Some 60,000 Hungarians living with mental disability are denied the chance to make their own decisions about how they live their lives, activists say. Anaïs Lynn Voski speaks to the director of the Budapest-based Mental Disability Advocacy Centre, an NGO that fights for the human rights of people with disabilities and has been working in Hungary and other Central European countries for more than 10 years.
20 May 2013
Oliver Lewis, executive director of the centre, said their mission essentially “boils down to equality and inclusion”, as many people are placed into large institutions away from their homes, where they do not want to be, and are deprived of their right to make decisions about their lives. “There are about 60,000 people under guardianship…