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The will create a specialized identification post for atypical people at a police station. The plan is to be implemented by the end of this year at the Child and Adolescent II Police Station in Ceilândia.
The idea is to be able to have a place with the differentiated reception for atypical people in cases such as issuing documents. The initiative does not extinguish the service in other DPS from the Federal District, but allows a place focused on those looking for something specific.
“There are autistic, for example, that bother with a strong light. So the Flash camera can cause a nuisance, even the green light for the fingerprints can also bother,” said the director of the Institute of Identification, Vanessa Viegas.
The implementation of an atypical identification station is part of the project “Integrated Support for Atypical Families: Strengthening Parents and Caregivers and sensitizing the Federal District Civil Police”, launched on Wednesday (17/9).
The project aims to promote a more inclusive, affordable and empathic institutional culture, focused on welcoming with atypical and family people, being the servers and the population in general.
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Launch event also had lectures on the theme
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Project is PCDF initiative
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Delegate General highlights PCDF role
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Diam leads project that will empower servers
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Secretary of People with Disabilities highlights the importance of inclusion
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“It’s so that no one gets into a police station and getting out there feeling smaller than he entered,” said the director of the Integrated Women’s Care Division (Diam), Karen Langkammer. Diam is responsible for the project.
“Our function is to protect, welcome and a simple treatment can be the differential between him to feel protected or he feels again vulnerable. And that is why this project was born, the integrated support project for atypical families strengthening parents and caregivers and sensitizing the Civil Police,” he added.
DF Civil Police Deputy General José Werick de Carvalho stressed that the culture of reception with atypical people will be implemented in all police stations, polyclinics and the Forensic Medical Institute and in all PCDF facilities.
“This initiative will be strengthened daily,” said Werick. “We want the whole corporation to have a culture of accessibility and reception of atypical people,” he added.
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The launch event also featured the Secretary of Person with Disabilities (SEPD) of the Federal District, Willian Ferreira da Cunha, who reinforced the importance of the initiative. “The main difficulty for complete accessibility is the lack of information.”
For him, an action that aims to empower public servants in the care of atypical people is an initiative that must be expanded. “The inclusion process is collective,” he added.
The project has the support of the International Network for the Victim Protection – Laço Branco Brasil, from Street Chairman Dance Company, Elev.a Videos, from BSB Audio, Sound, Light and Image, as well as sponsorship of the Nadja Quadros Institute.