Service users legal capacity is restricted or deprived completely
'I
ndividuals with mental health or intellectual
disabilities have been discriminated, stigmatised and repressed even in recent
years.
Their mere existence has been seen as a problem and they have sometimes
been hidden away in remote institutions or in the backrooms of family homes.
They have been treated as non-persons whose decisions are meaningless.
Though much of this has changed with the progress of the human rights cause, persons with mental health or intellectual disabilities do still face problems relating to their right to take decisions for themselves, also in important matters. Their legal capacity is restricted or deprived completely, and they are placed under the guardianship of someone else who is entitled to take all decisions on their behalf.
Some
persons with mental health or intellectual disabilities may have objective
problems in representing themselves to authorities, banks, landlords and other
such institutions - as a consequence of their actual or perceived impairments.
They may also be manipulated to make decisions which they would otherwise not
make.
Basic principle of human rights applies to every human being
A basic
principle of human rights is that the agreed norms apply to every human
being, without distinction. However, the international human rights norms have
been denied to persons with disabilities.
It was this failure which prompted
member States of the United Nations to adopt the Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities , which emphasises that people with all types of
disabilities are entitled to the full range of human rights on an equal basis
with others.
The aim is to promote their inclusion and full participation in society. When we deprive some individuals of their right to represent themselves we contradict these standards.
How then should the concrete situations be handled?
The UN Convention addresses this issue in its article 12 which starts by stating that governments shall "recognize that persons with disabilities enjoy legal capacity on an equal basis with others in all aspects of life".
Need for appropriate and effective safeguards to prevent abuse
The Convention recognises the reality that some people because of their impairments or external barriers are unable by themselves to take important decisions. For them the Convention requests governments to provide access to support they may require in exercising their legal capacity.
The nature of this support is a crucial aspect. Supported decision-making is a developing field in some Council of Europe member States, and the practice has been embedded for several years in many Canadian provincial laws. What happens in those jurisdictions is that a network of supporters are recognised - but not imposed on the adult - and these supporters provide information and options for the adult to make a decision.
Need for effective safeguards
The
Convention states that there should be appropriate and effective safeguards
in order to prevent abuse.
Th
e rights, will and preferences of the concerned
person should be respected and there should be no conflict of interest and
undue influence between those supporting the adult, and the adult him- or
herself.
Further, the arrangement for the support should apply for the shortest time possible and be subject to regular review by a competent, independent and impartial authority or judicial body.
These
formulations allow for a range of alternatives to guardianship to be provided
for adults with disabilities.
The starting point for the reforms is full legal
capacity combined with the right of the individual to seek support. The
exercise of this support should always be regulated with safeguards to avoid
that the trust be misused.
This is
different from the actual practice in a majority of countries, including in
Europe, where there has been a tendency to declare almost routinely people with
mental health and intellectual disabilities legally incapable and put them
under legal guardianship.
Action plan to promote full paticipation in society
However,
the UN Convention - as well as the Council of Europe 2006-2015 Action Plan
to promote the rights and full participation of people with disabilities in
society - may have had a positive effect in some countries.
A European Union high-level group on the implementation of the Convention reported recently that it had got assurances about a review process on this issue from the Czech Republic, France, Hungary, Ireland, Latvia, Portugal and Slovakia.1
The report also referred to the fact that these countries and others "had all expressed an interest in sharing information by organising conferences, expert working groups and seminars on the topic, involving civil society and all relevant players, including the judiciary, and discussing legal terms with a view to developing legislation, policy and practice in this area".
Such discussions are necessary in order to make real the shift of laws and policies which were agreed in principle when the UN Convention and the Council of Europe Action Plan were drafted and agreed. Obviously, the case law of the Strasbourg Court will be studied in detail during this process, and more litigation before that Court is needed in order to better integrate the UN Convention's approach into the European jurisprudence.
Case study
In a case
last year (Shtukaturov v. Russia) the Court had to deal with deprivation of
legal capacity; enforced hospitalisation and treatment without consent. Mr
Shtukaturov, an adult who was diagnosed with
schizophrenia, had been declared
of his legal capacity in a decision made without his knowledge at the request
of his mother, who had become his guardian.
He was legally prohibited from
challenging the decision in Russian courts and had subsequently been detained
in a psychiatric hospital.
After reviewing his case, the European Court of Human Rights stated that "the existence of a mental disorder, even a serious one, cannot be the sole reason to justify full incapacitation". The Court stated that domestic legislation must provide for a "tailor-made response". The Court found that the decision-making process depriving him of his legal capacity constituted a disproportionate interference with his private life, and found various violations of the European Convention on Human Rights.2
This judgment must be interpreted to promote an approach in line with the UN Convention. Any restrictions of the rights of the individual must be tailor-made to the individual's needs, be genuinely justified and be the result of rights-based procedures and combined with effective safeguards.
Interestingly, the UN Convention underlines the particular importance of protecting the right of persons with disabilities to own property, control their own financial affairs and to have equal access to bank loans and mortgages.3 This appears to be based on the experience that decisions on incapacitation in this area have been taken against the spirit of human rights.
I would like to add that persons with mental health and intellectual disabilities should have the right to vote in elections and stand for election. Though this is stated clearly in the UN Convention (Article 29), individuals in a number of European countries are excluded. Being deprived or restricted of their legal capacity they have been denied these rights as well. This has further exacerbated their political invisibility.
We should remember that there is a great difference between taking away the right to take decisions about one's life and to provide "access to support". The first views people with disabilities as objects of treatment, charity and fear. The second places the person with disabilities at the centre of decision-making and views them as subjects entitled to the full range of human rights.
This expert opinion was first published on The Council Of Europe's website .