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H. CON. RES. 169 - CALL FOR A UN DISABILITY CONVENTION
Introduced May 8, 2003 into the House by Rep. Tom Lantos
(D-CA).
Cosponsors.
This resolution asks that the UN General Assembly adopt a
Convention dealing with the human rights and dignities of people with
disabilities.
A concurrent resolution expressing the sense of Congress that
the United States Government should support the human rights and dignity of all
persons with disabilities by pledging support for the drafting and working
toward the adoption of a thematic convention on the human rights and dignity of
persons with disabilities by the United Nations General Assembly to augment the
existing United Nations human rights system, and for other purposes.
108th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. Con. Res. 169
Expressing the sense of Congress that the United States
Government should support the human rights and dignity of all persons with
disabilities by pledging support for the drafting and working toward the
adoption of a thematic convention on the human rights and dignity of persons
with disabilities by the United Nations General Assembly to augment the existing
United Nations human rights system, and for other purposes.
In The House of Representatives
May 8, 2003
Mr. LANTOS (for himself, Mr. HYDE, Mr. LANGEVIN, and Mr.
RAMSTAD) submitted the following concurrent resolution; which was referred to
the Committee on International Relations.
Concurrent Resolution
Expressing the sense of Congress that the United States
Government should support the human rights and dignity of all persons with
disabilities by pledging support for the drafting and working toward the
adoption of a thematic convention on the human rights and dignity of persons
with disabilities by the United Nations General Assembly to augment the existing
United Nations human rights system, and for other purposes.
Whereas all people are endowed with an inestimable dignity, which is based on
autonomy and self-determination, and which requires that every person be placed
at the center of all decisions affecting such person, and the inherent equality
of all people and the ethical requirement of every society to honor and sustain
the freedom of any individual with appropriate communal support;
Whereas more than 600,000,000 people have a disability;
Whereas more than two-thirds of all persons with disabilities live in developing
countries, and only 2 percent of children with disabilities in the developing
world receive any education or rehabilitation;
Whereas during the last 2 decades, a substantial shift has occurred globally in
governmental and nongovernmental institutions from an approach of charity toward
persons with disabilities to the recognition of the inherent universal human
rights of persons with disabilities;
Whereas the United Nations has authoritatively endorsed and helped to advance
progress toward realizing the human rights of persons with disabilities, as
exemplified by the United Nations Standard Rules on the Equalization of
Opportunities for Persons with Disabilities (adopted by the United Nations
General Assembly in Resolution 48/96 of December 20, 1993), which are monitored
by a United Nations Special Rapporteur;
Whereas because of the slow and uneven progress of ensuring that persons with
disabilities enjoy their universal human rights in law and in practice, every
society and the international community remain challenged to identify and
implement the processes which best protect the dignity of persons with
disabilities and which fully implement their inherent human rights;
Whereas greater and more rapid progress must be achieved toward overcoming the
relative invisibility of persons with disabilities in many societies, national
laws, and existing international human rights instruments; and
Whereas, accordingly, the United Nations General Assembly in November 2001,
adopted an historic resolution to establish an ad hoc committee open to all
United Nations member nations to consider proposals for a comprehensive and
integral treaty to protect and promote the rights and dignity of persons with
disabilities: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate
concurring), That it is the sense of Congress that--
(1) the United States should play a leading role in the
drafting of a thematic United Nations convention that affirms the human rights
and dignity of persons with disabilities, and that--
(A) is consistent with the spirit of the American with
Disabilities Act of 1990, the United States Constitution, and other rights
enjoyed by United States citizens with disabilities;
(B) promotes inclusion, independence, political
enfranchisement, and economic self-sufficiency of persons with disabilities as
foundational requirements for any free and just society; and
(C) provides protections that are at least as strong as the
rights that are now recognized under international human rights law for other
vulnerable populations; and
(2) the President should instruct the Secretary of State to
send to the United Nations Ad Hoc Committee meetings a United States delegation
that includes individuals with disabilities who are recognized leaders in the
United States disability rights movement.
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