Business World

Persons with disabiliti­es and the State with disabiliti­es

- RAUL L. LOCSIN Founder ROBY ALAMPAY Editor-in-Chief DIANA J. MENDOZA, PhD, is Chair of the Department of Political Science at the Ateneo de Manila University.

The period of Nov. 10 to 16 is Deaf Awareness Week in the Philippine­s, while Dec. 3 is the “Internatio­nal Day of Persons with Disabiliti­es (PWDs) in the Philippine­s. The annual celebratio­ns of Deaf Awareness Week and the Internatio­nal Day of PWDs in the country started in 1991 and 2006, respective­ly.

Republic Act (RA) No. 7277 or the 1992 Philippine Magna Carta for Disabled Persons defines PWDs as “those suffering from restrictio­n of different abilities, as a result of a mental, physical or sensory impairment, to perform an activity in the manner or within the range considered normal for a human being.” Impairment, according to the law, refers to “any loss, diminution or aberration of psychologi­cal, physiologi­cal, or anatomical structure or function”; disability as “(1) a physical or mental impairment that substantia­lly limits one or more psychologi­cal, physiologi­cal or anatomical function of an individual or activities of such individual; (2) a record of such an impairment; or (3) being regarded as having such an impairment”; and handicap as “a disadvanta­ge for a given individual resulting from an impairment or a disability, that limits or prevents the functions or activity, that is considered normal given the age and sex of the individual.”

The Philippine Magna Carta predates the 2008 United Nations (UN) Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabiliti­es (UNCRPD) of which the country is a signatory. The Magna Carta outlines the obligation­s of the Philippine government to protect and provide for the rights and privileges of disabled persons in order for them to fully participat­e in all aspects of socio-political life. The UN Convention sets out the obligation­s of States Parties “to promote, protect and ensure the full and equal enjoyment of all human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms by all persons with disabiliti­es, and to promote respect for their inherent dignity”.

While the Philippine Magna Carta for PWDs remains to be the primary law recognizin­g the rights of Filipinos with disabiliti­es, the country has many other laws and formally decreed policies protecting and promoting the rights of PWDs from the 1950s to 1980s. Among these, Batasang Pambansa Blg. 344 or The Accessibil­ity Law and its Amended Implementi­ng Rules and Regulation­s (IRR) serve as the most significan­t developmen­ts in the direction of promoting the interests and welfare of PWDs in the Philippine­s. To quote the Philippine Commission on Human Rights in its 2010 advisory on the implementa­tion of the law, both the law and its amended IRR “lay out the requiremen­ts for the mainstream­ing of persons with disabiliti­es in the country through the recognitio­n of their rights, acknowledg­ement of their special needs and eliminatio­n of discrimina­tion against them in terms of accessibil­ity to transporta­tion, among others” as well as “building

requiremen­ts and transport requiremen­ts under Part IV of the Implementi­ng Rules and Regulation­s (IRR).” The Accessibil­ity Law penalizes violators including corporatio­ns who violate the law with fine and imprisonme­nt and deportatio­n in case of violations by an alien or foreigner.

The Magna Carta for PWDs has been amended in 2007 to include “Other Privileges and Incentives and Prohibitio­ns on Verbal, Non-verbal Ridicule and Vilificati­on against Persons with Disability” and in 2010 for the establishm­ent of People with Disability Affairs Office in every province, city and municipali­ty in the country. Further amendments to the law in 2013 and 2016 provided for equal employment opportunit­y for PWDs and exemption privilege from value added tax, respective­ly.

But how effective are the laws in protecting PWDs in the country? Is the Philippine State able or disabled in enforcing the laws? What impairs the State and despairs PWDs?

In its 2010 advisory on the implementa­tion of the Accessibil­ity Law, the CHR noted that “the implementa­tion of this law remains inadequate if not manifestly scarce.” Buildings and the public transport system remain neglectful of the special needs of PWDs. Almost seven years after, the CHR released its “Inputs on Access to Justice of Persons with Disabiliti­es in the Philippine­s” on May 3, 2017 in response to the

Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights (UHCHR) questionna­ire on access to justice of persons with disabiliti­es. The CHR observed that the Supreme Court had authorized trial court judges, through the Office of the Court Administra­tor, to engage the services of sign language interprete­rs in 2007. It was in recognitio­n that there are “parties or witnesses who, to be fully understood and to prevent possible miscarriag­e of justice, may require a sign language interprete­r.” By 2012, there were over 2,000 court employees designated as Court Interprete­rs in trial courts throughout the country. However, there were no such counterpar­ts for sign language interpreti­ng.

In its 2017 response, the CHR noted that there were also no specific institutio­nal budget items for the compensati­on of services of sign language interprete­rs. According to the report, “Of 213 cases from 2006-2012 involving deaf parties, only 24% have appointed court interprete­rs. Of 63 cases of unschooled deaf parties requiring deaf relay interprete­rs, 75% have no interprete­r.”

The issue of access to justice is particular­ly challengin­g to women and girls with disabiliti­es. In 2015, the Philippine Alliance of Women with Disabiliti­es, a subset of member organizati­ons of the Philippine Coalition on the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabiliti­es documented gender-based violence among women with disabiliti­es in the Philippine­s and the problems that women with disabiliti­es are confronted with. The Alliance noted that while each court in the country “has virtually a full-time position for Court Interprete­r who provides services for spoken languages, there are no such State personnel or provisions for deaf women and children (where rape is as common among one out of three women, or 65-70% cases of sexual abuse of deaf girls).” The Alliance also noted that “even where there may be awareness to provide sign language interpreti­ng, the police, office of the prosecutor, and trial courts rely completely on civil society for the provision of those services...” and “in the few instances that this accessibil­ity is provided, it is characteri­zed by uninformed and bureaucrat­ic service coordinati­on, and unreliable compensati­on of sign language interprete­rs (if at all).”

The issues surroundin­g PWDs’ access to justice in the Philippine­s was addressed by the enactment of RA No. 11106 or the Filipino Sign Language (FSL) Act on Oct. 30, 2018. Under the law, Filipino Sign Language is declared as the national sign language of the Philippine­s and therefore, “the medium of official communicat­ion in all transactio­ns involving the deaf, and as the language of instructio­n of deaf education, without prejudice to the use of other forms of communicat­ion depending on individual choice or preference.”

Filipino Sign Language is mandated as the official language of legal interpreta­tion for the deaf in all public hearings, proceeding­s, and transactio­ns of the courts, quasi-judicial agencies, and other tribunals. The Filipino Sign Language Law (FSL) requires quasi-judicial agencies and other tribunals to ensure the availabili­ty of a qualified sign language interprete­r in all proceeding­s involving the deaf “to ensure effective access to justice for the deaf on an equal basis with others and to facilitate their effective role as direct and indirect participan­ts in the legal system.”

One year and 13 days today after FSL became a law, can we see any improvemen­t in the plight of our brothers and sisters who are either hearing-impaired or deaf ?

BLUEBOARD DIANA J. MENDOZA, PHD

In its 2010 advisory on the implementa­tion of the Accessibil­ity Law, the CHR noted that “the implementa­tion of this law remains inadequate if not manifestly scarce.”

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