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Desperate measures

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Lady Bracknell's Editor | 18:36 UK time, Wednesday, 1 August 2007

I’d be the first to agree that disabled people in the UK, despite what the DWP might claim, really »å´Ç²Ô’t have equality of access to employment. Anyone who says different is either very lucky; not disabled; or a government spokesperson with an agenda. Frankly, even if you have a diversity-aware employer, and full reasonable adjustment, your chances of advancement within your chosen career are pitifully low compared to those of your non-disabled colleagues.

But I’m not complaining. Not today. And I »å´Ç²Ô’t think you will be, either. Not after reading .

Yesterday, twelve disabled men in Varanasi, India, publicly drank pesticide in a desperate protest against the city administration which had taken over their shops. Without those shops, the men had no way of making a living. This morning, five are dead and the remaining seven are in critical condition.

This is what Tribhuvan, one of the protesters said to a journalist:

'' The administration said they would listen to our demands within 24 hours. But even after two days nothing was done. We had said give us space so we can earn a living. But the municipal officer said even if you poison yourself we will not listen and we will demolish your shops. So to give them a little happiness we consumed poison''.

Tribhuvan died in hospital a few hours later.

Whatever the ins and outs behind this story – and it only appeared online an hour ago, so there hasn’t been much opportunity for a rebuttal as yet – disabled people have died because their way of earning a living was taken away from them.

Ok, so there are news items from around the world on an almost daily basis which report the discriminatory treatment of disabled people. If you wept every time you read one, you’d risk drowning in your own tears. But this is the worst one I’ve seen for a while. And, distressing though it is, I think it merits the widest possible coverage.


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Comments

Thanks for bringing attention to this sad situation.

This blog doesn't seem to have pingback capability, but FYI, I have now made a blog post about this incident as well, with a link both to the article in question and to your blog post here:

This is at my brand-new blog, "We Can Do," which will be focusing on people with disabilities in developing countries and issues related to poverty, jobs, education, human rights, health, and other economic and human development themes.

  • 2.
  • At 10:18 AM on 02 Aug 2007, Bobby wrote:

This is horrifying. Utterly horrifying.

Disgusting I was a disabled puppeteer for many years.The DSS allowed me to make £30 a week,while i drew pension.

The vendors were incited by the local media, which has opted for sensationalizing non events as a means of differentiating themselves from the many similar sounding TV channels. They encouraged these people to eat some tablets assuring them they will be unconscious for some time. They were treading a risky path, and they paid for it in good measure. If you are stupid enough to consume poison on the assurances of journalists, you would be doing the world a favor by removing yourself from the gene pool.

The guys who died were physically challenged. Not mentally. They could think, and opted for this knowing the risks. They paid the price. Whats wrong in that?

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