Monthly Archives: April 2008

Disability Rights Convention Now International Law

Celebrations all round! Just in case you haven’t caught up with the media fanfare (not!) the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities now has twenty ratifications. This means it is now international law and the mechanisms to bring it into force, such as the international monitoring committee, can now be established.

New Zealand has not yet ratified, see Disability Rights Convention one year on, but this is huge for disabled people worldwide. Congratulations to those countries which have ratified. Disabled people there will now have a voice in monitoring the implementation of the Convention.

Each step in the development of this Convention has been a vindication of our struggle to make disability rights part of the human rights agenda. In New Zealand it gives further weight to the Disability Strategy, and a platform for progress in achieving our rights alongside non-disabled people..

To find out what is happening here go to the Office for Disability Issues and the Human Rights Commission.

Nothing about us without us!

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Filed under Disability Issues, Disability Rights

Damned if you do

There’s a certain irony about the man who can’t compete in the Olympics because his artificial legs would give him an unfair advantage over the regular athletes! Does that mean that the Paralympians are now faster than the Olympians! Aren’t the Olympics supposed to be the creme de la creme of speed and the Paralympics for crocks who can’t compete on the same terms as “real” sportspeople? This is really confusing to a sports dummy like me who was brought up to believe that disabled people could not go out there and aggressively compete at sport.

Reuters reported earlier this year

“Nightmare visions of athletes using all sorts of mechanical aids to improve performances prompted the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) to amend its rules last year.”

Heaven forbid!

It went on to say ‘The IAAF banned technical devices incorporating “springs, wheels or any other element” giving athletes an advantage over their competitors.’  (What about fibreglass vaulting poles then?) You just can’t win can you, as a South African athlete who tested the rule found.

Disabled people used to know their place. But not any more. They climb mountains, go skiing, rafting, yachting, run the New York and countless other marathons, and indulge in all manner of sporting pastimes. A special Olympian with Down syndrome is about to attempt the Sky Tower Challenge. Is there no end to what uppity crips and blindies will get up to these days?
Time was when sports reporters were very scornful about Paralympics and disability sports generally, claiming that they weren’t really sports. They never got any mainstream sports coverage. They still don’t get enough, especially when they are winning and the so-called mainstream sports are losing bigtime.

Yet I heard a sports reporter on radio New Zealand just the other day extolling wheelchair rugby, and the wheelblacks (always makes me think of bootblacks for the 21st century,) as great spectator sport. He described with great relish the vigorous and sometimes destructive contact between players. And how they fall out of their chairs, get put back in and continue pursuing a sport every bit as aggressive, macho and physical as its namesake. There was a very strong hint of bloodlust in his enthusiasm.

But back to the guy with the techno racing legs. I think he should be able to race in the Olympics. It would be great to see a crip win in the “real” games. It could be the start of a sporting revolution. I for one would cheer him on.

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Filed under Disability Issues, Miscellaneous