No EU money for segregation! Inclusion Europe calls out abuse in institutions
Click here for the easy-to-read version
1.2 million people with disabilities are detained in institutions in Europe, and financing from EU Structural and Investment Funds is still used to run them. Inclusion Europe yesterday participated at a seminar which gave evidence on the abuse many persons with disabilities, including people with intellectual disabilities, suffer in institutions. The conclusion was clear: No EU money for segregation!
The seminar, organised by the Mental Disability Advocacy Centre (MDAC) presented a report on the appalling conditions in the “Topház Special Home”, a Hungarian institution for children and adults with disabilities, which has received financing from EU Structural and Investment Funds. The institution was visited by a team of experts in April, and their findings indicate serious abuse and neglect of the residents living there, with incidences of torture or ill-treatment. This reflects the situation in many “care” homes in EU member states.
During the event, Eva Baranyi, a Hungarian woman who spent her childhood in an institution, related her experiences of a lack of food, no privacy, detention and regular physical, emotional and sexual abuse.
MDAC demands that the European Commission investigate where the money allocated to the “Topház Special Home” has gone, how the funds have been used and to ensure they comply with EU law, including meeting core human rights standards. Furthermore, the European Commission must now assess how widespread this problem is across Europe.
Inclusion Europe supports these demands and calls upon the European Commission to ensure that no EU money is used to further prolong institutionalisation.
Abuse in institutions is not limited to Hungary, but happens in many EU countries. Therefore, victims of abuse in institutions need to be recognised as such and offered appropriate support. Governments should be obliged to regularly report on their progress regarding deinstitutionalisation and the measures they have taken to protect persons with disabilities from abuse and develop independent living.
Inclusion Europe Executive Director Milan Šveřepa said at the press conference held after the seminar:
EU funding must not directly or indirectly support segregation in institutions, which embody the invisibility in society of many of its most vulnerable individuals.
This segregation and lack of recognition is also reflected by the fact that people with intellectual disabilities in many countries still do not have legal capacity or the right to vote and are denied to take basic decisions about their own live. Steps must be taken both by national governments and on the EU level to address this deplorable state of affairs and make sure that persons with intellectual disabilities can enjoy their full human rights.
None of the issues raised in MDAC’s report are new; the evidence for a heightened risk of abuse in institutions is overwhelming. The responsible authorities now must act, institutions must be closed and people with intellectual and other disabilities and their families must receive the support they deserve.
Inclusion Europe has recently launched a study on how women with intellectual disabilities cope with institutionalised violence: “Life after Violence”.
Easy-to-read version
No EU money for separate institutions!
Institutions are places
where people with intellectual disabilities live
with other people with intellectual disabilities.
They live apart from other people.
This is what we call “separate”.
Sometimes this happens against their will.
Inclusion Europe has said that it is not good
when people live in separate institutions.
But many people still live in separate institutions.
They often experience violence.
Inclusion Europe participated in a seminar.
The seminar was organised by an organisation called
the Mental Disability Advocacy centre.
At the seminar there was a woman called Eva Baranyi.
She is from Hungary.
She spent most of her childhood in institutions.
She said that she experienced a lot of violence there.
People from the Mental Disability Advocacy centre
went to a separate institution in Hungary.
And they found out that people experienced violence there.
They said that this institution in Hungary
receives money from the European Union.
They said that we must find out
where this money has gone.
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[…] Europe recently has called out abuse in instutions, which is still happening in Europe, and has joined demands to stop using EU money for […]
[…] Tania Tsiora from the European Commission’s DG Employment (Disability and Inclusion Unit) had mentioned it at the panel discussion: Funding from the European Commission should have an impact on inclusion instead of institutionalisation (read also our related article). […]