The committee, which reviews states' compliance with the 2006
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, published a
17-page report with recommendations about how Britain could do
better.
"The UK is at the moment going backwards in accordance to the
information that we have received," committee member Stig Langvad
told a news conference in Geneva.
Britain said it was disappointed by the report. It said it did not
reflect the evidence it had provided to the committee, nor did it
recognize progress that had been made.
The U.N. committee's chairwoman Theresia Degener has described the
situation in Britain as a "human catastrophe".
"The austerity measures that they have taken – they are affecting
half a million people, each disabled person is losing between 2,000
and 3,000 pounds per year, people are pushed into work situations
without being recognized as vulnerable, and the evidence that we had
in front of us was just overwhelming," she said.
The most acute concern was the limitations on independent living.
"Persons with disabilities are in our view not able to choose where
to live, with whom to live, and how to live," Langvad said.
Britain was also not fulfilling its commitment to allow inclusive
education, and there was a high incidence of bullying at schools. A
growing number of disabled people were living in poverty.
Budgets for local authorities had not only been slashed, but they
were no longer ear-marked for disabled people, another committee
member, Damjan Tatic, said.
Langvad said people with disabilities should be involved in
preparations for Britain's Brexit talks with the European Union, to
avoid losing protections that historically came from the EU.
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"Persons with disabilities are afraid of the future since they do
not know what is happening and since they do not feel that they are
involved in the discussions on how to secure the rights of people
with disabilities afterwards," he said.
Britain's government said it was a recognized world leader in
disability rights, and almost 600,000 disabled people had moved into
work in the last four years.
"We spend over 50 billion pounds a year to support disabled people
and those with health conditions – more than ever before, and the
second highest in the G7," a government spokesperson said.
Debbie Abrahams, the opposition Labour party's spokeswoman for Work
and Pensions, said the "damning" report was a vindication of
Labour's criticism of the government's policies.
“This confirms what Labour has been saying all along, that the lack
of progress on all convention articles, including cruel changes to
social security and the punitive sanctions regime, are causing real
misery for sick and disabled people."
A Labour government would incorporate the convention fully into
British law, she said in a statement.
(Reporting by Tom Miles, editing by Pritha Sarkar and Richard
Balmforth)
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