UN official An today cast doubt ons
UN official: An today cast doubt on disability rights. San Sebastian, Mar 9 () .- The Vice-Chairman of the UN Observer Mission International Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Ana espaola Pelez, regretted that the rights of disabled people today still "keep questioning" even from within their own sector.
Pelez made this reflection in an interview with , after hearing a recent ruling that restored some civil rights a young Gipuzkoa with Down's syndrome bean was, eve online isk, totally incapacitated by a court of Irn.
The Public Prosecutor for Guipzcoa appealed the sentence to the District Court now has returned a large portion of its rights as marriage and the right to vote, as well as its ability to test and use the money obtained from its working as a waiter.
Pelez, who is blind and works as Director of, sto credits, International Relations, ONCE, has been now "fully satisfied" with the new judicial RESOLUTION because it shows that "estn complying with and implementing the rights and freedoms "enshrined in the International Convencin on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities in the UN.
He recalled that a few years ago Spain ratify this Convencin of mandatory application and determines that the interpretation of, sto energy credits , the limitations of rights by incapacitacin must be proportional and tailored to the circumstances of people .
Stressing that the new sentence "has a pedagogical effect grandsimo infinite," the UN official has said, "is welcome" to produce "this kind of progress" in judgments, because "down the vaa follow "and represent" a light in this way is still sometimes difficult to discern for the judges. "
Pelez, who also represents Spain in the European Disability Forum, has reiterated that, in the process of failure of the people, "always" need "to break" the capabilities that keep those affected "In some cases residual SERN but not in others."
He admitted, however, that such action sometimes "high" even what they think of the disabled because some families, probably due to "over PROTECTION" that subject their loved ones, "do not see able to act as free citizens with full rights. "
"Besides, added there are always sectors that are more reluctant to incorporate into their professional practices these developments taking place in human rights, especially when they collide with the traditional model."
Criticized in this regard that even within the disability sector, "still continue questioning fundamental principles" as "such as voting, when it not only ensures Convencin but in addition said that when the disabled "requires the support of another person you trust to exercise this right, this must be facilitated and can be applied."