Madam President,
On the occasion of the adoption of the Convention on the
Rights of Persons with Disabilities, my delegation would like to convey its
appreciation to Ambassadors L. Gallegos and D. McKay for their dedicated
leadership over these long negotiations.
Protecting the rights, dignity and worth of persons with disabilities remains
a major concern for the Holy See. The Holy See has consistently called for
disabled individuals to be completely and compassionately integrated into
society, convinced that they possess full and inalienable human rights.
Therefore, from the very beginning, my delegation has been a constructive and
active partner in these negotiations.
While there are many helpful articles in the Convention, including those that
address education and the very important role of the home and the family, surely
the living heart of this document lies in its reaffirmation of the right to
life. For far too long, and by far too many, the lives of people with
disabilities have been undervalued or thought to be of a diminished dignity and
worth. My delegation worked assiduously to make the text a basis upon which to
reverse that assumption and to ensure the full enjoyment of all human rights by
people with disabilities. This is why I would like now to put on record the Holy
See’s position on certain provisions of the Convention.
With regard to article 18, concerning liberty of movement and nationality,
and article 23 on respect for home and the family, the Holy See interprets these
in a way which safeguards the primary and inalienable rights of parents.
Further, my delegation interprets all the terms and phrases regarding family
planning services, regulation of fertility and marriage in article 23, as well
as the word "gender", as it did in its reservations and statements of
interpretation at the Cairo and Beijing International Conferences.
Finally, and most importantly, regarding article 25 on health, and
specifically the reference to sexual and reproductive health, the Holy See
understands access to reproductive health as being a holistic concept that does
not consider abortion or access to abortion as a dimension of those terms.
Moreover, we agree with the broad consensus that has been voiced in this chamber
and the travaux préparatoires that this article does not create any new
international rights and is merely intended to ensure that a person’s disability
is not used as a basis for denying a health service.
However, even with this understanding, we opposed the inclusion of such a
phrase in this article, because in some countries reproductive health services
include abortion, thus denying the inherent right to life of every human being,
affirmed by article 10 of the Convention. It is surely tragic that, wherever
fetal defect is a precondition for offering or employing abortion, the same
Convention created to protect persons with disabilities from all discrimination
in the exercise of their rights, may be used to deny the very basic right to
life of disabled unborn persons.
For this reason, and despite the many helpful articles this Convention
contains, the Holy See is unable to sign it.
In conclusion, my delegation considers that the positive potential of this
Convention will only be realized when national legal provisions and
implementation by all parties fully comply with article 10 on the right to life
for disabled persons.
I ask that this statement be included in the report of this meeting.
Thank you, Madam President.