Press Release
September 11, 2018

CHIZ SEEKS PRRD NOD ON FSL AS NATIONAL SIGN LANGUAGE

Sen. Chiz Escudero is urging President Duterte to sign into law the measure declaring Filipino Sign Language (FSL) as the national sign language following the adoption of the Senate version bill in the House of Representatives.

"I thank our House counterparts and all those who worked hard for the passage of this bill. I hope the President will sign it," said Escudero, chairman of the Senate Committee on Education, Arts and Culture.

According to Escudero, sign language is not an international or universal language since each country may have different sign languages depending on its own native tongue.

"We want to recognize our own sign language for the benefit of deaf Filipinos who are in need of better access to communication and information. We want them to know and to feel that we recognize and uphold their fundamental rights," the Bicolano senator explained.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), more than 5 percent of the world's population, or about 466 million people, have disabling hearing loss. Out of this number, 34 million are children.

In the Philippines, however, hearing impairment was at 17 percent or 97,957 per 577,345 population, based on the data from the Department of Health National Registry in 1997.

The World Federation of the Deaf (WFD) says that around 70 million deaf people use sign language as their mother tongue and that it is also the first language of some deafblind people.

Under the bill, FSL will be promoted and supported as the language of official communication in public transactions involving the deaf. The bill will also be mandating the use of FSL in schools, broadcast media and in the workplaces where there are deaf people.

Furthermore, FSL will be the medium of instruction in deaf education. It will also be the official language of legal interpreting in public hearings, proceedings and other legal transactions of courts and tribunals concerning deaf people.

Escudero reiterated that having our own national sign language is in line with the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which seeks to "promote, protect and ensure the full and equal enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms of persons with disabilities."

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