Petition updateMandatory CCTV Cameras for Vulnerable disability children and adults in Places of CareWe must fight for our disability Children whatever age to have their human rights upheld
Anndrea WheatleySydney, Australia
Jan 1, 2020

Thank you for signing my petition - please put the link on your facebook or other platforms you belong to so that we can gather more signatures to present to the government.

http://chng.it/vs4FRXb7        or change.org/disabilitycameras

Even animals who have no voice are protected and those people that hurt them or are cruel to them are prosecuted or fined...yet when it happens to those with disabilities who are also unable to talk or articulate what happened to them it is ignored - by the police and lack of law. The police would not even question the girl worker who worked with my son the day of his assault...this showed a lack of interest in investigation...and a discrimination against humans who matter as much as the rest of us but must be valued as such.

As noted in the Royal Commission recently -those with disabilities often suffer injuries and abuse, and that it also can go unreported depending on the organization.

(Royal commission 2019 Gibbs newspaper article)Disabled Peoples Organisations Australia put together some of the known data and statistics about violence against us. What we know is shocking:"People with intellectual disability are 10 times more likely to experience violence than people without disability,
People with intellectual disability are three times more likely to be victims of assault, sexual assault and robbery compared with people who do not have an intellectual disability
20 per cent of women with a disability report a history of unwanted sex compared with 8.2 per cent of women without disability.
We live in group homes, boarding houses and aged care homes, go to special schools and work in sheltered workshops.But these statistics only tell part of the story. They can't tell the story of what it is like to not be able to choose who you live with, or to not be paid properly for your work. To not be able to access the same services and facilities as everyone else, and to have little choice about what you do every day.Statistics don't tell the story of being ignored or treated as less than human because you are disabled."

My Blog :   (read more on rtrain.org)If James could speak what would he say? Would be say Mum someone hit me I was really frightened they would shouting at me and they hit me...Mum I dont want to go back there...would he get angry and write a rap about the b.....s who hurt him? An angry rap against hatred against unjustness in the world?

Would he start wearing black like my daughters did when their father left? Would he watch violent movies to channel the pain and anger inside him? Would he take alcohol to drown his fears and pain and trauma? Or would he take drugs antidepressants and illegal drugs to take away the bad feelings he could not fight himself? Would he go out partying nights on end or drive a car fast until he crashed it? He hasnt even got the choice to do that.

Does he know I love him? Does he know he is safe with me here? I think yes he does, but he world is not safe out there...we must make it safe.

I said to the police if someone hurts my son they hurt me do you understand? The young policeman said to me why do you put him in respite? Incredulously I realized he didnt know what parents of special needs kids face - tiring relentless work, and a person who needs all kinds of help and demands which must be met not just by but by others and parents need these places of care for their kids and so they can continue to look after them since those with disabilities to this extent cannot look after themselves ever.

I must be James's voice I must protect him dont you understand? He cant speak I told the young police guy. He nodded.

I sat with my son in the lounge watching a church thing on the Tv a few days later, when they were singing I said to him I wish you could talk James I wish you could talk and I started crying...for him...

I am his voice, no one else, he cannot speak for himself he is non verbal and he has a disability and I have so far tried to protect him from everything and everyone...

I was crying for my mother who had died a year or so ago and I thought how upset she would be to know her grandson had been hurt, hit in the head...she knew James couldnt talk she knew the struggles she knew that when I had divorced James's father wiped him because James had a disability and was too much work...how dare he...the world is unjust but we must do justice for our children. In the end we can lie down and curl up in a ball or we can stand and fight.

My son was put in a respite place for the day to be cared for and coming home with something like a king hit to the head made me crazy angy why did they do it...why? Because they could and not only that they could hide it. This should not be. For shame you will not get away with it...

When you hurt someone who cannot defend themselves you will face their vindication one day and maybe it will happen to you at the hands of someone less harmless, less helpless.

 To remain unaccountable for the harm done to a person who cannot defend themself is crime and we must not allow our disability children to have no protections.

 I am sick of seeking mothers crying on the Royal Commission testimonies lately investigating Disabilities...mothers staying their children had been abused at respite group homes and nothing was done about it, one had been abused at every group home she stayed at. Her mother was brokenhearted. I dont want anymore brokenhearted mothers. This world may be a cold heartless placed but no way will I let this continue we must have laws to protect children with disabilites and over 18 years old since the chid protection act finishes at 18 years old. There must be strong laws to protect our young. It was not so long ago the young had no protections and were forced to work in factories as young as five years old in the last century, parents were even allowed to put children to death for being naughtly. Such is the state of the human race, we must now not let wrong and harm happen to those who cannot speak for themselves. Literally, the non verbal child with disability.

We must be their voice.

Anndrea Wheatley   (Mother and resilience psychologist)

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