Declaration on the Rights of Mentally Retarded
Persons Proclaimed by General Assembly resolution 2856 (XXVI) of
20 December 1971
The General Assembly ,
Mindful of the pledge of the States
Members of the United Nations under the Charter to take joint
and separate action in co-operation with the Organization to
promote higher standards of living, full employment and conditions
of economic and social progress and development,
Reaffirming faith in human rights
and fundamental freedoms and in the principles of peace, of
the dignity and worth of the human person and of social justice
proclaimed in the Charter,
Recalling the principles of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenants on
Human Rights, the Declaration of the Rights of the Child and
the standards already set for social progress in the constitutions,
conventions, recommendations and resolutions of the International
Labour Organisation, the United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization, the World Health Organization, the
United Nations Children's Fund and other organizations concerned,
Emphasizing that the Declaration
on Social Progress and Development has proclaimed the necessity
of protecting the rights and assuring the welfare and rehabilitation
of the physically and mentally disadvantaged,
Bearing in mind the necessity of
assisting mentally retarded persons to develop their abilities
in various fields of activities and of promoting their integration
as far as possible in normal life,
Aware that certain countries, at
their present stage of development, can devote only limited
efforts to this end,
Proclaims this Declaration on the
Rights of Mentally Retarded Persons and calls for national
and international action to en sure that it will be used as
a common basis and frame of reference for the protection of
these rights:
1. The mentally retarded person
has, to the maximum degree of feasibility, the same rights
as other human beings.
2. The mentally retarded person
has a right to proper medical care and physical therapy and
to such education, training, rehabilitation and guidance as
will enable him to develop his ability and maximum potential.
3. The mentally retarded person
has a right to economic security and to a decent standard of
living. He has a right to perform productive work or to engage
in any other meaningful occupation to the fullest possible
extent of his capabilities.
4. Whenever possible, the mentally
retarded person should live with his own family or with foster
parents and participate in different forms of community life.
The family with which he lives should receive assistance. If
care in an institution becomes necessary, it should be provided
in surroundings and other circumstances as close as possible
to those of normal life.
5. The mentally retarded person
has a right to a qualified guardian when this is required to
protect his personal well-being and interests.
6. The mentally retarded person
has a right to protection from exploitation, abuse and degrading
treatment. If prosecuted for any offence, he shall have a right
to due process of law with full recognition being given to
his degree of mental responsibility.
7. Whenever mentally retarded
persons are unable, because of the severity of their handicap,
to exercise all their rights in a meaningful way or it should
become necessary to restrict or deny some or all of these rights,
the procedure used for that restriction or denial of rights
must contain proper legal safeguards against every form of
abuse. This procedure must be based on an evaluation of the
social capability of the mentally retarded person by qualified
experts and must be subject to periodic review and to the right
of appeal to higher authorities.
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