This was forwarded to me via the Florida
Association of the Deaf
Alysse
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Legal Seat – Helsinki, Finland
WORLD FEDERATION OF THE
DEAF
An International
Non-Governmental Organisation in official liaison with ECOSOC, UNESCO,
ILO, WHO and the Council of
Europe, established in Rome in 1951
PO Box 65, FIN-00401 Helsinki,
FINLAND
FAX: +358 9
5803 572
www.wfdeaf.org
CONGRESS
RESOLUTION
XVI WORLD CONGRESS OF THE WORLD FEDERATION OF THE
DEAF
18-24 July
2011, Durban,
South
Africa
The World Federation of the Deaf (WFD), its
Members and the 2,100 participants from 125 countries at the XVI World Congress of the World
Federation of the Deaf in Durban, South Africa, 18-24 July
2011.
Recalling the statement by the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights in the Opening Ceremony of the World Congress, “participation is a key
human rights principle. However, without adequate access to sign language
interpretation, bilingual education and recognition of sign language, there are
important barriers” to the full enjoyment by deaf people of their human rights,
Reaffirming the importance of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities and the Optional Protocol thereto,
specifically:
Article 3: respect for
difference and acceptance of deaf persons as part of human diversity and
humanity,
Article 9: enabling persons
with disabilities to participate fully in all aspects of life including access
to information and communications including provision of professional sign
language interpreters,
Article 21: recognising and
promoting the use of sign languages,
Article 24: ensuring that
the education of deaf children is delivered in the most appropriate languages
for the individual and in environment which maximises academic and social
development and employing teachers who are qualified in sign
language,
Article 25: ensuring deaf
persons have the right to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of
health without discrimination,
Article 30: recognising the
right of deaf persons to take part on an equal basis with others in cultural
life including the recognition and support of sign languages and deaf
culture,
Recalling also that deaf women and girls are often subject to multiple
discrimination and emphasizing the need to incorporate a gender perspective in
all efforts to promote the full enjoyment of human rights and fundamental
freedoms by persons with disabilities,
- Reaffirms the need to
promote quality deaf education and calls upon governments to take active
measures:
- to promote policies that permit deaf
people of all ages to develop as multilingual and multicultural persons and
to promote their social and emotional
development;
- to protect the right of deaf people to
be educated in sign language;
- to emphasize the need for research-based
best practise models in deaf
education;
- to ensure appropriate support in
inclusive settings, including professional sign language
interpreters;
- to employ in the schools teachers who
are qualified and fluent in sign language including deaf teachers, to
promote the cultural and linguistic identity of the
deaf;
- Urges the
promotion of sign language and deaf
studies
- to encourage and promote the recognition
of sign language as a fundamental human right for all deaf people including
infants and children;
- to promote research into sign languages
and deaf cultures;
- to promote the many unique positive
contributions of deaf people that can be offered as benefits to the wider
society;
- Emphasizes the need
for constant attention to the needs of deaf communities in developing
countries, particularly in Africa, and urges
members and governments:
- to empower deaf associations in
developing countries with particular attention to the strengthening of
organisational capacity;
- to emphasize the active role of deaf
associations in capacity-building and leadership programmes for developing
countries;
- to work and cooperate with the
Secretariat of the African Decade of Persons with Disabilities (SADPD) in
order to ensure the participation and inclusion of deaf people in disability
programming processes in Africa.
- Reaffirms that deaf
people have full equality and enjoyment of their human
rights
- to ensure that a positive image of deaf
people as a natural part of human diversity be promoted
worldwide;
- to develop information and training for
national deaf associations on the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons
with Disabilities (CRPD), the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), and the Convention on the Rights of
the Child (CRC) to ensure that deaf women and girls are empowered in all
areas of their lives;
- to train deaf communities around the
world in their rights under the
CRPD;
- to ensure that governments adopt the
CRPD and its Optional Protocol to enable deaf people to enforce their rights
under the CRPD;
- to ensure that information on sign
language development for children with cochlear implants be provided to
parents, and that WFD create a position paper on cochlear
implants;
- to promote early identification and
family-centred early intervention including sign language and exposure to
deaf culture to ensure optimal access to social and academic
success;
- to promote research in conjunction with
WFD into improving access to health care for deaf people around the
world;
- Calls on deaf
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) persons to actively promote
their right to freedom of association and to protection as any other person
and to include deaf LGBT in WFD programmes of empowerment, capacity-building
and self-pride;
- Urges the
strengthening of the field of sign language interpreting through professional
interpreter training programmes and interpreter mentors, and to promote
research on the effect of professional sign language interpreters in inclusive
education and the consequences on the quality of life of deaf
students;
- Strongly urges the
promotion and development of access to mental health services for deaf
children, youth, adults and the elderly, and to initiate and encourage
research into mental health models for deaf
populations;
- Affirms the
importance of the recognition of children of deaf adults (CODAs) as
multilingual persons with a significant contribution to their families, their
schools and local communities, and to promote national CODA
organisations;
- Encourages the
promotion of sign language and deaf culture training to parents of deaf
children;
- Urges the
availability of appropriate services to deaf senior
citizens;
- Encourages
full use of the latest technological advances to enhance access and
communication for all deaf
people;
- Reaffirms the
importance of appropriate services for deafblind people to ensure their full
participation in society;
- Strongly encourages its
members to form strong ties with their national deaf youth movement and to
support youth activities in their respective
countries.