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Housing
stands attract back errant husbands
Jennifer Dube, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
May 27, 2012
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/2012/05/27/housing-stands-attract-back-errant-husbands/
A man who dumped
his wife for bearing him a child with cerebral palsy has returned
after learning his family was among beneficiaries of residential
stands in Mabvuku.
The man, who
could not be identified to protect the identity of the disadvantaged
child, is among a number of husbands that are coming back to their
wives in the suburb where the fortunes of women, dumped by their
husbands years ago after giving birth to children with disabilities,
are fast changing.
At least 26
parents of children with various forms of disabilities will soon
own residential stands after their association bought land to accommodate
the families, most of whom presently live in backyard shacks.
The families
have for years been making monthly savings through the Zimbabwe
Parents of Handicapped Children Association (ZPHCA), enabling
them to raise US$15 000, which they used to buy a piece of land
to be subdivided into residential stands.
Each member
will own a 200 square metre stand in Harare's Mabvuku suburb.
These developments have resulted in some of the husbands who had
run away coming back to their families after realising that their
wives would soon receive residential stands.
"There
is a man who had left his wife and five children, including their
nine-year old child who is suffering from cerebral palsy (CP),"
a ZPHCA official said. "The wife soldiered on, vending to
raise money for her children's upkeep and the association
subscription. She is one of those who benefitted under this phase
and her husband is now back home."
The beneficiaries
were hopeful that the initiative would bring relief to most members
of the association as they were being discriminated against when
looking for accommodation to rent.
"My husband
left me and our three children in 1998 because of our 19-year-old
daughter who suffers from cp," 42-year-old Virginia Chirinda
said. "At one point, I was promised a room for lodging with
my family but when I went back with my disabled child the following
day, the potential landlord told me she had no room for that thing,
referring to my child."
Speaking at
a ground- breaking ceremony in Mabvuku last week, ZPHCA coordinator
Theresa Makwara said members had been saving up for stands for several
years.
"We started
off as a big association with more than 100 members but we are down
to 42 now because of various problems, among them lack of resources,"
Makwara said.
"Most people got discouraged when our Zimdollar savings came
to naught but some of us soldiered on and that has finally paid
off."
Body
caters for parents of the disabled
Formed in 1987,
ZPHCA is an organisation of parents of children with disabilities.
The Harare Province is the largest with a growing base of 23 support
groups.
The association
advocates for the rights of children with disabilities, especially
in the areas of health, education, food, shelter, housing and recognition
in the society.
Most of the
handicapped live with cerebral palsy (PC), a condition which affects
brain development and body functionality while others suffer from
Hydrocephalus condition, which is a buildup of fluid inside the
skull that leads to brain swelling.
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