#25 - JRL 2008 - Special Edition - JRL Home
Moscow Times
April 22, 2008
Moscow's Disabled Stuck in a Separate World
By Svetlana Osadchuk / Staff Writer
Every morning, Vadim Voyevodin performed the same ritual: Bending over almost
parallel to the ground, he lifted the baby onto his back, slung a towel around
his son and knotted the edges around his chest. The little boy remained pressed
close to his father's body throughout the day as he cleaned the house or cooked.
"I always dreamed of having a child, but I never imagined that this dream
would come true at a time when I was single and handicapped," says Voyevodin,
59, who lives in a one-room apartment in northern Moscow with his son, now 16,
who is also named Vadim.
Voyevodin has not left the apartment in more than 10 years. Many disabled
Muscovites, especially those with spinal problems, are effectively locked within
the four walls of their homes -- doorways and elevators are rarely big enough
for wheelchairs, and the Moscow metro and bus systems are not designed for
people with disabilities.
Voyevodin used to have a wheelchair, but it was broken several years ago. Now
he moves around his apartment in an ordinary office chair equipped with wheels.
"There are too many bureaucratic procedures to endure to get a new one for
free. I have no courage to do it," he said.
Under new rules introduced in 2006, all disabled people applying for federal
benefits must have their disabilities verified by the state. Even amputees,
paraplegics and those with genetic disorders must go through a lengthy process
to confirm their disability and define the extent of it. They must obtain
documentation from a variety of doctors as well as from their local department
of social services, department of residential services, bureau of medical and
social analysis and social security office. And naturally, visiting all these
agencies requires standing in long lines.
The process takes two to four months, and while the application is in
process, the applicant has no right to any allowances or other privileges.
Receiving the document that certifies the disability is only a temporary
victory, however. The certification is only valid for a year, and then the
process starts all over again.
"They must think that my leg will grow next year while I secretly enjoy the
privilege of moving around in a free wheelchair," said Mikhail Ruchnov, 42, who
has been certified as belonging to the category of people with the most severe
disabilities.
In his annual report on the disabled in Russia, human rights ombudsman
Vladimir Lukin noted that the number of complaints about bureaucracy had
increased in recent years. The report also points out that those who are
certified as disabled often qualify for equipment that they are unable to use.
Some, but not all, Moscow apartment buildings have ramps designed for
strollers, but these ramps are useless for wheelchairs. Additionally, many
buildings have steps leading from the entrance to the elevator, and an October
2007 report from the social commission of the Vostochnoye Degunino district,
where Voyevodin lives, notes that many buildings in that region have a gap of up
to 4 centimeters between the elevator and the floor, making it impossible for a
wheelchair to enter without being lifted, even if the elevator is big enough.
"My electric wheelchair weighs 110 kilograms. Who will lift it for me?" said
Igor Lapin, 35, who lives alone.
Lapin's comments are echoed by people all over Russia who post questions for
President Vladimir Putin on the web site www.president.yandex.ru.
"My son's wheelchair cannot fit through the doorway of our bathroom, so he
cannot wash himself there," wrote Natalia from Murmansk. She added that her
son's disabilities made it impossible for her to leave him alone and therefore
she was unable to work. As the parent of a disabled child, she receives a
monthly allowance from the state of 120 rubles ($5.13). The amount has not
increased in 10 years.
"If I hand my son over to the state, one month of caring for him in a group
home would cost the state 15,000 rubles. It seems like the authorities are
financially urging us to abandon our sick children," she wrote.
Vadim Voyevodin says it was very hard to raise his son, who is now 16. At
times, they only had bread and kefir to eat. Friends collected second-hand
clothes and shoes for them. But family friend Vera Marushkina says Vadim was a
great father, devoting himself completely to his son. Today, their one-room
apartment looks like a control room, full of cords and monitors. The room serves
as both a bedroom and the office of the Foundation for the Defense of the Rights
of Disabled People, which Voyevodin founded in 1991.
"The elder Vadim is a very forthcoming person, although life was cruel to
him," said Vitaly Troyanovsky, a producer with the state television channel
Kultura who included Voyevodin's story in one of his documentaries on
pre-perestroika Soviet Union.
A native of Moscow, Voyevodin moved to Karshi, Uzbekistan, in 1980 to work as
a producer at a youth music club and theater. Voyevodin said his success in that
position earned him the envy of the local Communist Party boss' son, Davron
Gaipov, who considered himself the key figure in the local music scene. Shortly
after a serious disagreement between the two, Voyevodin was arrested on
suspicion of abuse of office and appropriation of club property.
"They were false accusations. All the property was available in the club's
storage. But Gaipov was a kind of god in the city," Voyevodin said.
The case never went to court, but Voyevodin was held in a detention facility
for almost four years. It was there on Aug. 25, 1985, that Interior Ministry
soldiers beat him, fracturing his back. He returned to Moscow on a stretcher. No
one was ever punished for the assault.
It would be an overstatement to say the disabled lived well during Soviet
era, but they did have some benefits, such as some free medication and an annual
vacation at a sanatorium. This system of privileges continued until 2004, when a
controversial law was passed that replaced these benefits with monthly cash
payments. The law went into effect on Jan. 1, 2005.
Another benefit involved a special car known as the Oka, an upgrade of a
Soviet-era vehicle that was produced especially for the disabled. Certain
categories of disabled people, including veterans and victims of Chernobyl,
could receive an Oka for free, and all those who qualified for a wheelchair had
the right to purchase an Oka at a 60 percent discount. This benefit was
eliminated in 2005.
Tatyana Morozova said she felt lucky to have an Oka, which gives her the
opportunity to reach some small shops that are located beside the road.
"They sell stuff through the window. I drive really close to them and buy
things like at a drive-through," she said.
Tatyana Kozyreva, another wheelchair user who is also Voyevodin's friend,
usually travels by metro.
"I bring my wheelchair close to the stairs and wait for someone to help take
me down," Kozyreva said. Sometimes she waits more than half an hour for someone
to help her. She uses the same method to get out of the metro.
Last year, the Moscow Department of Transportation introduced 30 special
handicap-accessible buses, but this does not amount to much for a city with
close to 1.5 million disabled citizens. Even if a wheelchair user manages to
find one of the specially equipped buses, he will face more challenges once he
reaches his destination. Curbs on most Moscow streets do not have gaps for
wheelchairs, and few of the city's stores, hospitals, restaurants, theaters and
museums have wheelchair ramps.
Mayor Yury Luzhkov called the center of Moscow a wilderness for the disabled
because of its lack of accessibility, ITAR-Tass reported.
Voyevodin has always fought to improve life for the disabled and has become
even more committed since establishing his foundation. Through the foundation,
he pressed for the installation of banisters at the entrance to Morozova's
apartment building in northeastern Moscow.
People in wheelchairs are rarely able to defend their rights in court simply
because they cannot get there. Laws oblige court officials to visit disabled
people with pending cases, but usually they try the cases in absentia. In 2005,
Voyevodin filed a lawsuit seeking 32,000 rubles he claimed he was overcharged
for electricity, but in his absence, the Timiryazevsky District Court in Moscow
ruled in favor of the utilities provider, Mosenergo.
While Voyevodin has solved problems for many of his friends, he has been
unable to win any of these small victories for himself. His apartment features
none of the special equipment for disabled people that can be found in Western
countries. Vladimir Doronin, an engineer with Tekhma, a company that specializes
in installing equipment for disabled people, said measurements were taken to
install a special lift for the tub in Voyevodin's apartment, but the addition
has not been made.
"We can do it, but somebody has to pay for this. It would cost about 50,000
rubles to equip his apartment with everything he needs," Doronin said.
Even if the state has verified an individual's disability and determined what
kind of technical aids may be needed, these aids, such as the kind of lift
Doronin wants to install for Voyevodin, are not included in the state program
for aid to the disabled, said Lin Nguen, a lawyer with the nongovernmental
organization Perspektiva.
Today, the younger Vadim tries to help his father as much as he can. They
enjoy each other's company and avoid talking about Vadim's mother, who was a
nurse at one of Moscow's rehabilitation hospitals and disappeared from their
lives when he was an infant. Voyevodin likes to talk about his passion for music
and the theater and the artist friends he used to have. Many of his old friends
tried to keep in touch after he became disabled, but most of them have fallen
away over the years.
In Russia, the disabled simply live in a world apart.
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