Today's Paper
» MISCELLANEOUS
» OTHERS March 3, 2013
Disability rights is off the rails
Like all other years, this year’s Railway budget did not
bring any cheer for India’s 70-100 million people with disabilities, a
large number of whom depend on the Railways for their basic mobility
needs.
The only difference was that for the first
time, the new Railway Minister talked about the substantive issue of
accessibility at the stations and in the coaches. However, the
discrimination and indignity faced by millions of persons with
disabilities trying to use the Railways cannot be addressed by mere
pious statements of good intent. The barriers are deep-rooted and
systemic.
Let’s try and understand what it means for the average person with disability to travel with the Railways.
To
begin with, you can’t buy the tickets online. The website is not
accessible as it does not conform to web content accessibility
guidelines despite a Government of India policy mandating so. And even
if you are not print-impaired, you ‘have to’ physically go to the
booking counter with your disability certificate in hand to avail
yourself of the discount and get a prized seat in that one single
accessible coach per train.
The booking counters are
not accessible and that one ‘accessible’ counter for ‘special’ and
‘differently-abled’ people (pun intended) is not manned most of the
time.
To top it, by the government’s own admission,
more than 50 per cent of the people with disabilities actually don’t
have a disability certificate.
Even if you are lucky
to have a disability certificate, you are forced to purchase two tickets
and to travel with an ‘attendant,’ never mind if you are totally
independent and can actually travel alone.
Hurdles in stations
To
get to the coach is another huge struggle. The way to the platforms is
not at all accessible. India is still stuck with the concept of foot
over-bridges with a thousand steep steps, and no ramps or lifts. You are
therefore left with no choice but to use the same path as the luggage
carts — littered with potholes and garbage.
The
concept of ‘accessibility’ for the Railways has remained limited to one
accessible toilet for the entire station. God help you if you urgently
need to use one but you are on Platform No. 2 and the
‘disabled-friendly’ toilet happens to be at the extreme end of the
station, beyond Platform No. 7.
It is the same story with all other public facilities such as the drinking water taps, the public telephone booths, and so on.
The
worst aspect of the Railways in the modern, 21st century India is the
segregated coach for people with disabilities. This ‘special’ coach for
‘differently-abled’ people is attached now to almost every long-distance
train either at the beginning, immediately after the engine, or towards
the very end, right next to the guard. A person with disability doesn’t
have the same choice as other passengers because all the other coaches
are not accessible.
We all know the story of Mahatma
Gandhi having been thrown off a first-class carriage in South Africa
because of the colour of his skin. I say Gandhiji was lucky. After all,
he did manage to get into the coach. I, as a wheelchair user, can’t even
get inside.
What is needed is a holistic, time-bound
action plan with a generous resource allocation. We are not asking for
any miracles but there should be a serious start somewhere. I offer a
simple three-point agenda to our new Railways Minister: Make the
Railways website accessible. Make all A1 category stations fully
accessible (stations are categorised by passenger traffic). Make at
least one coach accessible in every class of every train. Fix a
practical time frame, allocate a decent budget and for God’s sake, then
just do it!
(Javed Abidi is a very disgruntled disabled Indian citizen. He has
been a wheelchair user for the last 33 years and yet, is not
'wheelchair-bound'. He keeps travelling around the world as the Global
Chair of Disabled People's International (DPI). He is neither ‘invalid’
nor ‘special.’ And, he certainly is not ‘differently’ abled. He travels
by train all the time, but only in America and in Europe. At home, in
modern India, he cannot. He cannot even get inside them but he wants to.
Hence, this piece, in the hope that things will change. He is Convener,
Disabled Rights Group (DRG) and Chairperson, DPI.)
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