
Rights of Persons with Disabilities
TIMCAD Special Envoy is mandated to:
Develop a regular dialogue with child serving organizations, Organizations, States and other stakeholders for the identification, exchange and promotion of good practices related to the realization of the rights of persons with disabilities and their participation as equal members of society.
Special Envoy Mandate
TIMCAD Special Envoy is mandated to:
Develop a regular dialogue with States and other stakeholders for the identification, exchange and promotion of good practices related to the realization of the rights of persons with disabilities and their participation as equal members of society;
-
Receive and exchange information and communications on violations of the rights of persons with disabilities;
-
Consult with and involve persons with disabilities and their organizations in a participatory manner in the conduct of her work;
-
Make concrete recommendations on how to better promote and protect the rights of persons with disabilities, including on how to promote development that is inclusive of and accessible to persons with disabilities;
-
Provide advisory services and technical assistance in support of efforts for the effective realization of the rights of persons with disabilities;
-
Raise awareness of the rights of persons with disabilities, combat stigma and stereotypes, and inform persons with disabilities of their rights;
-
Closely contribute in the implementation of the UN Disability Inclusion Strategy and other efforts to ensure the UN system is fit for purpose;
-
Closely cooperate with other UN human rights mechanisms and UN entities to advance the rights of persons with disabilities in a coherent manner;
-
Closely cooperate with the Conference of State Parties to the CRPD and the Commission for Social Development and participate in their annual sessions;
-
Integrate a gender perspective throughout the work of the mandate
In the discharge of these functions, the Special Envoy:
-
Acts on information submitted to TIMCAD regarding alleged violations of the human rights of persons with disabilities by sending urgent appeals and communications to concerned States to clarify and/or bring this information to their attention. See Submitting Complaints.
-
Conducts country visits upon the invitation of the Government, to examine the state of protection of the human rights of persons with disabilities in the given country. The Special Envoy submits a report of the visit to the Human Rights Council of TIMCAD, presenting its findings, conclusions and recommendations. See Country Visits.
-
Participates in conferences, seminars and panels on disability-related matters and issues press releases. See Speeches and Presentations.
-
Reports annually to the Human Rights Council of TIMCAD in accessible formats, about the global state of protection of persons with disabilities, TIMCAD main concerns and the good practices observed in relation to the rights of persons with disabilities. The Special Envoy formulates specific recommendations with a view to enhancing the protection of the human rights of persons with disabilities.

In the present report, submitted to the Human Rights Council pursuant to Council resolution 44/10, the Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities provides an overview of the activities undertaken in 2022, and presents a thematic study on reimagining services in the twenty-first century to give effect to the right of persons with disabilities to live independently and be included in the community.
In his study, the Special Rapporteur outlines how traditional service and support models often perpetuate dependency and lack of agency by focusing on impairments and considering persons with disabilities as passive recipients of care. This approach is at odds with the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which is grounded in personhood, autonomy and community inclusion. Against this backdrop, he argues that a wholly new philosophy of service and support is emerging and requires clearer articulation in law and policy. He elaborates on the wide range of policy tools at the disposal of States to do so, while highlighting key policy challenges and pointing to the potential of the business sector to be an actor for change. The Special Rapporteur then provides conclusions and recommendations on the ways in which different actors should advance the transformation of services and support for persons with disabilities.
In this report, the Special Rapporteur reviews disability-specific forms of detention, their underlying causes and adverse consequences, and proposes alternative rights-based models. The report contains recommendations to assist States to develop and implement reforms to end deprivation of liberty based on disability. These include the abolition of laws and regulations allowing for deprivation of liberty on the basis of disability, the implementation of deinstitutionalization policies, and the conduct of awareness-raising campaigns. A wide-spread problem, with grave consequences: The deprivation of liberty on the basis of disability is a human rights violation on a massive global scale. As this report illustrates, it is not a “necessary evil” but a consequence of the failure of States to ensure their obligations towards persons with disabilities. Persons with disabilities are overrepresented in mainstream detention settings, such as prisons and immigration detention centres. While an estimated 15 per cent of the global population are persons with disabilities, they represent, in many countries, as much as half of the prison population. Persons with disabilities also face other forms of deprivation of liberty that are disability specific. The most common include involuntary hospitalization in mental health facilities, placement in institutions, internment in forensic psychiatric wards, forced treatment in “prayer camps” and home confinement. All these forms share common characteristics and justifications that stem from the medical model of disability, which suggests the need for “specialized care” in specialized institutions, rather than in the community. The reality is that people in these situations and settings become extremely vulnerable to sexual and physical violence, sterilization, human trafficking, and many other forms of torture and abuse. Children with disabilities are particularly at risk of institutionalization. Millions are confined to isolation in institutions, segregated from their families and communities. They are routinely locked, forced to take medication and often exposed to torture, abuse and neglect. The detrimental effects of institutionalization on their development, even when placed in small residential homes or “family-like” institutions, have been vastly demonstrated. Without legal avenues to challenge their situation, persons with disabilities deprived of their liberty become invisible and forgotten by the wider community. Indeed, due to the mistaken belief that those practices are well intentioned and beneficial, their situation and well-being is hardly monitored by national preventive mechanisms or human rights institutions. Causes: misperceptions and access to services While people commonly believe that reasons behind the deprivation of liberty are related to a person’s impairment, the underlying causes are largely social. Stigma and misconceptions often lie at the root of the various forms of deprivation. The need for “specialized care”, which can only be provided in institutions is most common, but cultural or religious beliefs can also play an important role. Persons with disabilities may be accused of being possessed by evil spirits or being “impaired” as a result of sin or witchcraft, making families feel ashamed, and prompting social rejection and segregation. In some cases, impairments are believed to be contagious, prompting their confinement away from the rest of the community. In many countries, health and social care professionals encourage parents to place their children with disabilities in institutions under the wrong assumption that they will receive better care than at home. This enables a system of essential services that are removed from the community: Families send their children with disabilities to special boarding schools or vocational centres because there is no other way available to ensure their education. Similarly, many persons with disabilities are placed into residential institutions as a way to access social protection benefits. In their most pernicious forms, misperceptions about persons with intellectual or psychosocial disabilities characterize them as dangerous and prone to violence. This is a worrisome trend, which translates into legislation that criminalises atypical behaviours like yelling or self-injury, as well as public displays of poverty--lack of maintenance of properties, or homelessness. In some cases, situations of non-compliant behaviour by persons with autism, deaf, or with epilepsy have been considered as threatening by enforcement officials, leading to violence and prosecution. Solutions to prevent the deprivation of liberty of persons with disabilities Deprivation of liberty is a product of the accumulated structural discrimination experienced by persons with disabilities, which can be traced to States’ inaction in implementing their fundamental rights. In the absence of legal capacity or access to justice, and without appropriate support or livelihoods, persons with disabilities are sent to institutions and mental health facilities as if there were no other option. Ending the deprivation of liberty on the basis of impairment requires a series of commitments by States and all stakeholders, including: Law reform: repeal all legislation that allows the deprivation of liberty on the basis of actual or perceived impairment, and the criminalization of homelessness or disability; Deinstitutionalization: Such process should consider a moratorium on new admissions and include psychiatric institutions. States must take immediate action to end deprivation of liberty within private and/or faith-based institutions, such as orphanages, small group homes, rehabilitation centres and prayer camps, and end home confinement and shackling; End coercion in mental health: States and organizations should invest in community-based responses, including peer-led services, and support services for persons experiencing crises. Access to justice: persons with disabilities who have experienced arbitrary deprivation of liberty, exploitation, violence or abuses should be able to access adequate redress and reparations, and the restitution of their liberty; Community-based support: education, health care, employment, housing and other community services must be inclusive of and accessible for persons with disabilities. Persons with disabilities should be able to choose where and with whom to live, and not be forced into a particular living arrangement; Ensure participation and adequate resources: persons with disabilities and their organizations must participate in the planning, implementation and monitoring of programmes, services and legislative changes, and be provided with adequate resources for their success. Expert consultation On 7 September 2015, the Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities, Catalina Devandas Aguilar, and the Special Rapporteur on the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, Dainius Puras, convened an Expert meeting on the deprivation of liberty of persons with disabilities on the basis of disability. The purpose of the meeting was to: Provide a platform to exchange views, share experiences and discuss challenges related to the obligation to abolish disability-specific forms of deprivation of liberty, including in the context of forced institutionalization in psychiatric and non-psychiatric settings, their impact on the right to health, and the interconnection with the enjoyment of other human rights such as the rights to legal capacity, to be free from arbitrary and unlawful detention and from torture and other ill-treatment, to live independently and be included in the community, and to social protection; Identify concrete solutions to implement alternatives to disability-specific forms of deprivation of liberty that respect an individual’s human dignity, will and preferences (e.g., legislative, judicial, and administrative measures to release individuals from detention and forced treatment, to immediately stop these practices at a systemic level, and to implement de-institutionalization and community-based services). Participants included 23 international experts, including international judges and lawyers, healthcare professionals, former/current Special Procedures mandate-holders, members of Treaty Body committees, representatives of organizations of persons with disabilities, civil society, and other practitioners, with experience in the areas of deprivation of liberty, mental health and the rights of persons with disabilities. The findings of the meeting contributed to inform the Special Rapporteur's report on the same issue.