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last updated
29-04-2004 16:12
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| © Disability Action
Council |
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Guiding Principles of the MSALVA Task Force on Disability Issues (1995-6)
- All recommendations should be studied in the light of three main
time frames:
- Remedial: the problem exists now; what can we do now, and how?
- Developmental: things will change in the future; how do we want
them to change?
- Preventative: if the problem is preventable, how do we go about
preventing it?
- The specific economic, cultural and social conditions of Cambodia
should always be considered.
- Emphasis must be given to the long-term sustainability of all forms
of services and support.
- Disabled people and their families must be given the opportunity
by Task Force and Sub-Committee members to participate in the formulation
of the National Plan.
- Special consideration should be given to:
- Programmes addressing the needs of disabled women.
- The development of community-based services for disabled people.
- Programmes which emphasise the development of public awareness
concerning the rights of disabled people, and the promotion of
positive attitudes towards disabled people in the community.
- Initiatives which increase the capacity of the disabled people
to help themselves and each other, through the development of
skills in needs identification, planning, decision-making, and
project management.
- All programmes, whether centre-based or community-based, must have
the principle of integration built into the plan. Programmes which
hinder economic, cultural and social integration of disabled people
should be de-emphasised.
- Programmes which lead to the empowerment of disabled people should
be favoured over those which create dependency. Therefore, disabled
people should be involved in designing, planning, and implementing
programmes which affect them, as far as possible, at every stage.
- All programmes should demonstrate the relevance of the services
and support they offer to the needs identified by disabled people
themselves.
- The National Plan should strive for an equitable distribution of
resources, regardless of type of disability, age, gender, religion,
or political affiliation.
- Human resource development, capacity building, and training of government
and non-government staff should be a priority at all levels.
- The problem of discrimination should be addressed through cross-disability
initiatives which emphasise the common experience of discrimination
rather than the individual's impairment.
- The plan should promote the participation of disabled people in
mainstream governmental and non-governmental initiatives targeted
at the general population.
- The plan should promote inclusion of the need for legislation concerning
disability, the rights of disabled people, and the role of disabled
people in formulating such legislation.
- The plan should adhere to the UN Standard Rules for Equalisation
of Opportunities for Disabled Persons, and the ESCAP Proclamation
on the Rights of Disabled Persons, signed by the Co-Prime Ministers
of the Kingdom of Cambodia.
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