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UPDATED: September-5-2008  
The Disabled Protected by Law
By WEI BIAN

In China today, more and more Chinese people, including the disabled, are learning how to protect themselves according to law.

In early 1995, Shen Chao, first grade primary school pupil in the Shunshui Village, Hubei Province, lost his arms due to a high-tension power accident.

Shen Chao's father sought help from many sources, including the county-based power supply bureau, the village committee and the school, but he was frustrated by their merciless attitudes. Everyone refused to take the responsibility for the accident, but instead, shifted it onto others. After nearly three years of seeking medical advice and dealing with seemingly endless disputes over the accident, Shen's father was heavily in debt.

Then, Shen's father went to the Rights Protection Center for the Weak in Society for help.

The center's officials worked out a plan to carry out an investigation into the case. They immediately set out on the difficult journey to Shen's home in order to obtain evidence.

Four court sessions of hearings were held. Confronted by conclusive evidence, the people and units involved in the accident must come up with 130,000 yuan to compensate for the economic losses of the family.

The center, an affiliate of Wuhan University founded in May 1992, is a non-governmental legal aid institution designated to provide top-quality legal services by the most competent legal staff for the people most in need. Set up under the center are six departments aiming to protect the rights and interests of the disabled, women, minors and the elderly. The center has recruited professional and talented young people with strong legal knowledge and a sense of social responsibility to beef up its strength in handling legal affairs. The hand-picked staff are all young lecturers, postgraduates or senior college students from the Legal Institute of Wuhan University.

"It is our bound duty to selflessly aid the disabled, to maintain their legal rights and interests on a par with the social justice and the dignity of the law," said Xu Kangding, chief of the Rights and Interests Department of the Disabled, adding that the staff never withdraws from advancing, no matter how heavy a task and how big the resistance to handling a case is.

For five years, the center has handled nearly 50 cases related to the legal rights and interests of the disabled, with a success rate of 80 percent.

Moreover, the center's officials and young volunteers spare no efforts to render free service to the disabled. Because it is difficult for the disabled to leave their homes, officials of the center sent staff to the homes of the disabled to listen to their opinions and learn about their needs, and to explain laws and related policies. In addition, the center provided special and meticulous services, including the arrangement of board and lodging, to the outsiders who were unable to manage their daily lives.

In addition to offering legal services, the center has also provided emotional support for people who have suffered misfortunes, with the ultimate aim of helping them regain their self-confidence. For example, a Hunan native girl, 13, lost her legs in a traffic accident. Afterwards, she poured out her mental agony to the center staff in a letter. Soon, letters were exchanged between the center and the girl in an effort to reduce her worry and help her pluck up her courage.

Recently, the center's Rights and Interests Department of the Disabled jointly set up the Wuhan Legal Service Center for the Disabled with the Wuhan City Federation of the Disabled.

"We try our best to help the masses become aware of the law and arouse the whole society to show concern for the disabled so we can protect the legal rights and interests of the disabled, instead of limiting our efforts to lawsuits," Xu added.

Therefore, the center's officials often provide free consultations centered on knowledge of the law. The center also co-sponsors many hotline live programs with the provincial and municipal broadcasting and TV stations. In addition, they visit primary and middle schools to give lectures about legal knowledge.

During summer vacation, the center carries out a social survey on special issues in order to gauge the implementation of the Law on Protection of the Disabled and to prepare for training the disabled on the law.

Recently, the center published the legal works, Theory on the Protection of the Rights and Interests of Handicapped Persons in Society, and An Introduction to the Protection of the Disabled.

(Beijing Review p.24 No. 12, 1998)


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