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Information brought to you from the Disability Grapevine.
UNITED NATIONS
Media Advisory
UNITED NATIONS—After five years of negotiations, countries have
agreed on a new convention to protect the rights of persons
with disabilities.
“This is the first convention of this magnitude for this
century,” UN General Assembly President Jan Eliasson said after
the agreement was reached. He told the negotiators that they
were “sending an absolutely wonderful message to the world. You
are sending the message that we want to have a life with
dignity for all and that all human beings are all equal”.
“This marks a great day for the UN and for persons with
disabilities,” said New Zealand’s Ambassador Don MacKay, who
chaired the negotiations through its final sessions. “It’s a
good convention and it will make a difference for millions of
people.”
The successful completion of the treaty, after a day of intense
negotiations and compromises, was met with thunderous applause
by well over a hundred government delegations and hundreds of
representatives of disability organizations who participated in
the process of negotiating the 40-article treaty.
Proponents of the convention maintained that the treaty was
necessary because persons with disabilities represented one of
the most marginalized groups and that their rights had been
routinely ignored or denied throughout much of the world.
While the convention does not create new rights, it
specifically prohibits discrimination against persons with
disabilities in all areas of life, including civil rights,
access to justice and the right to education, health services
and access to transportation.
The convention was largely approved by consensus, although
there was a vote on a provision concerning “foreign occupation”
that was included in the preamble. With five countries voting
against, the provision was adopted.
The convention will be formally sent to the General Assembly
for adoption at its 61st session that begins in September. It
will then be open for signing and ratification by Member
States.
It is estimated that 10 per cent of the world’s population, or
about 650 million people, suffer from disabilities.
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