December 3, 2024
NPRD Message on World Disability
Day 2024
The National Platform for the Rights of the Disabled (NPRD) conveys its
greetings to the entire disabled people in the country on the occasion of the
International Day of Persons with Disabilities.
In its message last year the NPRD had sought to draw attention to the
impact of the ongoing genocide in Gaza on people with disabilities
there. A year since, their numbers have swelled. According to the Palestinian Ministry of
Health, of the 94,460 injured, approximately 10,000 Palestinians have had their
limbs amputated. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees estimates that at least ten children lose a limb every day in Gaza as
a result of the Israel's war since October 7, 2023.
In India, rising communal strife and violence is also contributing to
increasing the number of people with disabilities. The impact of climate change
and consequent natural disasters are also adversely affecting people with
disabilities. Thousands of people who became disabled consequent to the horrific
Bhopal Gas Tragedy forty years earlier on December 2, 1984 continue to remain
neglected. It is also time to remember that people like Stan Swamy and Dr. G N
Saibaba were denied reasonable accommodations in jail and subjected to torture,
which ultimately cost their lives.
A major chunk of the disabled population in India lives in pitiable
conditions. They continue to be discriminated in accessing various things including
but not restricted education, employment and livelihood, notwithstanding laws
and policies. This has mainly been due to the abysmally low budgetary allocations
to the Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities. Allocations to the
department as
a proportion to the total budget hover around a mere 0.025 per cent, a far cry
from the 5 per cent allocation across ministries that disability rights
organisations and activists have been demanding.
Despite tall
claims and promises India’s disabled population continues to face systemic neglect and indifference. One of the major
concerns has been the issue of rampant unemployment, which according to
government’s own admission hovers around 65%. Reservations in the government
sector are being undermined with large scale privatisation, outsourcing and
contractualisation.
The lack of livelihood opportunities makes a huge chunk of the disabled
population dependent on the miserly amount of pension doled out by the state.
The central government has refused to enhance the amount given through the
Indira Gandhi National Disability Pension, which continues to remain at a
paltry Rs. 300/- per month since 2012, notwithstanding the claims of India
being a five trillion economy and so on.
On this Disability Day the NPRD reiterates its commitment to fight for an
equitable and just society which will also entail the elimination of all
barriers that prevent people with disabilities from achieving full inclusion
and participation in all aspects of life.
-- National Platform for the Rights of the Disabled (NPRD)
36, Pt. Ravishankar Shukla Lane
New Delhi 110 001