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SOUTHERN
AFRICA: Disabled remain marginalised, says report
IRIN News
December
15, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=44688
JOHANNESBURG
- The secretariat of the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) and governments in the region have been urged to devise new
measures to assist the disabled.
A new report, 'Representative surveys on living conditions among
people with activity limitations in Namibia, Zimbabwe and Malawi',
noted that disabled people in these three countries do not enjoy
the same access to education as their able-bodied counterparts.
It added that disabled people, generally, do not have any basic-level
primary education, nor do they have any vocational skills training
or tertiary education.
Less than 20 percent of the disabled people in the countries surveyed
were receiving the disability grants they were entitled to.
"The disabled are also denied access to public buildings and facilities,
as they are not disability-friendly," the report said.
A comparative study of unemployment trends in households with disabled
members and those without revealed glaring inequalities, with unemployment
higher among the disabled than the able-bodied.
The surveys also revealed that when disabled people did enjoy some
form of employment, their incomes were always lower than those of
the able-bodied.
Fifty percent of the disabled people interviewed in the three countries
said they were never consulted before decisions affecting them are
made.
"The surveys in Namibia, Malawi and Zimbabwe have shown that living
conditions among the disabled are systematically lower than among
the non-disabled. This implies that people with disabilities are
being denied equal opportunities to participate and contribute to
their societies. It is in this context that they are denied their
rights," the report concluded.
Commenting on the findings, the Southern Africa Federation of the
Disabled (SAFOD) secretary-general, Alexander Phiri, said the region
needed to design and implement programmes that improved the lives
of the disabled.
"Many countries in the region do not have disability policies. Disability
issues are generalised under health ministries and, in most cases,
there are no programmes on the ground. We need to have disability
issues rated as national priority programmes. This can only be achieved
if the SADC secretariat makes it regional policy to prioritise the
handling of disability issues," Phiri commented.
"The region has to recognise that development cannot take place
as long as the vulnerable sections of the population remain marginalised,"
he added.
He said the surveys, which were largely sponsored by the Norwegian
Federation of the Disabled, would be expanded to cover more countries
in the region.
"The fact that we have come up with such revelations in only three
countries shows we have only scratched the surface of the problem.
We need more information on disability across the region. A similar
survey is planned for Zambia early next, with Botswana and Lesotho
expected to follow shortly afterwards," Phiri noted.
In a bid to improve regional visibility and interaction with the
SADC secretariat, SAFOD will be opening an office in Botswana early
next year.
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