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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Violence
disables - stop violence!
National
Association of Societies for the Care of the Handicapped (NASCOH)
May 26, 2008
As an umbrella body of
organizations of and for people with disabilities in Zimbabwe whose
mandate is to improve the lives and well being of people with disabilities,
NASCOH notes with mounting concern and sadness that the senseless
violence currently gripping the country has had the unfortunate
effect of increasing the number of people with disabilities in the
country.
This unfortunate development
comes at a time when our health and social services departments
are grossly overstretched and singularly unable to deal with the
influx of casualties of violence. It also places a heavy burden
on disability organizations across the country, which are commonly
under-resourced, under funded and undeserved, as, ultimately, they
will have to bear the burden of rehabilitating and providing a wide
range of support services to these newly-created people with disabilities.
Sadly, the effects of
this violence, which, ironically, is ridiculously easy to avoid,
will continue to haunt its victims and society long after the violence
has ended. Bread winners have been lost, while many of the victims
have been so brutalized, mutilated and maimed that they have been
deprived of the means of earning a living, thus further compounding
the cycle of poverty that has almost become synonymous with disability.
It is sad to note that
it is not only physical disabilities that have been created, but
that disabilities have been created across the whole disability
spectrum. Limbs have been severed and mutilated beyond use, thus
adding to the physical disability population; people have been subjected
to such brutal head injuries that their sight and hearing has been
affected, thus swelling the numbers of the visually and hearing
impaired; while some have been traumatized so much by the intensity
and brutality of the violence that they have joined or will soon
join the ranks of the mentally challenged. Tragically, even innocent
children have not been spared, as some of them have also been beaten
up and forced to witness brutal beatings and horrific tortures of
their parents and relatives. These children have been scarred and
traumatized for life. They have been deprived of their future.
The current violence
is not only a flagrant assault on the country's disability
management efforts; it is inimical to the whole process of development,
and an affront to ubuntu, the age-old African spirit of humanness,
togetherness and sharing, for which Zimbabwe, especially, is renowned.
In this vein, we call upon the responsible parties to end this violence,
and work towards the creation of a better Zimbabwe for all, including
people with disabilities.
Visit the NASCOH
fact
sheet
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