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New
study sheds light on lives of disabled
IRIN
News
February
19, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=39591
Lydia Mpofu's
day begins at 4.00 am when she makes the first of two trips to fetch
water from a river 4 km from her home in Zezane, near the southern
Zimbabwean border town of Beitbridge. Although aged 66, she then
spends three back-breaking hours tending her maize crop, before
returning home to care for her disabled grandson.
"I have to balance my time evenly between the necessary household
chores, daily work commitments and caring for him. He has been like
this since he was born, seven years ago. It is difficult looking
after him because he cannot do anything by himself. He needs to
be washed and fed, exactly like a baby, and moved from one shade
to another. If only I could get him a wheelchair," said Mpofu.
Her story typifies that of families looking after the disabled.
Without adequate state support, it is the extended family that shoulders
the responsibility for their care and, given the depths of Zimbabwe's
economic crisis, that struggle has become all the harder.
The last census, in 2002, estimated that 2.9 percent of Zimbabweans
were disabled. But what had not been properly documented were the
actual living conditions of those with disabilities. Now, a new
study by the Southern Africa Federation of the Disabled (SAFOD),
in collaboration with the Norwegian Federation of Disabled People,
has shed light on their daily lives.
The report, "Living Conditions Among People with Activity Limitations
in Zimbabwe, a Representative Regional Survey" sampled 22,000 people
in five of the country's 10 provinces, and found the disabled were
deeply disadvantaged in terms of access to education, employment
and state support.
Only one out of every eight respondents was receiving financial
assistance. Disability and social support grants only amounted to
about Zim $15,000 (US $3.75) a month, while a loaf of bread cost
Zim $2,300.
Three times as many disabled people - 28 percent - had never been
to school, compared with just 10 percent of the non-disabled. Women
faced the greatest discrimination, with 34 percent of those with
disabilities never having entered a classroom.
A separate analysis looked at the type of disability prevalent among
those without any formal schooling and found that the largest number
had sensory impairments (seeing and hearing) and communication problems.
Comparisons between the rural and urban areas also revealed glaring
disparities in access to education, with the disabled in rural areas
facing significant challenges, noted the report.
Unemployment was another area of concern. In the southern province
of Matabeleland, 81 percent of the disabled were jobless, with Manicaland
in the east and the central province of Midlands tied at 77 percent.
Again, women were more disadvantaged than men, while "more households
with one or more disabled members have no employed members, compared
to households without disabled members".
Despite the lack of employment opportunities, the study found that
35 percent of disabled people in the potentially economically active
15 to 65 age group had received vocational skills training, compared
to only 28 percent in the non-disabled category, because special
education self-help programmes were usually geared towards the disadvantaged.
Surveys on the accessibility of health and education facilities
for the disabled showed that 80 percent believed primary health
care clinics and hospitals were accessible, while 40 percent gave
schools a thumbs-up.
Commenting on the findings of the survey, SAFOD secretary general
Alexander Phiri said despite the lack of facilities, living conditions
of people with disabilities were better in rural areas because there
was a greater sense of community.
He said he hoped the information gathered would be used to formulate
better welfare schemes for the disabled in Zimbabwe, and added that
SAFOD was working towards a regional policy to address their specific
needs.
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