PRESSURE MOUNTS ON ZAMBIA TO RE-DRAFT MENTAL HEALTH BILL
The international community has stood in solidarity with
human rights activists in Zambia who are opposed to the enactment of a new mental health legislation
for failure to comply with human rights standards. The Zambian government seems
to have left out crucial submissions made by stakeholders during the
consultation process and produced a draft which has not been well received even
by representatives of persons with mental illnesses and disabilities.
In a solidarity statement
signed by ten international organisations and experts including Amnesty
International, Southern
Africa Federation of the Disabled (SAFOD), Disability Rights International, International
Commission of Jurists (ICJ), The Southern Africa Litigation Centre (SALC) and Validity
Foundation – Mental Disability Advocacy Centre, serious concerns have arisen on
the text of the Bill.
In recent years, the Special Rapporteur on
the Rights of Persons with Disabilities has criticized Zambia’s
outdated laws applicable to persons with mental disabilities as violating rights
guaranteed under the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
(CRPD) which Zambia ratified in 2010. The Zambian High Court has similarly called for “thorough review” of the law which it found
to be offensive to constitutionally guaranteed rights.
It is in this context and
following years of tireless activism that Zambian mental health care users,
organisations of persons with disabilities (OPDs) and civil society have
welcomed the Zambian government’s intentions to reform the law by tabling the
Mental Health Bill No 1 of 2019.
Disability Rights Watch a leading
advocacy and disability rights think tank was called in first by the Committee
on Health and Social Services that was mandated to work on the Bill by the speaker
of Parliament. In their expert submissions the organisation expressed concern that
The Bill had been substantially changed departing
away from almost all the submissions made by different stakeholders who were
directly involved in the consultation process of the Bill. Many stakeholders,
including persons with disabilities in general, and those with mental
disabilities in particular, with other civil society organisations and medical
practitioners made submissions, in good faith, which took into consideration
provisions of international human rights frameworks and the Constitution of
Zambia.
DRW further recommended that the 2019 Bill should
not proceed in its current form until the concerns of persons with mental disabilities
and wider civil society are fully addressed in the frame of comprehensive,
inclusive and transparent process of engagement like this one.
Whereas aspects of the Bill are welcome, notably
adoption of a definition for discrimination conforming to that given under the
Persons with Disabilities Act 2012, the Bill has fundamental weaknesses which
render it incompatible with human rights guarantees provided in international
human rights frameworks and the Constitution of Zambia.
DRW Director Wamundila Waliuya said the Bill wrongly
refers, in the Preamble, to the Principles for the Protection of Persons with
Mental Illness and the Improvement of Mental Care General Assembly Resolution
46/119 of 17th December 1991 which has been superseded by the UN Convention on
the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
He also said the Bill was replete with
discriminatory and derogatory language which attacked the dignity of persons
with mental disabilities as citizens of Zambia, including the term “mental
disorder”. The use of derogatory language, including this term, was found to be
“highly offensive, derogatory and discriminatory”, having “no place in a modern
society” by the High Court of Zambia and was banned by the court in Mwewa,
Kasote and Katontoka v. the Attorney General and Others [2017/HP/2014].
DRW also contended that In its present form, the
Bill would legalise abusive practices which breach Constitutional protection
and the human rights of persons with mental disabilities including legislating
to enable involuntary detention, forced treatment, seclusion, restraint and
electro-convulsive therapy (ECT) (which if not modernized cases severe pain).
Zambian mental health users
have also expressed serious concern with the content of the Bill. The Bill contains
discriminatory provisions based on an outdated medical model of mental disability
and violates human rights guaranteed by the CRPD and the Protocol to the
African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities in Africa (Africa Disability Protocol). Rather than being drafted
in line with human rights, the Bill is modelled on archaic approaches to mental
health that have since been rejected by human rights bodies and the World
Health Organization.
Zambian human rights
defenders, activists, OPDs and civil society have expressed concern that the
Bill does not reflect the comprehensive submissions of stakeholders who were
involved in consultative processes in the Bill’s development in the years leading
up to its tabling. The National Assembly’s current consultative process on the
Bill has been criticized for the extremely short notice that stakeholders have
been given to engage since the Bill has been made public. Calls have therefore
been made for comprehensive amendment of the Bill to align it with human rights
standards.
“As regional and
international human rights organisations, OPDs, disability activists, academics
and lawyers, we stand in solidarity with the demands of Zambian activists, OPDs
and civil society in calling for the Bill to be amended in full compliance with
the Zambian Constitution, the CRPD, and the Africa Disability Protocol. We
endorse the calls for meaningful consultation and incorporation of the
submissions of mental health users, OPDs and disability activists.
We commend the extraordinary
political will for reform displayed by the Zambian government but join Zambian
activists in stressing the vital necessity for comprehensive amendment of the
Bill. Zambia has the opportunity to be a regional leader in reforming outdated
laws applicable to persons with mental disabilities. We urge the legislature to
enable a process of meaningful engagement that allows for the serious deficits
of the Bill to be addressed to ensure its compliance with the Constitution, the
CRPD, and the Africa Disability Protocol.”
The statement from international
human rights actors concluded.
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