has made a
strong commitment to the human rights of persons
with disabilities.
16
This commitment has been re-
flected in major human rights instruments as well as
within specific measures and initiatives, which began
with the 1971 Declaration on the Rights of Persons
with Mental Retardation and now has culminated in
the 2006 Convention on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities. Other examples of disability-focused ini-
tiatives include the International
Decades of Disabled
Persons, the 1993 Standard Rules on the Equalization
of Opportunities for Persons with Disabilities and the
1994 Salamanca Statement and Framework for Ac-
tion for Special Needs Education (see box 4.1 for a
more complete list).
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: