| ANNEX
Asian and Pacific Decade of Disabled Persons, 2003-2012
Biwako
Millennium Framework for Action: towards an Inclusive,Barrier-free
and Rights-based Society for Persons with Disabilities in Asia and
the Pacific
Lake “Biwa” is the largest freshwater lake in Japan,
in the City of Otsu. It is in this city that the High-level Intergovernmental
Meeting to Conclude the Asian and Pacific Decade of Disabled Persons
was held. Hence, the name of the framework is “Biwako”
(“ko” means a lake). The word “Millennium”
indicates that the Framework was adopted at the beginning of the
new millennium and also that it is structured to supplement the
United Nations Millennium Development Goals and targets. “An
Inclusive, Barrier-free and Rights-based Society” represents
the guiding principles of this framework. An “inclusive”
society is a society for all, and a “barrier-free”
society refers to a society free from institutional, physical
and attitudinal barriers, as well as social, economic and cultural
barriers. A “rights-based” society means a society
based on the human rights of all individuals where peoples with
disabilities are valued and placed at the centre of all decisions
affecting them.
In
May 2002, ESCAP adopted the resolution “Promoting an inclusive,
barrier-free and rights-based society for people with disabilities
in the Asian and Pacific region in the twenty-first century”.
The resolution also proclaimed the extension of the Asian and Pacific
Decade of Disabled Persons, 1993-2002, for another decade, 2003-2012.
In October 2002, Governments at the High-level Intergovernmental
Meeting to Conclude the Asian and Pacific Decade of Disabled Persons
1993-2002, adopted the “Biwako Millennium Framework for Action
towards an Inclusive, Barrier-free and Rights-based Society for
Persons with Disabilities in Asian and the Pacific”, as the
regional policy guideline for the new decade.
The
“Biwako Millennium Framework” outlines issues, action
plans and strategies towards an inclusive, barrier-free and rights-based
society for persons with disabilities.
To
achieve the goal, the framework identifies seven priority areas
for action, in each of which critical issues, targets with specific
timeframes, and actions are specified. In all, 21 targets and 17
strategies supporting the achievement of all the targets are identified.
The
new decade (2003-2012) will ensure the paradigm shift from a charity-based
approach to a rights-based approach to protect the civil, cultural,
economic, political, and social rights of persons with disabilities.
To
pursue the targets and strategies, consultations with and involvement
of civil society, inter alia, self-help organizations and concerned
NGOs are essential.
The
following sections summarize the seven priority areas for action,
the targets, strategies, time-frames, and the supporting/monitoring
mechanisms.
A.
Self-help organizations of persons with disabilities and related
family and parent associations
Persons
with disabilities and their self-help organizations are the most
equipped and best informed to speak on their behalf and can contribute
to solutions on issues that concern them. Two targets are set to
make the difference:
(1) By 2004, Governments, international funding agencies and NGOs
should establish policy to support and develop self-help organizations.
Governments should take steps to ensure the formation of parents
associations at local levels by the year 2005 and federate them
at the national level by year 2010.
(2) By 2005, Governments and civil society organizations should
fully include self-help organizations in decision-making processes.
Actions for the targets include the participation of persons with
disabilities in policy-making, political representations and capacity
building.
Self-help organizations should include marginalized persons with
disabilities such as women and girls with disabilities, persons
with intellectual disabilities and persons with psychiatric disabilities.
B.
Women with disabilities
Women
with disabilities are multiply disadvantaged through their status
as women, as persons with disabilities, and their likelihood to
be living in poverty. Three targets are set to solve these problems:
(1) By 2005, Governments should ensure anti-discrimination measures,
where appropriate, to protect women with disabilities.
(2) By 2005, self-help organizations should adopt policies to
promote full representation of women with disabilities.
(3) By 2005, women with disabilities should be included in the
membership of national mainstream women’s associations.
C.
Early detection, early intervention and education
Fewer
than 10 per cent of children and youth with disabilities have access
to any form of education compared with an enrolment rate of over
70 per cent for non-disabled children and youth in primary education
in the Asian and Pacific region. This exclusion from education for
children and youth with disabilities results in exclusion from opportunity
for further personal, social and vocational development. Four targets
are set for these problems:
(1) Children with disabilities will be an integral part of the
population targeted by Millennium Development Goal Target 3, which
is to ensure that, by 2015, children everywhere, boys and girls
alike, will be able to complete a full course of primary schooling.
(2) By 2010, at least 75 per cent of children and youth with disabilities
of school age will be able to complete a full course of primary
schooling.
(3) By 2012, all infants and young children (0-4 years) will have
access to and receive community-based early intervention services.
(4) Governments should ensure detection of childhood disabilities
at a very early age.
Actions in this area include adequate legislation for inclusive
education and national data collection on children with disabilities
(0-16 years).
D.
Training and employment, including self employment
Persons
with disabilities remain disproportionately undereducated, untrained,
unemployed, underemployed and poor. They have insufficient access
to the mainstream labour market partially due to social exclusion,
lack of trained and competent staff and adequate training for independent
workers. Three targets follow:
(1) By 2012, at least 30 per cent of the signatories (member states)
will ratify ILO Convention 159 concerning Vocational Rehabilitation
and Employment (Disabled Persons).
(2) By 2012, at least 30 per cent of all vocational training programmes
in signatory countries will include persons with disabilities.
(3) By 2010, reliable data on the employment and self-employment
rates of persons with disabilities will exist in all countries.
E.
Access to built environment and public transport
Inaccessibility
to the built environment, including public transport systems, is
still the major barrier for persons with disabilities. This problem
will only be exacerbated, as the number of older people with disabilities
increases in the region. Universal design approaches benefit all
people in society, including older persons, pregnant women and parents
with young children. Its economic benefits have been legitimized,
yet substantive initiatives at policy level have not been taken.
Three targets are set to improve the situation:
(1) Governments should adopt and enforce accessibility standards
for planning of public facilities, infrastructure and transport,
including those in rural/agricultural contexts.
(2) Existing public transport systems and all new and renovated
public transport systems should be made accessible as soon as
practicable.
(3) All international and regional funding agencies for infrastructure
development should include universal and inclusive design concepts
in their loan/grant award criteria.
F.
Access to information and communications, including information,
communication and assistive technologies
In
the past 10 years, there has been much progress in information and
communication technology (ICT) development, and it opens up many
opportunities for people with disabilities in networking, solidarity,
employment and independent living. But it has also widened the gap
between persons with disabilities and the non-disabled. The digital
divide includes inaccessibility to infrastructure for ICT, Internet,
and ICT skills. These problems are acute in rural areas. The multimedia
environment is creating barriers for people with visual disabilities.
Five targets are set to improve the situation:
(1) By 2005, persons with disabilities should have at least the
same rate of access to the Internet and related services as the
rest of citizens in a country of the region.
(2) By 2004, international organizations should incorporate accessibility
standards for persons with disabilities in their international
ICT standards.
(3) Governments should adopt, by 2005, ICT accessibility guidelines
for persons with disabilities in their national ICT policies.
(4) Governments should develop and coordinate a standardized sign
language, finger Braille (tactile sign language), in each country
and disseminate and teach the results through all means, i.e.
publications, CD-ROMs, etc.
(5) Governments should establish a system in each country to train
and dispatch sign language interpreters, Braille transcribers,
finger Braille interpreters, and human readers and to encourage
their productive employment.
G.
Poverty alleviation through social security and livelihood programmes
Persons
with disabilities are the poorest of the poor. It is estimated that
160 million persons with disabilities (over 40 per cent of the total)
are living in poverty, unable to benefit from their socio-economic
rights. Poverty and disability are mutually reinforcing as persons
with disabilities are socially excluded and adequate social services
are not provided. Pursuant to the United Nations Millennium Development
Goal target 1:
(1)
Governments should halve, between 1990 and 2015, the proportion
of persons with disabilities whose income/consumption is less than
one dollar a day. Actions call for Governments to integrate disability
dimensions into MDG baseline data collection and analysis, to allocate
a certain percentage of the total rural development/poverty alleviation
funds towards persons with disabilities.
National
plan of action (five-year) on disability
Strategy
1 calls for Governments to develop and adopt, by 2004, a five-year
comprehensive national plan of action to implement the targets and
strategies of the framework.
Promotion
of rights-based approach to disability issues
Strategy
2 calls for Governments to examine the adoption and implementation
non-discrimination policies. Strategy 3 draws attention to National
Human Rights Institutions as agencies to protect disabled people’s
rights. Strategy 4 calls for Governments to actively involve persons
with disabilities in any policy development. Strategy 5 calls for
Governments to consider ratifying the core international human rights
treaties. Strategy 6 calls for Governments to consider support for
the Ad Hoc Committee for the comprehensive and integral international
convention to promote and protect the rights and dignity of persons
with disabilities. Strategy 7 calls on Governments to include persons
with disabilities and their organizations, in their procedures at
the national, regional and international levels, concerning the
drafting and adoption of the proposed human rights convention on
disability.
Disability
statistics/common definition of disabilities for planning
A common
system of definition and classification of disability is not uniformly
applied in the region. Two strategies are set to solve the problem.
Strategy 8 calls for Governments to develop, by 2005, their system
in disability-related data collection and analysis. Strategy 9 calls
for Governments to adopt, by 2005, definitions on disability based
on the United Nations publication “Guidelines and Principles
for the Development of Disability Statistics.
Strengthened
community development approach to prevention, rehabilitation and
empowerment of persons with disabilities
The
community-based approach is augmenting and replacing traditional
institutional and centralized rehabilitation programmes for disabled
people’s economic, social and other human rights enhancement.
Strategy 10 calls for Governments to immediately develop national
policies to promote community-based approaches.
Cooperation
and support for action: subregional, regional and interregional
A special
focus is on strengthening cooperation among governments at the subregional
level. Strategies 11 and 12 call for developing subregional mechanisms,
by 2004, to achieve the targets. At a regional level, strategy 13
calls for Governments, the United Nations system, civil society
organizations and the private sector to collaborate, support and
take advantage of the training and communication capability of the
Asia-Pacific Development Center on Disability. This centre is to
be opened in 2004 in Bangkok, as a legacy of the Asian and Pacific
Decade of Disabled Persons. It has the capacity to be one of the
most powerful focal points in the region. Strategies 14 and 15 call
for Governments, civil society organizations and the private sector
to establish a network of centres of excellence in focused areas
to maximize cooperation and collaboration. ESCAP and other United
Nations agencies should assist in the establishment of a network
of centres of excellence. Strategy 16 calls for a suitable agreement
on trade, technology transfer and human resource development for
fast and efficient sharing of resources. Strategy 17 proposes that
the Asian and Pacific region, the African region and the Western
Asian region should strengthen their cooperation and collaboration
to create synergy in implementing regional decades through interregional
exchange of information, experiences and expertise, which will mutually
benefit all the regions.
Monitoring
and review
ESCAP
should convene biennial meetings to review achievements and to identify
actions that may be required to implement the Biwako Millennium
Framework for Action. At these meetings, the representatives of
national coordination committees on disability matters comprising
Government ministries/agencies, NGOs, self-help organizations and
the media will be invited to present reports to review progress
in the implementation of the framework.
A
mid-point review of the Biwako Millennium Framework for Action should
be conducted. Based on the review, the targets and strategic plans
for the second half of the Decade may be modified and new targets
and strategic plans formulated.
The
Trust Fund for the Decade
Background
In
1992, the concluding year of the United Nations Decade of Disabled
Persons, the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia
and the Pacific (ESCAP) proclaimed the period 1993-2002 as the Asian
and Pacific Decade of Disabled Persons. The theme of the Asian and
Pacific Decade was the promotion of the full participation and equality
of people with disabilities.
In
December 1992, ESCAP convened at Beijing a Meeting to Launch the
Asian and Pacific Decade of Disabled Persons, 1993-2002. The Meeting
formulated an Agenda for Action for the Asian and Pacific Decade
of Disabled Persons (hereinafter referred to as the Decade Agenda
for Action). At its forty-ninth session in April 1993, the Commission
adopted the Decade Agenda for Action.
ESCAP
subsequently established a Fund for the Asian and Pacific Decade
of Disabled Persons, 1993-2002, with pledges and contributions from
several ESCAP members and associate members in support of Decade
activities, as delineated in the Decade Agenda for Action.
The
Fund was extended for the period of the New Decade, 2003-2012.
Purpose
of the Fund for the Decade
The
Fund is designed to strengthen the building of capacity to enable
persons with disabilities to fulfil their potential for participating
in society, in order for them to break out of the vicious cycle
of poverty associated with disability, and to support the breaking
of social and physical barriers that marginalize persons with disabilities
from participation in mainstream community life.
Activities
Supported
The
Fund is intended to promote intercountry cooperation and facilitate
implementation, by ESCAP developing countries and territories, concerning
the BMF under the new Decade, through: technical exchange, training
and information dissemination using “best practices”;
and advisory services by experts drawn from the ESCAP region.
Emphasis
will be given to building capacity and strengthening capabilities
for:
•
National- and local-level implementation of the Biwako targets,
with special attention to the active participation of self-help
organizations and women with disabilities;
• National and sub national coordination of disability-related
actions, especially with regard to multisectoral collaborative action
to include persons with disabilities in mainstream development programmes,
including those for education and training, rural and urban development,
the International Convention, disability statistics, employment
and gender equality;
• Promotion of accessible ICT and access to information;
• Promotion of non-handicapping environments and equalization
legislation for persons with disabilities.
Some
donors
Australia; Brunei Darussalam; Cambodia; China; Hong Kong, China;
India; Indonesia; Republic of Korea; Singapore; Thailand; Honda
Motor Workers’ Union; and others
Your
contributions to the Fund
Your
contribution to the Fund is highly appreciated. Those who wish to
contribute are kindly invited to contact us:
Population
and Social Integration Section
Emerging Social Issues Division
Phone: (662) 288-1590
Fax: (662) 288-1030
E-mail: escap-esid-psis@un.org
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