Documenting to protect: how crimes against people with disabilities are documented

23.01.2026
Articles
During Russia's full-scale war against Ukraine, millions of people have suffered violence, loss of their homes, forced deportation and systematic human rights violations. Among them are people with disabilities, whose stories are too often overlooked.
This is what the Ukrainian organisation Fight For Right does — one of the few that systematically documents war crimes committed specifically against people with disabilities. The team, founded by women with disabilities, collects testimonies, analyses the facts of violations and insists that these voices be included in official investigations and international reports.
In collaboration with international partners, Fight For Right has developed recommendations for ethical and accessible interviews with people with disabilities — taking into account various forms of violations, without re-traumatising victims and respecting their dignity.
Their reports document crimes committed in boarding schools under occupation, violations of the right to safety, freedom of movement, medical care and property, as well as facts of forced ‘referendums’ and the imposition of Russian citizenship.
This work is not only about preserving memory.
It is about the aggressor's responsibility.
About justice.
About ensuring that the rights of people with disabilities do not disappear even during wartime.
We thank our colleagues for their principled, complex and extremely important work.
News and events
All publicationsEvents

Adaptive sports in Lviv: the path to recovery and community
An important social project has been launched in Lviv, opening up new opportunities for veterans, combatants and people with disabilities. Adaptive sports here are not about formal training, but about returning to an active life, recovery and a sense of personal strength. It is more than just physical activity. It is a tool for support and social integration that helps to: improve physical health; overcome psychological barriers after trauma and loss; return to active participation in community life; find like-minded people and support in a safe, friendly environment. Adaptive sports take into account the individual physical abilities of each person. They are real, accessible and personalised. This is not a ‘one-size-fits-all’ programme, but an inclusive space where you can try, move at your own pace and feel confident in your body and spirit. For LAOPD, the value of such initiatives is obvious: they form communities without barriers to participation; they show that sport and activity are a right, not a privilege; they change society's attitude towards people with disabilities — from pity to respect and partnership. We welcome Lviv's initiative and call on communities across Ukraine to develop adaptive sports programmes for veterans, people with disabilities, and anyone who wants to move forward. Because accessibility is not just about spaces and services. It's about real life opportunities for everyone.
30.01.2026
Read more
Articles

Why does a community need an accessibility specialist, and why can't it function without one?
The real-life experience of Ukrainian communities shows that accessibility does not happen on its own. It does not arise from an order, a strategy, or a single ramp. It is created by people — with clear powers, responsibilities, and access to decision-making. That is why communities are increasingly creating a separate position or appointing a person responsible for accessibility issues. And this is not a formality. It is not an ‘additional burden’ for a secretary or project manager. This is a key specialist who: coordinates work between departments and the executive branch so that accessibility does not fall apart into fragments; identifies real barriers — physical, digital, communication — and proposes systemic solutions; develops and monitors an accessibility action plan; helps organise services and events so that all community members can participate. Without a clearly defined person in charge, accessibility quickly becomes ‘no one's issue’. Someone builds a ramp. Someone adds subtitles. But there is no system, no standard, and no accountability for results. Instead, a community with a barrier-free specialist gets real inclusion, not just imitation of change: people with disabilities, veterans, people with limited mobility, parents with prams, and older people can fully use spaces and services; decisions are no longer random and start to follow a single logic of accessibility; barrier-free access becomes part of planning, not just a paragraph in a report. We call on communities in Ukraine to: identify or create a barrier-free access specialist in each community. This is not just an investment in comfort. It is an investment in equal opportunities, dignity and development for every person who lives and works in your community.
29.01.2026
Read more
News

Barrier-free buildings: the rules are in place. But where is the accountability?
The Ministry of Community and Territorial Development of Ukraine has approved Methodological Recommendations for Creating a Barrier-Free Environment for Residential and Public Buildings (Order No. 94 of 20 January 2026). This is an important and long-awaited document. It provides clear, practical guidelines for those who plan, design, construct, renovate and maintain buildings. The recommendations describe accessibility not formally, but in essence — from entrances, ramps and lifts to common areas and residential premises. Particular emphasis is placed on: the accessibility of shelters and protective structures; the adaptation of housing for people who use wheelchairs; the needs of different groups — people with disabilities, older people, parents with prams, and people with reduced mobility. The document is recommended for use: in new construction; during reconstruction and major repairs; in the process of restoring damaged facilities; when adapting existing buildings. But the key question remains open. Who will monitor the implementation of these recommendations and how? And who will be held accountable if accessibility remains a mere formality? Without clear control mechanisms, public participation, and accountability for violations, we risk ending up with yet another well-intentioned document — without any real changes on the ground. LAOPD insists: barrier-free access is not a recommendation ‘if possible’. It is a basic condition for safety, dignity and equal rights. View the Order and Methodological Recommendations
28.01.2026
Read more
