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Tue., May. 13, 2008

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Full Coverage: Disability

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Aspiring for discrimination free world / Photo credit: UN News
05/13/2008 UN Secretary General has described the adoption of Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities as 'a new dawn'. Though the Convention does not enlist new rights for the estimated 650 million disabled persons worldwide, it certainly paves the way for abolition of discriminatory laws and better implementation of existing rights.
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Related: [United Nations] [Law] [Human Rights]
Image: Aspiring for discrimination free world / Photo credit: UN News
Swagat Thorat / Photo credit: Huned Contractor / OWSA
05/08/2008 Freelance journalist and social activist Swagat Thorat in western India publishes a fortnightly called Sparshgyaan in local language for the visually impaired. In view of the limited availability of literature in Braille, this can be described as commendable effort.
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From: OneWorld South Asia
Related: [South Asia] [Information & Media] [Education] [Capacity Building]
Image: Swagat Thorat / Photo credit: Huned Contractor / OWSA
A Nepalese woman carries water up a steepy terrain / Photocredit: WaterAid
04/30/2008 A discussion paper by WaterAid, Creating user-friendly water and sanitation services for the disabled, takes a look at the social, technical, financial and policy barriers faced by the disabled in meeting water and sanitation needs in Nepal. The document recommends designing proper technologies to facilitate their access to basic services.
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Related: [South Asia] [MDGs] [Water/Sanitation] [Poverty]
Image: A Nepalese woman carries water up a steepy terrain / Photocredit: WaterAid
People with disabilities are an invisible minority in India / Photo credit: ActionAid India
04/17/2008 Bowing to the demands of people with disabilities in India, Karnataka’s Election Commission has decided to build ramps at all polling booths and provide Braille-equipped voting machines in the upcoming assembly elections. But this is the fulfillment of just one demand out of many.
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Related: [South Asia] [Governance] [Politics]
Image: People with disabilities are an invisible minority in India / Photo credit: ActionAid India
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03/20/2008 Turkin hallituksen ja Kurdistanin työväenpuolueen PKK:n sissien väliset taistelut jättävät jälkeensä tuhansia vammautuneita kurdeja, joilla ei useinkaan ole muuta vaihtoehtoa kuin hakeutua Eurooppaan.
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From: Voima Kustannus Oy
Related: [Turkey] [Conflict]
Image: -
Information at hand
03/15/2008 Punarbhava, a new interactive website for the disabled, is a one-stop cyber shop for information, aids, appliances, research and employment. The portal was recently launched at the Indian capital, along with the release of a new screen reader software for the blind.
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From: OneWorld South Asia
Related: [South Asia] [India] [Social Exclusion] [Communication] [ICT] [Internet]
Image: Information at hand
Disability sign
02/28/2008 There are approximately 60 million persons with disabilities in India. Most of them are poor, living in rural areas. It is pity that only 1.5% of them are the beneficiaries of various poverty alleviation and welfare schemes.
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Related: [South Asia] [Poverty]
Image: Disability sign
Sandhya trying to read / Photo credit: Quest / India Together
02/15/2008 Even after the ban on its use, the hazardous impact of pesticide Endosulfan sprayed in cashew plantations in Kerala, continues to affect the communities. The state government's relief package of Rs 5 million and other schemes have proved inadequate to rehabilitate the victims.
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Related: [South Asia] [Environment] [Health] [Disease/treatment]
Image: Sandhya trying to read / Photo credit: Quest / India Together
File photo: Subhash Chuttar can be seen with former President APJ Abdul Kalam
02/01/2008 Sharayu Precision is a Pune-based company in western India that believes in providing the first opportunity of employment to those who are physically or mentally challenged. Its founder Subhash Chuttar has been honoured with prestigious Hellen Keller Award for his contribution to the cause.
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From: OneWorld South Asia
Related: [South Asia] [Capacity Building] [Labor]
Image: File photo: Subhash Chuttar can be seen with former President APJ Abdul Kalam
Children and landmines
01/22/2008 Landmines and unexploded ordnance (UXO) have killed and maimed hundreds of people in Afghanistan in 2007, says the UN Mine Action Centre for Afghanistan. These explosive remnants of war left behind by various military factions during the 90s continue to endanger the lives of civilians.
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Related: [Afghanistan] [South Asia] [Arms & Military] [Conflict] [Landmines]
Image: Children and landmines © John Buckley /
12/26/2007 Only a fraction of the millions of children with disabilities in Bangladesh are able to get basic education, owing to government’s apparent indifference in ensuring their educational rights. However, the country's social welfare secretary says all that may change soon.
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Related: [South Asia] [Capacity Building] [Children] [Education]
Blind people sign
12/17/2007 For visually challenged people in western Indian state of Maharashtra, the life will become much easier with the setting up of a special resource centre in Pune. The centre will provide them 100 different services and equipment under one roof like medical treatment, walking sticks, audio calculators, braille watches, computer software, etc.
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From: OneWorld South Asia
Related: [South Asia] [Capacity Building]
Image: Blind people sign
Jaipur Foot / Photo credit: Samrat Mukherjee
12/08/2007 For decades the Jaipur Foot – not only in India where it is made but also in many other countries – has helped people living a normal life despite losing their limbs. It is now being further improved by using new technology and material.

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Related: [South Asia]
Image: Jaipur Foot / Photo credit: Samrat Mukherjee
ILO logo
12/06/2007 The right to decent work of persons with disabilities, a new report by ILO calls for renewed efforts to support people with disabilities in the world of work. Many among approximately 470 million disabled persons of employable age often face disproportionate levels of poverty and unemployment.
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Related: [Labor] [Poverty] [Human Rights] [MDGs]
Image: ILO logo
12/03/2007 To mark the occasion of International Day of Disabled Persons on December 3, a two-day event, ‘Abilities Mela’, was held in Indian capital New Delhi to showcase the skills and talents of people suffering from variety of disabilities. Organised by National Trust and supported by major corporate groups, the event also had a job fair to provide them with opportunities for work.
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From: OneWorld South Asia
Related: [South Asia] [Capacity Building] [Labor] [Social Exclusion]
Working with dignity
12/03/2007 On the occasion of International Day of Disabled Persons, December 3, Juan Somavia, DG of the International Labour Office in a message emphasised on the need to provide employment to people with disabilities and allow them to live with dignity. Exclusion of the disabled results in a loss of some US $1.94 trillion to global GDP.
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Related: [Labor] [Poverty] [Social Exclusion] [MDGs]
Image: Working with dignity
Child receives polio vaccine
11/28/2007 Bill and Milinda Gates Foundation has extended a grant of 100 million dollars for polio eradication worldwide. The grant will target Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan, the last four countries in the world where fresh cases of polio still keep surfacing.
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Related: [Children] [Health] [Disease/treatment]
Image: Child receives polio vaccine © Crack Palinggi/Reuters/Corbis; permissions through “Rx for Survival”
11/22/2007 Released on November 20, a World Bank study on people with disabilities in India finds low levels of literacy and employment among approximately 90 million of its population. Majority of Indians see disability as a ‘curse of God’ and turn a blind eye to their problems.
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Related: [South Asia] [Population] [Social Exclusion]
11/21/2007 No scholarships or unemployment allowance to the disabled, no financial assistance to widows, no juvenile shelter homes, no primary school for the deaf, no home for mentally retarded, no leprosy complex and no disbursement of funds to old-age homes. Despite availability of funds, the social welfare schemes of the Delhi government are in a shambles.
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Related: [South Asia] [Children] [Shelter & Housing] [Gender] [Governance]
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11/21/2007 Tansaniassa lasten oikeudet eivät ole itsestään selviä, ja vielä vähemmän tiedetään vammaisten lasten oikeuksista. Koululaiset Niwaely, Upendo, Afatah ja Shanweely taistelevat tasa-arvonsa puolesta.
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From: Suomen Lähetysseura
Related: [Tanzania ] [Children] [Human Rights]
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