Home TA Online Beyond charity: What people with disabilities in Malaysia urgently need

Beyond charity: What people with disabilities in Malaysia urgently need

Three decades on, Malaysia's disability community is still waiting for basic rights –from constitutional protection to accessible buildings and real employment opportunities

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Amar-Singh HSS

There have been a number of songs on the theme “All I want for Christmas”.

The one that has stuck in my memory is a child singing “All I want for Christmas is my two front teeth”. A simple but vital request.

As I reflect on International Day of Persons with Disabilities, celebrated on 3 December, I ask myself: “What does the disability community, their care partners and civil society want from the government and society?”

Remember that International Day of Persons with Disabilities is less about celebration and more about demanding urgent, tangible, long overdue action and accountability from the authorities.

These actions and changes are consolidated under the principle of moving from tokenistic gestures (a charity model) to the full realisation of rights (a rights-based model), in line with the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), which Malaysia ratified in 2010.

The basic, key essentials (simple but vital requests) we are hoping for include:

Legal reform and enforcement: We need to amend Article 8(2) of the Federal Constitution to explicitly include ‘disability’, thereby providing legal protection for people with disabilities against discrimination.

We need to urgently amend and pass the Persons with Disabilities Act 2008 with full alignment with the CRPD. This must include strong, enforceable penalty clauses against individuals, businesses and government bodies that violate the rights of people with disabilities.

The government needs to sign and ratify the Optional Protocol to the CRPD, which would allow individuals to submit complaints of human rights violations directly to the UN committee on the rights of people with disabilities, holding the government internationally accountable.

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Inclusive education and desegregation: We must stop the current trend of funding and building more segregated (special-needs-only) or integrated education facilities (as seen in the past few budgets) and move to true inclusion in mainstream settings, in line with the CRPD.

We need to mandate and fund comprehensive training for all teachers (not just special education teachers) in universal design for learning, curriculum modification and individualised support. These changes will benefit all children, not just those who are disabled. 

Employment and economic empowerment: We need a revamp of recruitment, training, placement and support systems, in the public and private sectors, to ensure people with disabilities are not discriminated against in hiring or promotion.

Over three decades of failure by the government – to achieve even a tiny 1% quota for the employment of people with disabilities in the public sector – must end.

We need to invest significantly in disability-inclusive training and building sustainable employment support programmes to support the inclusion and retention of people with disabilities in both public and private sector jobs. The current job coach training programmes require a serious revamp to make them functional.

Accessibility (physical, digital and transport): We need legally mandated access for people with disabilities to all buildings and transport facilities. All the structural obstacles in the built environment that restrict mobility and access must be systematically removed.

All new buildings must be accessible by design and not as an afterthought. Disabled-friendly restrooms are critical. These improvements will benefit all of society, especially older people.

It is critical that the government be the one advocating for and driving this instead of relying solely on people with disabilities and civil society.

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It is also embarrassing that no single government website is fully accessible to people with disabilities and has not met web content accessibility guidelines (WCAG 2.1). It is critical that all government websites, apps and services are built using universal design principles and meet international WCAG standards to prevent digital and information exclusion.

We call on the government to stop treating disability as a welfare or charity issue and start treating it as a human rights, legislative and enforcement priority.

All MPs should advocate alongside people with disabilities in their constituencies and ensure these basic needs and rights are advocated for and realised in Parliament.

With at least 40% of the population being people with disabilities or their care partners, and with an ageing society, it is time that the government works concertedly to meet the basic needs of people with disabilities, and not as an afterthought.

Dato’ Dr Amar-Singh HSS is a consultant paediatrician and child-disability activist.

The views expressed in Aliran's media statements and the NGO statements we have endorsed reflect Aliran's official stand. Views and opinions expressed in other pieces published here do not necessarily reflect Aliran's official position.

AGENDA RAKYAT - Lima perkara utama
  1. Tegakkan maruah serta kualiti kehidupan rakyat
  2. Galakkan pembangunan saksama, lestari serta tangani krisis alam sekitar
  3. Raikan kerencaman dan keterangkuman
  4. Selamatkan demokrasi dan angkatkan keluhuran undang-undang
  5. Lawan rasuah dan kronisme
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