Persons
with disabilities :
09/12/94 CESCR
General comment 5.
(General Comments )
Convention Abbreviation: CESCR
GENERAL COMMENT 5
Persons with disabilities
( Eleventh session, 1994)
1. The central importance of the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in relation to the human
rights of persons with disabilities has frequently been underlined
by the international community 1/ .
Thus a 1992 review by the Secretary-General of the implementation
of the World Programme of Action concerning Disabled Persons
and the United Nations Decade of Disabled Persons concluded
that "disability is closely linked to economic and social
factors" and that "conditions of living in large
parts of the world are so desperate that the provision of basic
needs for all - food, water, shelter, health protection and
education - must form the cornerstone of national programmes" 2/ .
Even in countries which have a relatively high standard of
living, persons with disabilities are very often denied the
opportunity to enjoy the full range of economic, social and
cultural rights recognized in the Covenant.
2. The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
and the working group which preceded it, have been explicitly
called upon by both the General Assembly 3/ and
the Commission on Human Rights 4/ to
monitor the compliance of States parties to the Covenant with
their obligation to ensure the full enjoyment of the relevant
rights by persons with disabilities. The Committee's experience
to date, however, indicates that States parties have devoted
very little attention to this issue in their reports. This
appears to be consistent with the Secretary-General's conclusion
that "most Governments still lack decisive concerted measures
that would effectively improve the situation" of persons
with disabilities 5/ .
It is therefore appropriate to review, and emphasize, some
of the ways in which issues concerning persons with disabilities
arise in connection with the obligations contained in the Covenant.
3. There is still no internationally accepted definition
of the term "disability". For present purposes, however,
it is sufficient to rely on the approach adopted in the Standard
Rules of 1993, which state:
"The term 'disability' summarizes a great number of
different functional limitations occurring in any population
... People may be disabled by physical, intellectual or sensory
impairment, medical conditions or mental illness. Such impairments,
conditions or illnesses may be permanent or transitory in nature" 6/ .
4. In accordance with the approach adopted in the Standard
Rules, this General Comment uses the term "persons with
disabilities" rather than the older term "disabled
persons". It has been suggested that the latter term might
be misinterpreted to imply that the ability of the individual
to function as a person has been disabled.
5. The Covenant does not refer explicitly to persons with
disabilities. Nevertheless, the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights recognizes that all human beings are born free and equal
in dignity and rights and, since the Covenant's provisions
apply fully to all members of society, persons with disabilities
are clearly entitled to the full range of rights recognized
in the Covenant. In addition, in so far as special treatment
is necessary, States parties are required to take appropriate
measures, to the maximum extent of their available resources,
to enable such persons to seek to overcome any disadvantages,
in terms of the enjoyment of the rights specified in the Covenant,
flowing from their disability. Moreover, the requirement contained
in article 2 (2) of the Covenant that the rights "enunciated
... will be exercised without discrimination of any kind" based
on certain specified grounds "or other status" clearly
applies to discrimination on the grounds of disability.
6. The absence of an explicit, disability-related provision
in the Covenant can be attributed to the lack of awareness
of the importance of addressing this issue explicitly, rather
than only by implication, at the time of the drafting of the
Covenant over a quarter of a century ago. More recent international
human rights instruments have, however, addressed the issue
specifically. They include the Convention on the Rights of
the Child (art. 23); the African Charter on Human and Peoples'
Rights (art. 18 (4)); and the Additional Protocol to the American
Convention on Human Rights in the Area of Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights (art. 18). Thus it is now very widely accepted
that the human rights of persons with disabilities must be
protected and promoted through general, as well as specially
designed, laws, policies and programmes.
7. In accordance with this approach, the international community
has affirmed its commitment to ensuring the full range of human
rights for persons with disabilities in the following instruments:
(a) the World Programme of Action concerning Disabled Persons,
which provides a policy framework aimed at promoting "effective
measures for prevention of disability, rehabilitation and the
realization of the goals of 'full participation' of [persons
with disabilities] in social life and development, and of 'equality'" 7/ ;
(b) the Guidelines for the Establishment and Development
of National Coordinating Committees on Disability or Similar
Bodies, adopted in 1990; 8/ (c)
the Principles for the Protection of Persons with Mental Illness
and for the Improvement of Mental Health Care, adopted in 1991; 9/ (d)
the Standard Rules on the Equalization of Opportunities for
Persons with Disabilities (hereinafter referred to as the "Standard
Rules"), adopted in 1993, the purpose of which is to ensure
that all persons with disabilities "may exercise the same
rights and obligations as others". 10/ The
Standard Rules are of major importance and constitute a particularly
valuable reference guide in identifying more precisely the
relevant obligations of States parties under the Covenant.
I. GENERAL OBLIGATIONS OF STATES PARTIES
8. The United Nations has estimated that there are more than
500 million persons with disabilities in the world today. Of
that number, 80 per cent live in rural areas in developing
countries. Seventy per cent of the total are estimated to have
either limited or no access to the services they need. The
challenge of improving the situation of persons with disabilities
is thus of direct relevance to every State party to the Covenant.
While the means chosen to promote the full realization of the
economic, social and cultural rights of this group will inevitably
differ significantly from one country to another, there is
no country in which a major policy and programme effort is
not required. 11/
9. The obligation of States parties to the Covenant to promote
progressive realization of the relevant rights to the maximum
of their available resources clearly requires Governments to
do much more than merely abstain from taking measures which
might have a negative impact on persons with disabilities.
The obligation in the case of such a vulnerable and disadvantaged
group is to take positive action to reduce structural disadvantages
and to give appropriate preferential treatment to people with
disabilities in order to achieve the objectives of full participation
and equality within society for all persons with disabilities.
This almost invariably means that additional resources will
need to be made available for this purpose and that a wide
range of specially tailored measures will be required.
10. According to a report by the Secretary-General, developments
over the past decade in both developed and developing countries
have been especially unfavourable from the perspective of persons
with disabilities:
"... current economic and social deterioration, marked
by low-growth rates, high unemployment, reduced public expenditure,
current structural adjustment programmes and privatization,
have negatively affected programmes and services ... If the
present negative trends continue, there is the risk that [persons
with disabilities] may increasingly be relegated to the margins
of society, dependent on ad hoc support." 12/
As the Committee has previously observed (General Comment
No. 3 (Fifth session, 1990), para. 12), the duty of States
parties to protect the vulnerable members of their societies
assumes greater rather than less importance in times of severe
resource constraints.
11. Given the increasing commitment of Governments around
the world to market-based policies, it is appropriate in that
context to emphasize certain aspects of States parties' obligations.
One is the need to ensure that not only the public sphere,
but also the private sphere, are, within appropriate limits,
subject to regulation to ensure the equitable treatment of
persons with disabilities. In a context in which arrangements
for the provision of public services are increasingly being
privatized and in which the free market is being relied on
to an ever greater extent, it is essential that private employers,
private suppliers of goods and services, and other non-public
entities be subject to both non-discrimination and equality
norms in relation to persons with disabilities. In circumstances
where such protection does not extend beyond the public domain,
the ability of persons with disabilities to participate in
the mainstream of community activities and to realize their
full potential as active members of society will be severely
and often arbitrarily constrained. This is not to imply that
legislative measures will always be the most effective means
of seeking to eliminate discrimination within the private sphere.
Thus, for example, the Standard Rules place particular emphasis
on the need for States to "take action to raise awareness
in society about persons with disabilities, their rights, their
needs, their potential and their contribution". 13/
12. In the absence of government intervention there will
always be instances in which the operation of the free market
will produce unsatisfactory results for persons with disabilities,
either individually or as a group, and in such circumstances
it is incumbent on Governments to step in and take appropriate
measures to temper, complement, compensate for, or override
the results produced by market forces. Similarly, while it
is appropriate for Governments to rely on private, voluntary
groups to assist persons with disabilities in various ways,
such arrangements can never absolve Governments from their
duty to ensure full compliance with their obligations under
the Covenant. As the World Programme of Action concerning Disabled
Persons states, "the ultimate responsibility for remedying
the conditions that lead to impairment and for dealing with
the consequences of disability rests with Governments".
World Programme of Action concerning Disabled Persons (see
note 3 above), para. 3. 14/
II. MEANS OF IMPLEMENTATION
13. The methods to be used by States parties in seeking to
implement their obligations under the Covenant towards persons
with disabilities are essentially the same as those available
in relation to other obligations (see General Comment No. 1
(Third session, 1989)). They include the need to ascertain,
through regular monitoring, the nature and scope of the problems
existing within the State; the need to adopt appropriately
tailored policies and programmes to respond to the requirements
thus identified; the need to legislate where necessary and
to eliminate any existing discriminatory legislation; and the
need to make appropriate budgetary provisions or, where necessary,
seek international cooperation and assistance. In the latter
respect, international cooperation in accordance with articles
22 and 23 of the Covenant is likely to be a particularly important
element in enabling some developing countries to fulfil their
obligations under the Covenant.
14. In addition, it has been consistently acknowledged by
the international community that policy-making and programme
implementation in this area should be undertaken on the basis
of close consultation with, and involvement of, representative
groups of the persons concerned. For this reason, the Standard
Rules recommend that everything possible be done to facilitate
the establishment of national coordinating committees, or similar
bodies, to serve as a national focal point on disability matters.
In doing so, Governments should take account of the 1990 Guidelines
for the Establishment and Development of National Coordinating
Committees on Disability or Similar Bodies. 15/
III. THE OBLIGATION TO ELIMINATE DISCRIMINATION
ON THE GROUNDS OF DISABILITY
15. Both de jure and de facto discrimination against persons
with disabilities have a long history and take various forms.
They range from invidious discrimination, such as the denial
of educational opportunities, to more "subtle" forms
of discrimination such as segregation and isolation achieved
through the imposition of physical and social barriers. For
the purposes of the Covenant, "disability-based discrimination" may
be defined as including any distinction, exclusion, restriction
or preference, or denial of reasonable accommodation based
on disability which has the effect of nullifying or impairing
the recognition, enjoyment or exercise of economic, social
or cultural rights. Through neglect, ignorance, prejudice and
false assumptions, as well as through exclusion, distinction
or separation, persons with disabilities have very often been
prevented from exercising their economic, social or cultural
rights on an equal basis with persons without disabilities.
The effects of disability-based discrimination have been particularly
severe in the fields of education, employment, housing, transport,
cultural life, and access to public places and services.
16. Despite some progress in terms of legislation over the
past decade, 16/ the
legal situation of persons with disabilities remains precarious.
In order to remedy past and present discrimination, and to
deter future discrimination, comprehensive anti-discrimination
legislation in relation to disability would seem to be indispensable
in virtually all States parties. Such legislation should not
only provide persons with disabilities with judicial remedies
as far as possible and appropriate, but also provide for social-policy
programmes which enable persons with disabilities to live an
integrated, self-determined and independent life.
17. Anti-discrimination measures should be based on the principle
of equal rights for persons with disabilities and the non-disabled,
which, in the words of the World Programme of Action concerning
Disabled Persons, "implies that the needs of each and
every individual are of equal importance, that these needs
must be made the basis for the planning of societies, and that
all resources must be employed in such a way as to ensure,
for every individual, equal opportunity for participation.
Disability policies should ensure the access of [persons with
disabilities] to all community services". 17/
18. Because appropriate measures need to be taken to undo
existing discrimination and to establish equitable opportunities
for persons with disabilities, such actions should not be considered
discriminatory in the sense of article 2 (2) of the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights as long as
they are based on the principle of equality and are employed
only to the extent necessary to achieve that objective.
IV. SPECIFIC PROVISIONS OF THE COVENANT
A. Article 3 - Equal rights for men and women
19. Persons with disabilities are sometimes treated as genderless
human beings. As a result, the double discrimination suffered
by women with disabilities is often neglected. 18/ Despite
frequent calls by the international community for particular
emphasis to be placed upon their situation, very few efforts
have been undertaken during the Decade. The neglect of women
with disabilities is mentioned several times in the report
of the Secretary-General on the implementation of the World
Programme of Action. 19/ The
Committee therefore urges States parties to address the situation
of women with disabilities, with high priority being given
in future to the implementation of economic, social and cultural
rights-related programmes.
B. Articles 6-8 - Rights relating to work
20. The field of employment is one in which disability-based
discrimination has been prominent and persistent. In most countries
the unemployment rate among persons with disabilities is two
to three times higher than the unemployment rate for persons
without disabilities. Where persons with disabilities are employed,
they are mostly engaged in low-paid jobs with little social
and legal security and are often segregated from the mainstream
of the labour market. The integration of persons with disabilities
into the regular labour market should be actively supported
by States.
21. The "right of everyone to the opportunity to gain
his living by work which he freely chooses or accepts" (art.
6 (1)) is not realized where the only real opportunity open
to disabled workers is to work in so-called "sheltered" facilities
under substandard conditions. Arrangements whereby persons
with a certain category of disability are effectively confined
to certain occupations or to the production of certain goods
may violate this right. Similarly, in the light of principle
13 (3) of the Principles for the Protection of Persons with
Mental Illness and for the Improvement of Mental Health Care, 20/ "therapeutical
treatment" in institutions which amounts to forced labour
is also incompatible with the Covenant. In this regard, the
prohibition on forced labour contained in the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights is also of potential
relevance.
22. According to the Standard Rules, persons with disabilities,
whether in rural or urban areas, must have equal opportunities
for productive and gainful employment in the labour market 21/ .
For this to happen it is particularly important that artificial
barriers to integration in general, and to employment in particular,
be removed. As the International Labour Organisation has noted,
it is very often the physical barriers that society has erected
in areas such as transport, housing and the workplace which
are then cited as the reason why persons with disabilities
cannot be employed 22/ .
For example, as long as workplaces are designed and built in
ways that make them inaccessible to wheelchairs, employers
will be able to "justify" their failure to employ
wheelchair users. Governments should also develop policies
which promote and regulate flexible and alternative work arrangements
that reasonably accommodate the needs of disabled workers.
23. Similarly, the failure of Governments to ensure that
modes of transportation are accessible to persons with disabilities
greatly reduces the chances of such persons finding suitable,
integrated jobs, taking advantage of educational and vocational
training, or commuting to facilities of all types. Indeed,
the provision of access to appropriate and, where necessary,
specially tailored forms of transportation is crucial to the
realization by persons with disabilities of virtually all the
rights recognized in the Covenant.
24. The "technical and vocational guidance and training
programmes" required under article 6 (2) of the Covenant
should reflect the needs of all persons with disabilities,
take place in integrated settings, and be planned and implemented
with the full involvement of representatives of persons with
disabilities.
25. The right to "the enjoyment of just and favourable
conditions of work" (art. 7) applies to all disabled workers,
whether they work in sheltered facilities or in the open labour
market. Disabled workers may not be discriminated against with
respect to wages or other conditions if their work is equal
to that of non-disabled workers. States parties have a responsibility
to ensure that disability is not used as an excuse for creating
low standards of labour protection or for paying below minimum
wages.
26. Trade union-related rights (art. 8) apply equally to
workers with disabilities and regardless of whether they work
in special work facilities or in the open labour market. In
addition, article 8, read in conjunction with other rights
such as the right to freedom of association, serves to emphasize
the importance of the right of persons with disabilities to
form their own organizations. If these organizations are to
be effective in "the promotion and protection of [the]
economic and social interests" (art. 8 (1) (a)) of such
persons, they should be consulted regularly by government bodies
and others in relation to all matters affecting them; it may
also be necessary that they be supported financially and otherwise
so as to ensure their viability.
27. The International Labour Organization has developed valuable
and comprehensive instruments with respect to the work-related
rights of persons with disabilities, including in particular
Convention No. 159 (1983) concerning vocational rehabilitation
and employment of persons with disabilities. 23/ The
Committee encourages States parties to the Covenant to consider
ratifying that Convention.
C. Article 9 - Social security
28. Social security and income-maintenance schemes are of
particular importance for persons with disabilities. As stated
in the Standard Rules, "States should ensure the provision
of adequate income support to persons with disabilities who,
owing to disability or disability-related factors, have temporarily
lost or received a reduction in their income or have been denied
employment opportunities". 24/ Such
support should reflect the special needs for assistance and
other expenses often associated with disability. In addition,
as far as possible, the support provided should also cover
individuals (who are overwhelmingly female) who undertake the
care of a person with disabilities. Such persons, including
members of the families of persons with disabilities, are often
in urgent need of financial support because of their assistance
role. 25/
29. Institutionalization of persons with disabilities, unless
rendered necessary for other reasons, cannot be regarded as
an adequate substitute for the social security and income-support
rights of such persons.
D. Article 10 - Protection of the family and
of mothers and children
30. In the case of persons with disabilities, the Covenant's
requirement that "protection and assistance" be rendered
to the family means that everything possible should be done
to enable such persons, when they so wish, to live with their
families. Article 10 also implies, subject to the general principles
of international human rights law, the right of persons with
disabilities to marry and have their own family. These rights
are frequently ignored or denied, especially in the case of
persons with mental disabilities. 26/ In
this and other contexts, the term "family" should
be interpreted broadly and in accordance with appropriate local
usage. States parties should ensure that laws and social policies
and practices do not impede the realization of these rights.
Persons with disabilities should have access to necessary counselling
services in order to fulfil their rights and duties within
the family. 27/
31. Women with disabilities also have the right to protection
and support in relation to motherhood and pregnancy. As the
Standard Rules state, "persons with disabilities must
not be denied the opportunity to experience their sexuality,
have sexual relationships and experience parenthood". 28/ The
needs and desires in question should be recognized and addressed
in both the recreational and the procreational contexts. These
rights are commonly denied to both men and women with disabilities
worldwide. 29/ Both
the sterilization of, and the performance of an abortion on,
a woman with disabilities without her prior informed consent
are serious violations of article 10 (2).
32. Children with disabilities are especially vulnerable
to exploitation, abuse and neglect and are, in accordance with
article 10 (3) of the Covenant (reinforced by the corresponding
provisions of the Convention on the Rights of the Child), entitled
to special protection.
E. Article 11 - The right to an adequate standard of living
33. In addition to the need to ensure that persons with disabilities
have access to adequate food, accessible housing and other
basic material needs, it is also necessary to ensure that "support
services, including assistive devices" are available "for
persons with disabilities, to assist them to increase their
level of independence in their daily living and to exercise
their rights". 30/ The
right to adequate clothing also assumes a special significance
in the context of persons with disabilities who have particular
clothing needs, so as to enable them to function fully and
effectively in society. Wherever possible, appropriate personal
assistance should also be provided in this connection. Such
assistance should be undertaken in a manner and spirit which
fully respect the human rights of the person(s) concerned.
Similarly, as already noted by the Committee in paragraph 8
of General Comment No. 4 (Sixth session, 1991), the right to
adequate housing includes the right to accessible housing for
persons with disabilities.
F. Article 12 - The right to physical and mental health
34. According to the Standard Rules, "States should ensure that persons
with disabilities, particularly infants and children, are provided with the
same level of medical care within the same system as other members of society". 31/ The
right to physical and mental health also implies the right to have access to,
and to benefit from, those medical and social services - including orthopaedic
devices - which enable persons with disabilities to become independent, prevent
further disabilities and support their social integration. 32/ Similarly,
such persons should be provided with rehabilitation services which would enable
them "to reach and sustain their optimum level of independence and functioning". 33/ All
such services should be provided in such a way that the persons concerned are
able to maintain full respect for their rights and dignity.
G. Articles 13 and 14 - The right to education
35. School programmes in many countries today recognize that
persons with disabilities can best be educated within the general
education system. 34/ Thus
the Standard Rules provide that "States should recognize
the principle of equal primary, secondary and tertiary educational
opportunities for children, youth and adults with disabilities,
in integrated settings". 35/ In
order to implement such an approach, States should ensure that
teachers are trained to educate children with disabilities
within regular schools and that the necessary equipment and
support are available to bring persons with disabilities up
to the same level of education as their non-disabled peers.
In the case of deaf children, for example, sign language should
be recognized as a separate language to which the children
should have access and whose importance should be acknowledged
in their overall social environment.
H. Article 15 - The right to take part in cultural life
and enjoy the benefits of scientific progress
36. The Standard Rules provide that "States should ensure
that persons with disabilities have the opportunity to utilize
their creative, artistic and intellectual potential, not only
for their own benefit, but also for the enrichment of their
community, be they in urban or rural areas. ... States should
promote the accessibility to and availability of places for
cultural performances and services ... ". 36/ The
same applies to places for recreation, sports and tourism.
37. The right to full participation in cultural and recreational
life for persons with disabilities further requires that communication
barriers be eliminated to the greatest extent possible. Useful
measures in this regard might include "the use of talking
books, papers written in simple language and with clear format
and colours for persons with mental disability, [and] adapted
television and theatre for deaf persons". 37/
38. In order to facilitate the equal participation in cultural
life of persons with disabilities, Governments should inform
and educate the general public about disability. In particular,
measures must be taken to dispel prejudices or superstitious
beliefs against persons with disabilities, for example those
that view epilepsy as a form of spirit possession or a child
with disabilities as a form of punishment visited upon the
family. Similarly, the general public should be educated to
accept that persons with disabilities have as much right as
any other person to make use of restaurants, hotels, recreation
centres and cultural venues.
Notes
* Contained in document E/1995/22.
1 / For a comprehensive review
of the question, see the final report prepared by Mr Leandro
Despouy, Special Rapporteur, on human rights and disability
(E/CN.4/Sub.2/1991/31).
2 / See A/47/415, para. 5.
3 / See para. 165 of the World
Programme of Action concerning Disabled Persons, adopted by
the General Assembly by its resolution 37/52 of 3 December
1982 (para. 1).
4 / See Commission on Human Rights
resolutions 1992/48, para. 4 and 1993/29, para. 7.
5 / See A/47/415, para. 6.
6 / Standard Rules on the Equalization
of Opportunities for Persons with Disabilities, annexed to
General Assembly resolution 48/96 of 20 December 1993 (Introduction,
para. 17).
7 / World Programme of Action
concerning Disabled Persons (see note 3 above), para. 1.
8 / A/C.3/46/4, annex I. Also
contained in the Report on the International Meeting on the
Roles and Functions of National Coordinating Committees on
Disability in Developing Countries, Beijing, 5-11 November
1990 (CSDHA/DDP/NDC/4). See also Economic and Social Council
resolution 1991/8 and General Assembly resolution 46/96 of
16 December 1991.
9 / General Assembly resolution
46/119 of 17 December 1991, annex.
10 / Standard Rules, (see note
6 above), Introduction, para. 15.
11 / See A/47/415, passim.
12 / Ibid., para. 5.
13 / Standard Rules, (see note
6 above) Rule 1.
14 / World Programme of Action
concerning Disabled Persons (see note 3 above), para. 3.
15 / See note 8 above.
16 / See A/47/415, paras. 37-38.
17 / World Programme of Action
concerning Disabled Persons (see note 3 above), para. 25.
18 / See E/CN.4/Sub.2/1991/31
(see note 1 above), para. 140.
19 / See A/47/415, paras. 35,
46, 74 and 77.
20 / See note 9 above.
21 / Standard Rules (see note 6
above), Rule 7.
22 / See A/CONF.157/PC/61/Add.10,
p. 12.
23 / See also Recommendation No.
99 (1955) concerning vocational rehabilitation of the disabled,
and Recommendation No. 168 (1983) concerning vocational rehabilitation
and employment of persons with disabilities.
24 / Standard Rules (see note
6 above) Rule 8, para. 1.
25 / See A/47/415, para. 78.
26 / See E/CN.4/Sub.2/1991/31
(see note 1 above), paras. 190 and 193.
27 / See the World Programme of
Action concerning Disabled Persons (see note 3 above) para.
74.
28 / Standard Rules (see note
6 above), Rule 9, para. 2.
29 / See E/CN.6/1991/2, paras.
14 and 59-68.
30 / Standard Rules (see note
6 above), Rule 4.
31 / Ibid., Rule 2, para. 3.
32 / See the Declaration on the
Rights of Disabled Persons (General Assembly resolution 3447
(XXX) of 9 December 1975), para. 6; and the World Programme
of Action concerning Disabled Persons (see note 3 above), paras.
95-107.
33 / Standard Rules (see note
6 above), Rule 3.
34 / See A/47/415 para. 73.
35 / Standard Rules (see note 6
above), Rule 6.
36 / ibid., Rule 10, paras.1-2
37 / See A/47/415 para. 79
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