NEW RATIFICATION
On Tuesday, 24th February 2009 at 19.23 Italian Parliament ratified the UN International Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability.
On Tuesday, 24th February 2009 at 19.23 Italian Parliament ratified the UN International Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability.
Denmark: New Rules on Personal Assistance Kirsten Plambech from Disabled Peoples Organisations Denmark (DPOD) reports about new legislation in Denmark:From 1st January 09 new rules are effective in relation to personal assistancebased on direct payment. The municipal council shall pay a subsidy towards the costof engaging assistant carers and attendants for persons with substantial andpermanent impairment of physical or mental function requiring particular support.What is new about these rules is the possibility for the individual to hand over thesubsidy to an organization, ruled by persons with personal assistance themselves, toa private company or a relative. They will hereafter administer the assistance.From a legal point of view, the individual can hand over the responsibility for being anemployer. However it is done, the individual keeps the responsibility for the day-todayplanning of the work, engaging the necessary help and so on.If being entitled to this kind of assistance, the municipal council cannot decideanything on behalf of the individual in relation to the planning of the arrangement.The individual decides, whether they wish to be an employer themselves or they willhand over the responsibility to an organization, a private company or a relative. Theindividual decides who to employ, the day-to-day planning and so on.About 2200 persons in Denmark are expected to fulfil the conditions to thisarrangement.A new organization called LOBPA (The national organization of people with personal
assistance ruled by themselves) has come into existence.
Finland: Bill on Personal Assistance Terhi Toikkanen from Assistentti.info pointed out a new bill on PA.A government bill on personal assistance for people with severe disabilities draftedunder the lead of the Finnish Minister of Health and Social Services Paula Risikkotogether with the Finnish Disability Forum has been completed. According to the bill,persons with severe disabilities who are in need of necessary and repeatedassistance in their everyday activities as well as for work and studies are entitled topersonal assistance. The objective is that the Act will enter into force on 1 Sep 2009.In the present Finish system, the municipality compensated the disabled person whoemploys an assistant for their costs. With the new Act, there are two morealternatives: – a) the municipality will give the person with severe disability a servicevoucher for purchasing assistance service – b) the municipality organises the servicein the form of a purchased service, through its own service production or in acontractual cooperation with one or several municipalities. In this way, the lawamendment will make it possible for persons with disabilities to obtain personalassistance in the form of a service – without employer obligations.
It is a great pleasure to announce that after five years of implementation the project Personal Assistant Service in Serbia, through Center for Independent Living Serbia, this service continue to live in Jagodina (CIL branch city) from 1st of February 2009, funded by Jagodina Municipality.
Jagodina Municipality adopted Strategic Plan at the end of 2007 and commited itself to realise one of priorities within the next four years – realisation of Service of Personal Assistants, as one type of support services to Persons with Disability.
According to that and the needs of PWDs Municipality commited funds for five PAs for 2009 which enables continuum for previous five users of service.
It is our hope that this will mean the continuance of long ago started pilog project (2003) of PA Service, that this service will become one of possible supports for Persons with Disability in Serbia.
Barack Obama and Joe Biden have a comprehensive agenda to empower individuals with disabilities in order to equalize opportunities for all Americans.
In addition to reclaiming America’s global leadership on this issue by becoming a signatory to — and having the Senate ratify — the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, the plan has four parts, designed to provide lifelong support and resources to Americans with disabilities.
They are as follows:
First, provide Americans with disabilities with the educational opportunities they need to succeed.
Second, end discrimination and promote equal opportunity by restoring the Americans with Disabilities Act, increasing funding for enforcement, supporting the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act, ensuring affordable, accessible health care for all and improving mental health care.
Third, increase the employment rate of workers with disabilities by effectively implementing regulations that require the federal government and its contractors to employ people with disabilities.
And fourth, support independent, community-based living for Americans with disabilities by enforcing the Community Choice Act, which would allow Americans with significant disabilities the choice of living in their community rather than having to live in a nursing home or other institution, creating a voluntary, budget-neutral national insurance program to help adults who have or develop functional disabilities to remain independent and in their communities, and streamline the Social Security approval process .
President Obama and Vice President Biden are committed to supporting Americans with Autism Spectrum Disorders (“ASD”), their families, and their communities.
Center for Independent Living Serbia and Handicap International, supported by EIDHR, organised Conference on Cooperationfor Improvement of Disability Policy in Serbia from 17/19 of November 2008. The aim of the Conference is:
This will be opportunity to learn more on local level work from eight coalitions who are making Local Plans of Action in Disability area in their communities.
Center for Independent Living Serbia organised workshop on importance of CRPD for representatives of Human Rights Organisations and DPOs. Workshop was held in Nis on 5 of November and there were 16 participants at the workshop facilitated by Damjan Tatic, Dimitrije Gligorijevic and Svetislav Marjanovic.
This workshhop is one of the activities within the SHARE SEE project run by Handicap International in parthership with CIL Serbia.
CRPD is important documet who should be used and adjusted with other legislative document for PWDs and other marginalised groups in Serbia.
(New York, United Nations, November 3, 2008): Today, the first Conference of States Parties on the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) elected the new Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities which will be in charge of monitoring the implementation of the CRPD. The Committee comprises seven men and five women, of which nine are persons with disabilities. The twelve Committee members elected are:
Monsur Ahmed Choudhuri (Bangladesh) (4-year term)
Amna Ali Al Suweidi (Qatar) (4-year term)
György Könczei (Hungary) (2-year term)
Ana Peláez Narváez (Spain) (4-year term)
Cveto Uršič (Slovenia) (2-year term)
Jia Yang (China) (4-year term)
Mohamed Al-Tarawneh (Jordan) (4-year term)
Ron McCallum (Australia) (2-year term)
Maria Soledad Cisternas Reyes (Chile) (4-year term)
Germán Xavier Torres Correa (Ecuador) (2-year term)
Lotfi Ben Lallohom (Tunisia) (2-year term)
Edah Wangechi Maina (Kenya) (2-year term)
The Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities is the body of independent experts and will monitor implementation of the CRPD by the States Parties.
After the completion of Personal Assistance Service for PWDs in Serbia, three children (11, 12 and 16 years of age) has had to take care on his father Zoran Antonijevic (42) suffering from Multiple Sclerosis.After numerous texts in printed media this family got a big support from VICTORIA GROUP corporation from Vojvodina. PR Manager of this Corporation, Natalija Kurjak, said that after reading the text about this family, they decided to pay persona assistant for the father and to fund children untill the end of their schooling.
ADRF representative, Mrs. Bardhylka Kospiri addresses the Parliamentary Commission on Electoral Reform, on the Electoral Rights of People with Disability in Albania.
Today, on October 7th, 2008, the Commission on Electoral Reform at the Albanian Parliament, invited in a hearing session, representatives of civil society organizations, Albanian Helsinki Committee for Human Rights, Albanian Disability Rights Foundation, INSIZ and G 99, to discuss and bring to the attention of MPs, their concerns and issues of interest to the Electoral Code.
The representative of ADRF, the disability advocate, Mrs. Bardhylka Kospiri, in her address to the Commission, articulated the importance of legal provisions to enable people with disability, exercise their right to vote.
Despite hard efforts, aiming at the complete involvement in the electoral processes and therefore the fulfillment of the constitutional right to equal, direct and secret voting for voters with disability, including blind people, people with moving difficulties, people with communication problems, hospitalized people or people not able to move out of their residences (home-bound voters), all this category of voters, are still excluded and can’t exercise this right because the existing Electoral Code, still continues to create barriers to them.
Today on this hearing session, ADRF presented a complete package of recommendations that aim to improve the access of people with disabilities in the political and electoral life of the country as part of the Electoral Reform that is under process in the Albanian Parliament. These recommendations were also supported by Disability and Development Coalition, Albania.
In her speech, Mrs Kospiri, emphasized the necessity to ensure the right to vote for home – bound voters, through mobile ballot box, as well as provision of accessibility and other facilities for those who can go to the voting centers.
Mrs. Kospiri appealed that inclusion of these recommendations in the New Electoral Code, will contribute to ensuring a law that complies with European and international Standards.
We, the undersigned call on International Olympic Committee and the International Paralympic Committee, to combine the Olympics and Paralympics in to one event.
According all athletes (regardless of the current separation) the same recognition, respect and acknowledgement of their achievement and commitment to their chosen sport.
Section 4 and 5 of the Fundamental Principles of Olympism states:
“The practice of sport is a human right. Every individual must have the possibility of practising sport, without discrimination of any kind and in the Olympic spirit, which requires mutual understanding with a spirit of friendship, solidarity and fair play. The organisation, administration and management of sport must be controlled by independent sports organisations.”
“Any form of discrimination with regard to a country or a person on grounds of race, religion, politics, gender or otherwise is incompatible with belonging to the Olympic Movement.”
Continued separation of the games in to two separate events goes against such principles. Go to http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/combine-the-games.html
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