Activists Note Serious Failings by Iranian Organization Tasked With Supporting People With Disabilities
JULY
21, 2018
As Iran’s State
Welfare Organization (SWO) marked its 38th birthday, several
people with disabilitiesbased in the country told the Center for Human Rights in Iran
(CHRI) that the organization must undergo fundamental reform in order to carry
out its mission.
Pouya, a disability rights activist who requested anonymity for
security reasons, said: “The welfare organization does not have a sufficient
budget or the human resources to handle a mountain of responsibilities.
Destitute women, child laborers and street workers, drug addicts, victims of
violence among women and children, the elderly and persons with disabilities
have all been entrusted to the welfare organization even though each of these
groups requires specialized expertise and equipment.”
The names of the people who provided testimony to CHRI for this report
have been changed due to the sensitivities in Iran around speaking to foreign
media outlets.
“Putting people with disabilities in the same basket as victims of
social problems or trying to prevent disabilities at the same time as stopping
girls from running away from home, or confronting addiction or divorce reflects
the belief in a medical perspective on disabilities that is not compatible with
the convention and must be changed,” he added.
Iran ratified the UN’s Convention
on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) in 2009 but its domestic laws and practices are still
not compliant with the treaty’s recommended standards.
People with disabilities in Iran are denied adequate access to
transportation, public spaces, facilities, and buildings, as well as effective
access to governmental services, education and legal protections in the justice
system. They also face severe employment discrimination.
In his message on the occasion of Iran’s “Welfare Week” (July 12-19, 2018),
the deputy director of the SWO, Anoushirvan Mohseni Bandpey, described the organization
as the most important caregiver in the country.
In order to live an independent and dignified life within society,
persons with disabilities should have access to individualized means and
services including, for example, assistive equipment and technologies,
comprehensive habilitation and rehabilitation services, personal assistance
services, as well as adequate disability pensions, if needed. However, research
by CHRI and Human Rights Watch has uncovered serious
shortcomings on the part of the SWO in providing
these services.
The report documents abusive treatment towards persons with
disabilities in Iran and their families, lack of sufficient and useful
information regarding available services, problems with accessing
rehabilitation services and support equipment, and an inadequate disability
pension system.
Among all the problems, the inappropriate and sometimes insulting
behavior of social workers towards people with disabilities is one of the most
important challenges facing the organization.
For example, when “Narges” went to an SWO office in Tehran to
order a new hearing aid for her hearing-impaired daughter, she was mistreated
by a social worker.
“The social worker became angry and said it was not his problem
that my daughter could not hear and said that I have to wait as long
as necessary,” Narges told CHRI.
In another incident, 24-year-old “Arash,” who cannot use a manual
wheelchair because of muscle weakness, asked for an electric wheelchair but the
social worker in charge responded that one should not expect the government to
provide “luxury items.”
“I felt very disappointed and humiliated,” he said. “I think these
people have no understanding of disability and what it really means.”
The lack of proper standards for hiring social workers, inadequate
training, and lack of supervision are some reasons why the SWO is failing
Iranian people with disabilities.
“Hamed” is a 25-year-old blind man. Here’s how he described his
experience with the SWO: “The problem is that individuals who work as social
workers are mostly unsuitable for this profession. Many of them do not have
university education or they have studied unrelated subjects such as history or
literature. Moreover, people seeking jobs as social workers are not evaluated
for their psychological condition or personality.”
A shortage of social workers at the SWO and piling cases assigned
to overextended staff has resulted in a severe drop in the quality of services
the SWO provides to people with disabilities.
In many areas in Iran, there are insufficient numbers of SWO
social workers. Although national standards dictate that each social worker
should have no more than 150 cases, in practice many social workers have much
heavier caseloads.
For example, in the southern part of Kerman province, each social
worker has around 1,500 cases. In Ghazvin province, there are fewer than 20
social workers for approximately 20,000 persons with disabilities.
The low number of social workers has a direct impact on the
quality of social work service.
The State Welfare Organization of Iran was established on July 15, 1980, with the merger of 15 different agencies
and organizations to provide solutions for social ailments, offer support
and rehabilitation services to people with disabilities, and meet the basic
needs of low-income individuals.
At the time, the decision to combine so many agencies with varied
missions came under criticism.
Opponents of the merger pointed out that the
quality of service to persons with disabilities would suffer due to stretched
and inadequate resources.
When Iran joined the Convention on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities in 2009, the SWO was put in charge of its implementation
along with the Martyrs and Veterans Affairs Foundation, an organization
operating under the supreme leader.
This placed more responsibilities on the SWO’s already sagging
shoulders and created a need for an upgrade to its services for people with
disabilities that has gone unmet.
According to Pouya, “The welfare organization does not have the necessary
administrative structure or financial and human resources to carry out its
international obligations. For that reason, the UN has criticized Iran’s treatment of people with disabilities in almost every
aspect.”
Kayvan Davatgaran, the director of the SWO’s rehabilitation center
for people with disabilities, told the state-run Iranian Republic News Agency in November 2016,
“The welfare organization’s volume of work is more than four ministries
combined and its budget, human resources, and structure are not consistent with
expectations.”
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