We’re here to assist MPS onwards whereby to check out all development plans and will need to be approved by ours committee before they are submitted to the one-stop centre committee, to ensure that the plans include facilities for the disabled. And also we’re here to give our views and ensure the job is done correctly. We hope that the other Municipal Council's in Malaysia will take this a good example to build disabled-friendly features in their town planning.
INDEPENDENT LIVING & TRAINING CENTRE MALAYSIA - (BADAN LATIHAN & HIDUP BERDIKARI MALAYSIA) LOT NO. 112, KG. SG. DUA TAMBAHAN, JALAN BATU ARANG, MUKIM RAWANG, 48000 RAWANG SELANGOR DARUL EHSAN TEL: 03-6093 6292 TEL/FAX: 03-6091 2531 Email: iltcmalaysia@gmail.com
NEW MINISTER FOR WELFARE MINISTER OF MALAYSIA
Disabled Members Protest
ILTC Malaysia members staged a protest outside JPJ Wangsamaju KL.
Friday, 20 August 2010
Successful Meeting - MPS
We (Technical Working Committee for the Disabled’s Facilities) had a very successful meeting today at the Selayang Municipal Council (MPS)
Thursday, 19 August 2010
Malaysia: Disability Rights Treaty Ratification an ‘Important Step’
Malaysia: Disability Rights Treaty Ratification an ‘Important Step’
Malaysia's ratification of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities can help bring real improvement in the lives of people with disabilities in Malaysia, Human Rights Watch said today. But Malaysia should withdraw its formal reservations to the treaty that will undermine its efforts to protect and promote those rights, Human Rights Watch said.
The Disability Rights Convention affirms broad protections for people with disabilities, including the rights to life, freedom from discrimination, equal recognition before the law, and access to justice, education, employment, and health. The treaty will go into effect in Malaysia on August 18, 2010.
"Malaysia has taken an important step to protect the rights of people with disabilities," said Shantha Rau Barriga, disability rights researcher and advocate at Human Rights Watch. "But the convention should be seen as a springboard for changing Malaysian laws, policies, and practices that violate the rights of people with disabilities."
While the Malaysian government has indicated plans to improve acceptance of people with disabilities into the mainstream, there are still problems with putting the plans into practice, Human Rights Watch said. Compliance with the 1984 law that mandates that public buildings be designed for accessibility is sporadic. In addition, a non-binding plan announced in 2009 to ensure that one percent of the government work force is reserved for persons with disabilities has not matched expectations.
The dropout rate for children with disabilities is a major concern, Human Rights Watch said. In part, this results from a lack of access to schools for children who use wheelchairs, for example, and in part from a lack of facilities, programs, and trained personnel to assist children with learning disabilities. The country's education regulations even exclude the "non-educable" from schools.
Malaysia entered formal reservations to the Disability Rights Convention concerning the prohibition of torture and other ill-treatment (article 15) and the right to liberty of movement and nationality (article 18). It also made a declaration limiting the government's legal application of the principles of non-discrimination and equality.
Human Rights Watch urged Malaysia to withdraw these reservations immediately and to ensure that anyone with disabilities in Malaysia has the full protection of all rights set out in the convention. Countries that have ratified the Disability Rights Convention should make formal objections to Malaysia's reservations and declaration, Human Rights Watch said.
Malaysia's reservations are especially problematic, Human Rights Watch said, because the government has yet to ratify other major human rights treaties that incorporate these rights, specifically the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. The prohibition against torture is one of the most basic under international law, permitting no exceptions. Malaysia has recently withdrawn a number of its reservations to the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, but should remove all the remaining reservations, Human Rights Watch said.
"Malaysia's reservations are troubling and send a terrible message to people with disabilities," Barriga said. "What possible justification could Malaysia have for objecting to protecting persons with disabilities from torture or allowing them to move around the country?"
Human Rights Watch also urged Malaysia to sign and ratify the Optional Protocol to the Disability Rights Convention, which allows individuals to send complaints of human rights violations to an international monitoring body. At present, Malaysia's Persons with Disabilities Act provides no mechanisms for redress, and expressly prohibits legal actions against the government for violating the rights of persons with disabilities.
"By ratifying the Disability Rights Convention, Malaysia made progress toward fulfilling one of its pledges as a member of the United Nations Human Rights Council to adopt more international human rights instruments," Barriga said. "However, its reservations to the convention fall far short of honoring that pledge."
Malaysia's ratification of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities can help bring real improvement in the lives of people with disabilities in Malaysia, Human Rights Watch said today. But Malaysia should withdraw its formal reservations to the treaty that will undermine its efforts to protect and promote those rights, Human Rights Watch said.
The Disability Rights Convention affirms broad protections for people with disabilities, including the rights to life, freedom from discrimination, equal recognition before the law, and access to justice, education, employment, and health. The treaty will go into effect in Malaysia on August 18, 2010.
"Malaysia has taken an important step to protect the rights of people with disabilities," said Shantha Rau Barriga, disability rights researcher and advocate at Human Rights Watch. "But the convention should be seen as a springboard for changing Malaysian laws, policies, and practices that violate the rights of people with disabilities."
While the Malaysian government has indicated plans to improve acceptance of people with disabilities into the mainstream, there are still problems with putting the plans into practice, Human Rights Watch said. Compliance with the 1984 law that mandates that public buildings be designed for accessibility is sporadic. In addition, a non-binding plan announced in 2009 to ensure that one percent of the government work force is reserved for persons with disabilities has not matched expectations.
The dropout rate for children with disabilities is a major concern, Human Rights Watch said. In part, this results from a lack of access to schools for children who use wheelchairs, for example, and in part from a lack of facilities, programs, and trained personnel to assist children with learning disabilities. The country's education regulations even exclude the "non-educable" from schools.
Malaysia entered formal reservations to the Disability Rights Convention concerning the prohibition of torture and other ill-treatment (article 15) and the right to liberty of movement and nationality (article 18). It also made a declaration limiting the government's legal application of the principles of non-discrimination and equality.
Human Rights Watch urged Malaysia to withdraw these reservations immediately and to ensure that anyone with disabilities in Malaysia has the full protection of all rights set out in the convention. Countries that have ratified the Disability Rights Convention should make formal objections to Malaysia's reservations and declaration, Human Rights Watch said.
Malaysia's reservations are especially problematic, Human Rights Watch said, because the government has yet to ratify other major human rights treaties that incorporate these rights, specifically the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. The prohibition against torture is one of the most basic under international law, permitting no exceptions. Malaysia has recently withdrawn a number of its reservations to the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, but should remove all the remaining reservations, Human Rights Watch said.
"Malaysia's reservations are troubling and send a terrible message to people with disabilities," Barriga said. "What possible justification could Malaysia have for objecting to protecting persons with disabilities from torture or allowing them to move around the country?"
Human Rights Watch also urged Malaysia to sign and ratify the Optional Protocol to the Disability Rights Convention, which allows individuals to send complaints of human rights violations to an international monitoring body. At present, Malaysia's Persons with Disabilities Act provides no mechanisms for redress, and expressly prohibits legal actions against the government for violating the rights of persons with disabilities.
"By ratifying the Disability Rights Convention, Malaysia made progress toward fulfilling one of its pledges as a member of the United Nations Human Rights Council to adopt more international human rights instruments," Barriga said. "However, its reservations to the convention fall far short of honoring that pledge."
Wednesday, 18 August 2010
Tuesday, 17 August 2010
Financial aid not for all disabled
Friday August 13, 2010
Financial aid not for all disabled
We refer to the letter “Aid for disabled comes with condition” (The Star, Aug 11).
The Department of Social Welfare wishes to clarify that information highlighted in the newspapers relating to financial assistance for disabled person was not clearly elaborated.
We wish to emphasise that registration does not automatically qualify for financial assistance as the eligibility is based on certain criteria as follows:
> The applicant must be a citizen of Malaysia.
> The household income is less than RM720 for Peninsular Malaysia, RM830 for Sarawak and RM960 for Sabah.
> Besides that, other factors that need to be considered during field visits to justify that the applicant comes under the category of poor and needy by looking at the number of family members, support from those living inside and outside of the family, number of family dependants, the health aspect of the applicant and other related factors.
We would like to stress that having Astro is not the criterion for assessing the eligibility of an applicant. We will look at the circumstances of the family as a whole to determine the need for welfare assistance.
Any inquiry can be directed to the Department for the Development of Persons with Disabilities at 03-2616 5600.
UNIT PERHUBUNGAN AWAM,
Jabatan Kebajikan Masyarakat.
Financial aid not for all disabled
We refer to the letter “Aid for disabled comes with condition” (The Star, Aug 11).
The Department of Social Welfare wishes to clarify that information highlighted in the newspapers relating to financial assistance for disabled person was not clearly elaborated.
We wish to emphasise that registration does not automatically qualify for financial assistance as the eligibility is based on certain criteria as follows:
> The applicant must be a citizen of Malaysia.
> The household income is less than RM720 for Peninsular Malaysia, RM830 for Sarawak and RM960 for Sabah.
> Besides that, other factors that need to be considered during field visits to justify that the applicant comes under the category of poor and needy by looking at the number of family members, support from those living inside and outside of the family, number of family dependants, the health aspect of the applicant and other related factors.
We would like to stress that having Astro is not the criterion for assessing the eligibility of an applicant. We will look at the circumstances of the family as a whole to determine the need for welfare assistance.
Any inquiry can be directed to the Department for the Development of Persons with Disabilities at 03-2616 5600.
UNIT PERHUBUNGAN AWAM,
Jabatan Kebajikan Masyarakat.
Monday, 16 August 2010
Making Jalan Gasing disabled-friendly
Friday, August 13, 2010
DISABLED-FRIENDLY WALKWAY ALONG JALAN GASING.
We Independent Living & Training Centre (ILTC) would like to praise the Petaling Jaya City Council for constructed a disabled-friendly walkway along Jalan Gasing. We are very grateful towards the council for providing us more accessibility for the 450-metre pavement a disabled-friendly walkway along Jalan Gasing. Last Friday, We (Mr. Stanislaus Anthony, Pn. Hjh. Sharipah Marhaini Binti Syed Ali - Pengarah (Perancang Bandar), some other officials & myself) had a field visit with Y.B. Puan Rodziah Ismail (EXCO of the Selangor Government) whereby to discussed about how to build a Trigger Green Traffic Lights and also having some technical problems to construct at the bus stop near the pavement a disabled-friendly walkway along Jalan Gasing.
DISABLED-FRIENDLY WALKWAY ALONG JALAN GASING.
We Independent Living & Training Centre (ILTC) would like to praise the Petaling Jaya City Council for constructed a disabled-friendly walkway along Jalan Gasing. We are very grateful towards the council for providing us more accessibility for the 450-metre pavement a disabled-friendly walkway along Jalan Gasing. Last Friday, We (Mr. Stanislaus Anthony, Pn. Hjh. Sharipah Marhaini Binti Syed Ali - Pengarah (Perancang Bandar), some other officials & myself) had a field visit with Y.B. Puan Rodziah Ismail (EXCO of the Selangor Government) whereby to discussed about how to build a Trigger Green Traffic Lights and also having some technical problems to construct at the bus stop near the pavement a disabled-friendly walkway along Jalan Gasing.
Even though the walkway is partially completed, we know it's going to make our lives a bit easier.
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