Tag: disabilities

  • FG orders strict enforcement of 5% employment quota for persons with disabilities

    FG orders strict enforcement of 5% employment quota for persons with disabilities

    The federal government has ordered ministries, departments, and agencies (MDAs) to fully comply with the mandatory five per cent employment quota for Persons With Disabilities (PWDs), declaring that the era of excuses for non-compliance has come to an end.

    Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Senator George Akume, issued the directive on Tuesday at the 2025 International Day of Persons with Disabilities Forum in Abuja.

    According to a statement issued by Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Yomi Odunuga, the SGF said the government has entered a new phase of full enforcement of disability rights across all sectors.

    Akume, represented by a Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Communication, Nadungu Gagare said accessibility to public buildings, transport systems, and service channels is now a legal requirement, not a matter of goodwill.

    Describing 2025 as “a historic year” for disability inclusion, the SGF noted that the five-year moratorium provided under the Discrimination Against Persons with Disabilities (Prohibition) Act of 2018 has expired, moving Nigeria from transition to enforcement.

    With this shift, he said, MDAs must demonstrate clear adherence to the law.

    “The federal government under the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu remains firmly committed to building a Nigeria where no one is excluded from meaningful participation. Accessibility is no longer optional. It is the law. The era of excuses is over”, he stated.

    Akume also urged the private sector to champion disability inclusion, arguing that it is not an act of charity but “smart economics” that improves innovation, widens the talent pool, and enhances corporate growth and reputation.

    “Companies that embrace diversity and inclusion outperform their peers. Disability has never meant inability, it simply reflects a different pathway to contribution”, he said.

    Read Also: Lagos deepens disability inclusion with new policy commitments

    He emphasised that PWDs are not seeking sympathy but access, opportunity, and fair recognition.

    Their contributions, as artisans, entrepreneurs, technologists, educators, and public servants, are already shaping national development, he noted.

    The SGF outlined three priority actions for national progress: employing qualified PWDs to meet the 5 per cent quota; equipping workplaces with accessible tools and environments; and expanding leadership and enterprise opportunities for PWDs, including support for PWD-owned businesses.

    “Inclusion must be reflected in our budgets, infrastructure, hiring decisions, corporate strategies, and daily interactions. Nigeria cannot rise fully while leaving talent behind”, he said.

    Akume commended the Office of the Deputy Speaker and the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Foundation for hosting what he described as a timely forum, coming at a moment when Nigeria is at a major turning point on its journey toward full inclusion.

  • ‘Prioritise people living with disabilities’ needs’

    ‘Prioritise people living with disabilities’ needs’

    The Coordinator of Centre for Disability Affairs, a non-governmental organisation (NGO), Comrade Kehinde Oshilaja, has urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, 36 governors, ministers and chairmen of local governments to prioritise the needs of people living with disabilities.

    The advice was contained in a letter made available yesterday to reporters in Ebute Meta, Lagos.

    Oshilaja said it had become necessary for the government to create a just and equitable society for all Nigerians, adding that it should immediately address the hardships faced by people living with disabilities.

    Read Also: Tinubu calls for multi-pronged approach to security in Lake Chad region

    He said: “We are all citizens of this great nation, and we deserve to have our basic needs met, especially in terms of communication, shelter, health care and employment. Without a strong commitment from the government to ensure the right and well-being of people living with disabilities are met, the masses will not be happy.’’

    Oshilaja noted that the current state of the economy had made it difficult for people living with disabilities to have access to basic necessities such as health care, education and employment.

  • Five footballers who played with disabilities

    Five footballers who played with disabilities

    1.  Manuel Francisco dos Santo (Garrincha)

    He was born with Valgus knee, a condition that caused his leg to bend inwards. He won the World Cup twice with Brazil and also one of the best dribblers to ever play football.

    2. David Beckham

    He played with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). He confirmed this in an interview.


    3.  Hector Castro

    Read Also: C & S leader urges Tinubu to address Nigerians


    He accidentally cut off his own arm while using an electric saw as a 13-year-old & was consequently known as ‘El Manco’ (The One-Armed One)

    It didn’t stop him from scoring the only goal as Uruguay won their WorldCup debut over 90 years ago.

    4. Tim Howard

    He played with Tourettes and said he had ADHD, OCD, Tourette’s syndrome.

    He is the 4th goalkeeper to ever score a goal in the Premier League, only 6 goalkeepers can boast of this record.

    5. Cristiano Ronaldo.

    Portugal star Cristiano Ronaldo was diagnosed with tendinosis in knee ahead of the 2014 World Cup. It still lives with him till date. 

  • Govt empowers persons  with disabilities

    Govt empowers persons  with disabilities

    Ekiti State Government has made significant strides in improving the lives of people with disabilities (PWDs), with initiatives introduced to promote their inclusivity and accessibility.

    The Special Adviser to Governor Biodun Oyebamiji on Special Education and Social Inclusion, Princess Adetoun Agboola, said the achievements included implementation of Disability Law and introduction of Ekiti Kete Online Sign Language Lessons for civil servants and political office holders.

    She said the government had also mandated ramps in new public buildings and was retrofitting old ones to improve accessibility.

    Agboola said: “Employment opportunities for PWDs have been enhanced through the enforcement of the five per cent employment law. This ensures qualified PWDs are given equal opportunities.

    Read Also: Tinubu means well for north, says Shettima

    “The state has provided free medical access to PWDs in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, a critical step applauded by the community for its life-saving impact.”

    She said the government had introduced technology in special schools, including laptops, desktops and interactive boards, adding that the government had also employed vocational teachers and therapists and provided fully equipped vocational centres for skills like sewing, hairdressing and soap making. These measures aim to improve learning and quality of life for students with disabilities.

  • Living on the margins: Overlooked struggles of persons with disabilities

    Living on the margins: Overlooked struggles of persons with disabilities

    Despite constant efforts to enhance the implementation of Nigeria’s national disability law since its enactment, there persists a significant gap in adherence and execution across various sectors. As a consequence, individuals with disabilities face exclusion from community events, encounter challenges in accessing buildings, healthcare facilities and transportation, and grapple with discrimination in multiple facets of their lives. Regrettably, the situation is no different in Niger State, as JUSTINA ASISHANA sheds light on these marginalised persons.

    Musa Bello found himself in a state of agitation. Despite his attempts to communicate the urgent medical needs of his wife through gestures, Musa, who has a speech impairment, encountered a frustrating barrier at Niger General Hospital. The medical attendant, unable to comprehend him, turned away.

    The absence of a sign language interpreter added to the ordeal, contravening the Discrimination Against Persons with Disability (Prohibition) Act. This legislation mandates the full integration of persons with disabilities and emphasizes the need for public hospitals to ensure special communication provisions for individuals facing such challenges.

    Frustrated by the lack of understanding, Musa lashed out at the medical attendant, prompting hospital officials to seek assistance from an official affiliated with an association for persons with disabilities to defuse the situation. Section V (24) of the law states: “A public hospital where a person with communicational disabilities is medically attended to shall make provision for special communication.”

    A 2023 study on the status of inclusive healthcare services in Nigeria recommended the construction of ramps, adapted examination tables and other facilities that enhance physical access and inclusion of persons with disabilities. The researchers also recommended the availability of information and communication aids such as material in braille and large print for patients with visual impairment, pictures and materials in simple language for those with learning disabilities and sign language interpreters for those with hearing and communication impairments. However, at the time of publishing this report, no public hospital in Niger State has provision for special communication for people with disabilities.

    It’s not just in hospitals that persons with disabilities face access challenges. The law provides for the full integration of persons with disabilities in healthcare, education, social, economic and civil rights, but in all these spheres, persons with disabilities in Niger State, and Nigeria at large, continue to face obstacles.

    Fatima Sani, who is visually impaired, feels a sense of dread every time she leaves home to go into town (Minna’s central business district). Although she has a white cane and her 12-year-old niece by her side to guide her, she has difficulty getting a keke (tricycle), which is the main mode of public transport. The keke drivers are impatient and don’t wait for her to board. In Minna, people are reluctant to help Fatima and her niece cross the busy roads. Fatima faces these challenges despite the law addressing accessibility to roads, sidewalks and vehicles. The law forbids discrimination against persons with disabilities in the provision of public transport. Refusing to provide services is an offence. The law states that a vehicle should stop for a passenger with disabilities to board or alight and that such a passenger should get priority in boarding. The law also requires that vehicles and bus stops provide functional accessibility aids (lifts and ramps) and that buildings provide special parking spots.

    According to the law, people with disabilities are supposed to be given priority in queues, but Mohammed Enagi, the Chairman of the Empowerment Initiative for Persons With Disability in Niger State, who has a physical impairment and rides a specially-designed motorcycle, said that at many filling stations, attendants ask him to wait in the queue and get off his motorcycle, even when he explains how they can accommodate him to fuel his motorcycle safely. He now prefers fueling at Bovas Filling Stations in Minna as they have shown sympathy and understanding to the plight of people with disabilities. The Discrimination Against Persons With Disabilities (Prohibition) Act states that persons with disabilities shall be given first consideration in queues, with offenders liable to a fine of N50,000 or six months in prison or both.

    Several people with visual impairment complained that bank officials would not issue them with ATM cards when they opened bank accounts.  Efforts to get a comment from the Bankers Association in Niger State on why ATM cards are not issued to visually impaired persons proved futile as officials neither picked up calls nor responded to messages.

    Persons with disability also still face challenges in accessing public buildings, including the office of the Niger State Commissioner for Humanitarian Affairs, which handles disability matters. Public buildings were given five years, which lapsed at the end of 2023, to make their buildings accessible by incorporating aids like lifts and ramps. Persons with disability, especially those with physical disabilities, said that whenever a meeting to discuss disability matters is held at the second-floor office of the Niger State Commissioner for Humanitarian Affairs, it takes them several minutes to take the stairs to the office, which has neither lifts nor ramps.

    Statistics on disability

    Disability is an umbrella term, covering impairments, activity limitations and participation restrictions. Impairments are problems in body functions or structures, while activity limitations are difficulties encountered by an individual in executing tasks or actions. Participation restrictions refer to challenges that interfere with a person’s ability to take part in different life activities.

    In other words, disability is not just one health problem. It is a complex phenomenon, reflecting the interaction between the features of a person’s body and the features of the society in which he or she lives. The most prevalent forms of disability in Nigeria include visual impairment, hearing impairment, physical impairment, intellectual impairment, and communication impairment.

    Globally, over a billion people are estimated to live with some form of disability. This corresponds to about 15 per cent of the world’s population. Between 110 million (2.2 per cent) and 190 million (3.8 per cent) people aged 15 years and older have significant difficulties in functioning. Furthermore, the World Health Organisation (WHO) observes that the rates of disability are increasing in part due to ageing populations and an increase in chronic health conditions.

    The last Nigerian census in 2006 reported that there were about 3.3 million people with disabilities or 2.3 per cent of the 140.4 million population. Then in 2018, the WHO estimated that about 29 million of the 195 million people who comprised Nigeria’s national population were living with a disability. Data from the 2018 Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey reveal that an estimated seven (7 per cent) of household members above the age of five (as well as nine per cent of those aged 60 or older) have some level of difficulty in at least one functional domain i.e. seeing, hearing, communication, cognition, walking, or self-care. One per cent either have a lot of difficulties or cannot function at all in at least one domain. Visual impairment is the most common type of disability in Niger State, according to the Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey, 2018.

    Disability rights

    In December 2006, the United Nations (UN) adopted the Charter on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPDs) which came into force in May 2008. Nigeria ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities on March 30, 2007, and it’s Optional Protocol on September 24, 2010. Ratification is a concrete action taken by states which signal the intention to undertake legal rights and obligations contained in the Convention or the Optional Protocol. Nigeria is thus legally bound to uphold the rights contained in the CRPD.

    In 2019, the Discrimination Against Persons with Disabilities (Prohibition) Act was signed into law to protect the rights of persons with disabilities, provide for their integration into society and establish the National Commission for Persons with Disabilities (NCPWD) to oversee the implementation of the act. The commission was set up in 2020, and tasked with formulating and implementing policies, and guidelines, and monitoring implementation.

    The disability law encompasses several significant provisions, prohibiting all forms of discrimination based on disability, and imposing penalties such as fines and prison sentences for violations. It guarantees the right to education for individuals with disabilities at all levels, emphasising accessible facilities and learning materials in schools. It also ensures the right to health, encompassing affordable, accessible care and health insurance coverage, with healthcare providers required to make reasonable accommodations.

    The act also mandates disability-friendly public transport systems and provides concessions. Public life accessibility is safeguarded in the law, ensuring that public buildings, roads, business premises, and recreational centres are accessible. Public organisations are required to allocate at least five per cent of employment opportunities to people with disabilities, ensuring equitable salaries. The legislation mandates the inclusion of people with disabilities in political appointments with provisions made for accessibility during elections. The act further provides for the establishment of the National Disability Trust Fund.

    In 2020, the persons living with disabilities in Niger State decried the poor treatment of its members during the Special Public Workers Scheme of the Federal Government, as they claimed to have been shortchanged in the programme. The Chairman of the Joint National Association of Persons with Disabilities in Niger State, Isah Abdullahi, led a protest to the Secretariat of the Nigerian Union of Journalists in Minna, lamenting that despite the directive by the Federal Government to allocate at least five per cent of slots to PLwDs, they only got 0.4 per cent.

    Niger State was allocated 25,000 slots and persons with disabilities submitted 1,250 names to the National Directorate of Employment (NDE), with 50 representatives from each of the 25 local government areas. However, when the final list was released, it had only 100 names of persons with disabilities, or 0.4 per cent, instead of the required five per cent. Worse still, the names were from only two local government areas.

    The chairman says that persons with disabilities would now begin seeking legal redress against any individual or organisation that discriminates against its members, though he acknowledges that ignorance of the anti-discrimination law drives stigma, with some parents still segregating their children who have disabilities. The Executive Director of Quality Lives for Persons with Special Needs Foundation, Abdulrahman Alwal, echoed this thought, pointing out that the State Government and other actors have yet to implement the Disability Act.

    He said that persons with disabilities, who are among the vulnerable group of women, youth and children, are yet to get the legally mandated commission, despite advocating for it. His words: “We should be given our position just like other vulnerable groups. Let all necessary provisions that we are entitled to also be given to us so that we can live favourably and conveniently.

    “We will adopt litigation because we have exhausted advocacy opportunities. We have spent too much on advocating; we will start litigating. When we go to a building and it is not accessible, we will take the organisation to court. Whatever should happen should happen; we have gotten to that point now. And even with this political inclusion and recruitment, we will start taking people to court and start prosecuting them because it is getting out of hand.”

    Alwal further stated that people with disability in Niger State are not given equal opportunities in education, employment, healthcare, transportation and other public services. “More than 300 people have been appointed politically in the state and not even one person with a disability has been considered. We have the educated among us, but they still face discrimination in employment. Somebody who has had NCE since 2011 is on the street begging because no organisation has employed him. We don’t get equal representation,” he added.

    While the educational sector is not as accessible and inclusive as it should be, several people with disabilities in Niger State have undergraduate and master’s degrees and diplomas, while others eke out a living in business. “We try our best to do the little we can to put food on the table. Another success is that we are still alive; we did not allow stigmatisation and suffering to send us to an early grave. We will live our lives till God takes it from us. We do not allow anybody or any pain inflicted on us to kill us. We will survive,” said Alwal.

    Mohammed Enagi who is the Chairman of the Empowerment Initiative for Persons with Disabilities in Niger States, runs an ICT training centre where people with disabilities are trained on various skills. Enagi, who is currently a student at IBB University, Lapai, initially started studying IT and Sharia Law in Saudi Arabia but returned home during the COVID-19 pandemic, and couldn’t return to complete his course due to a lack of funds. The university had asked for a letter of support from the Office of the Governor, but efforts to get it proved futile.

    Another major concern of persons with disabilities in Niger State is mobility and accessibility. The law provides for a five-year transitional period within which public buildings, structures and vehicles are to be modified to include necessary accessibility aids like ramps and lifts, and accessible sidewalks and footbridges. The transitional period commenced in 2018 and lapsed in 2023. However, a cursory look at the buildings and structures across the Minna metropolis showed that no move has been made towards this amendment even though new buildings keep springing up across different parts of the state capital daily.

    To this end, officials at the Niger State Ministry of Housing may face several lawsuits should persons with disabilities make good their resolution to take legal action. According to the Act, an officer who approves or directs the approval of a building plan that contravenes the building code commits an offence and is liable on conviction to a fine of at least N1,000,000 or a term of imprisonment of two years or both. Therefore, a person with a disability who is not able to access a public building has the right to make a complaint and the authority in charge of the building must fix such barriers or pay for damages suffered by the complainant.

    For the past three years, Abdulrahman Alwal, who is visually impaired, has been running ‘Nakasa Baka Saraba’ a radio programme on Badeggi Radio, creating awareness about the challenges faced by people with disabilities. He advocates for the inclusion of disability rights during policymaking at every level and the implementation of those rights to make inclusion a reality.

    Alwal stated that lack of political will has limited the usefulness of the law in Niger State. While acknowledging that the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs had set up a desk for persons with disabilities and started giving them food aid, signalling renewed concern for the affairs of persons with disabilities, Alwal said much more remained to be done. For instance, he pointed out that many buildings still don’t have wheelchair-accessible toilets and lack light alarms to notify those with hearing impairment of other people’s presence or warn them of danger. He added that public buildings should have accessibility aids for all forms of disability, such as digital communication devices and sign language interpreters.

    Lacklustre response

    The Director of Rehabilitation Services at the Niger State Ministry for Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management, Hajara Ndayako, who serves as the Desk Officer for Persons With Disabilities said that the State Government is doing its best to empower and train people with disabilities to be self-dependent and to advocate and fend for themselves.

    “It is all about them rising for themselves. We encourage them to form associations and monitor their election of who will steer the affairs of their association. We also encourage them to form groups so that whenever there is assistance, they can push for inclusion, not only in this ministry but in other ministries and programmes,” she said.

    She added that though the previous government had not set up a Commission for Persons With Disabilities, her office was working to put disability issues on the priority list. “We intend to bring this issue before the governor. Other states have already gotten a commission as directed by the act. We are working hard on that because when it is in place, a lot of things concerning persons with disability will be addressed.”

    Ndayaka said several buildings such as the neonatal hospital and the women’s multipurpose centre had incorporated accessibility requirements during construction, and that her office draws attention to the need for disability-friendly buildings, whenever the State Government is putting up a new building. “Some of these changes cannot be radical; it takes time and we will continue to push and draw the attention of all the people that are needed to address that to do so. We are trying and we will keep pushing,” she said.

    Disability-friendly rating

    While Minna has made little progress in making the city disability-friendly, Abuja and Lagos scored 63 per cent and 51 per cent in a 2015 report on access to public infrastructure, published by the Center for Citizens with Disabilities. This is despite their strategic importance as the seat of government (Federal Capital Territory) and the commercial nerve centre of the country (Lagos).

    Nigeria could borrow a leaf from South Africa’s MyCiTi’s Integrated Rapid Transport System in Cape Town, a project that explicitly included universal design, making accessibility a project outcome. It is the first universally accessible transport system in Sub-Saharan Africa. It has wide entrance gates without turnstiles and railway stations are enabled for level and seamless boarding of vehicles. There’s also a fleet of low-floor kneeling vehicles that have wheelchair positions, as well as wheel-chair accessible toilets. Other universal access features include tactile paving to help the visually impaired locate stations and platforms, and induction loops at ticket kiosks for the hearing impaired. There are also boarding bridges on buses serving residential and central city routes, which provide passengers with level access to the buses from bus stops. Buses are also equipped with audio LED screens and service information in diversified formats. The stations and the buses have dedicated customer support staff enabling seamless traveling for persons with disabilities. Further, MyCiTi has a Dial-a-Ride, a dedicated kerb-to-kerb service for persons with disabilities who are unable to access mainstream public transport services.

    Hong Kong Public Transport System is another model system that integrates universal design ensuring seamless access to public transport for PWDs. The Transport Department set up a “Working Group on Access to Public Transport for Persons with Disabilities” with core mandates of tackling key transport challenges and addressing the transport needs of PWDs. Consequently, 30 per cent of the buses (about 2,000) are wheelchair-accessible and are equipped with a fixed ramp and wheelchair parking space inside the buses.

    Over 95 per cent of all taxis have braille and tactile vehicle registration number plates inside the vehicle compartment while about 7,500 taxis have talking meters that announce taxi service and taxi fare messages in diverse languages including English, Cantonese and Putonghua. Similar to Cape Town’s MyCiTi’s Dial-a-Ride service for PWDs, the Hong Kong government funds Rehabus services, a territory-wide transport network with a fleet of 90 wheelchair-accessible buses, for individuals unable to access public transport.

    In Kenya, Nairobi County introduced a digital zebra crossing along Harambee Avenue and Uhuru Highway which ensures the safety of pedestrians with disabilities.

    Assistive technology

    Assistive technology enhances accessibility and improves the quality of life for persons with disabilities. Screen readers convert text to synthesised speech, allowing individuals with visual impairments to access and navigate digital content. Braille displays convert digital text into braille, providing tactile feedback for individuals with visual impairments, and text-to-speech software and customisable communication boards help individuals with speech or communication difficulties express themselves.

    Other technologies include hearing aids which amplify and clarify sound for individuals with hearing impairments, improving their ability to perceive and understand speech and other sounds, adaptive keyboards that customise keyboards with larger keys, tactile feedback, or alternative layouts to assist individuals with motor skill challenges, and eye-tracking technology which allows individuals to control a computer or device through eye movements, benefiting those with mobility impairments.  Prosthetics and exoskeletons assist individuals with limb differences or mobility impairments by providing support and enhancing mobility, smart glasses (augmented reality glasses) provide real-time information, aiding individuals with visual impairments in navigation and recognising objects, and voice recognition software transcribes spoken words into text, facilitating hands-free computer operation for individuals with mobility impairments. Accessible mobile apps with features like voice commands, screen magnification, and captioning, enhance accessibility for various disabilities, while closed captioning and subtitles provide text descriptions of audio content in videos, benefiting individuals with hearing impairments amongst others.

    Alwal uses Okam My Eyes, an app that helps him scan newspapers and books and do his financial transactions independently, thereby improving his financial security. He also has an app that can take pictures of a person or place and describe them.

    In many African countries, many persons with disabilities don’t have access to these and other assistive technologies. WHO data from four African countries found that only 17 per cent to 37 per cent of people received assistive devices such as wheelchairs, prosthetics and hearing aids; and only 26 per cent to 55 per cent received the medical rehabilitation they needed, while only 17 per cent to 37 per cent received the assistive devices they needed such as wheelchairs, prostheses and hearing aids.

    • This article was produced with the support of the Africa Women’s Journalism Project (AWJP) in partnership with the International Center for Journalists (ICFJ) with support from the Ford Foundation.
  • ‘Charity not enough for persons with disabilities’

    ‘Charity not enough for persons with disabilities’

    Persons with disabilities need special training and resources to make them self-sufficient, life-long learners and independent, an education specialist has said.

    According to Dr. Bimpe Abayomi-Ige, a special needs education specialist, charity is not enough for children with special needs, ‘they need to be taught life skills that will help them scale through life on their own terms’.

    She also harped on the need for inclusive schools/education where special children learn with their peers in the same setting. This, she said, fosters acceptance.

    Dr. Abayomi-Ige is the CEO of Learning Helpers in the USA, a centre which focuses on meeting the educational needs of persons with disabilities so they can achieve their highest potential in life.

    According to her also, disabilities and their degrees varies, so addressing these challenges would require tailored approaches.

    She said: “Disabilities present in different forms and degrees. They could be intellectual or physical. There are basically 13 categories of disability under the IDEA in the United States, which are Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), Deaf-Blindness, deafness, emotional disturbance, hearing impairment, intellectual disabilities, multiple disabilities, Orthopaedic Impairment, other health impairment, specific learning disability (DYSGRAPHIA,DYSLEXIA,DYSCALCULIA), speech or language impairment, traumatic brain injury, visual impairment, including blindness.

    Read Also: Govt restates commitment to persons with disabilities

    “But to address these disabilities, charity isn’t enough. Persons with disabilities need training and special resources to be self-sufficient, life-long learners and independent so they can achieve their highest potential in life.

    “This is why Learning Helpers is focused on changing the lives and improving outcomes for all children with disabilities so they can become responsible citizens as adults. Our organisation provides individualised education in form of tutoring, intervention, parent support and other valuable resources for these ones.

    “A child might have a disability, but as long as the disability does not impact his\her learning outcomes in school, that child may not qualify for special education. Every individual has one form of disability or the other, but it does not impact us in a way that we are unable to achieve our goals.”

    Dr. Abayomi-Ige also harped on approaching teaching from the child’s knowledge end, ensuring the child is ready to receive the learning.

    “We don’t just these ones to know, we teach them to master what they are being taught. We approach teaching and learning from each individual’s zone of proximal development (Vygotsky) because we believe in mastery learning which allows students to learn at their own pace, with no learning gaps and with the ultimate goal of teaching them to become lifelong self-directed learners. Students learn challenging skills and master them without forgetting skills they learned earlier,” she added.

    Though Learning Helpers is a virtual company, its services cut across all strata and cadre of the society. Key beneficiaries of its services include parents, guardians, caregivers, teachers, school administrators, education stakeholders, corporation, NGOs, children and adults.

  • Govt restates commitment to persons with disabilities

    Govt restates commitment to persons with disabilities

    Lagos State has celebrated and empowered Persons living with Disabilities (PLWDs) with assistive devices and resources to ease their participation in society.

    Commissioner for Youth and Social Development, Mobolaji Ogunlende presented this at an event to mark International Disability Day, and World Braille Day.

    Ogunlende said the programme, organised by Lagos State Office for Disability Affairs, (LASODA), was in line with the THEMES+ Developmental Agenda of the Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu administration.

    Permanent Secretary, Mrs. Oluwatoyin Oke-Osanyitolu, said the event was to create awareness about plight of PWDs and give them more attention.

    General Manager of LASODA, Mrs. Adenike Oyetunde-Lawal, said giving out assistive devices was to enable PWDs participate in social affairs, encourage parents, neighbours, caregivers and religious organisations to support the government.

    Oyetunde-Lawal maintained that Sanwo-Olu’s administration would advance the cause of PWDs.

    She said: “… we will not rest until the mandate of LASODA to create an equal platform for persons with disabilities is achieved.

    Read Also: All eyes on MPC to strengthen naira’s correction

    “We are distributing guide canes/slates and stylus to students with visual impairment and appreciating homes, teachers, coaches, sign language interpreters, parents, and caregivers that cater for persons with disabilities. We are honouring individuals like Dr. Lekan Muhammad, a PhD holder and first deaf lecturer at Lagos State University (LASU).

    “These individuals have proved that disabilities should not limit the height we can attain.”

    Mrs. Oyetunde-Lawal reiterated LASODA’s mission to provide a platform for inclusive development, opportunities, accessibility, and social justice to integrate PWDs into society.

    Guest speaker, Mrs. Crystal Chigbu, hailed Lagos State for its efforts, and called for jobs opportunities for PWDs.

    She emphasised the use of adaptive technology to facilitate access to infrastructure and education for PWDs, and sought community engagement and awareness to scale up advocacy for their rights.

    Highlight of the occasion was presentation of awards to caregivers for their contributions to progress of persons with disabilities, as well as gifts for the visually impaired.

  • Govt: financial independence for persons with disabilities

    Govt: financial independence for persons with disabilities

    Lagos State Government has expressed its intention to foster financial independence among persons with disabilities, through the implementation of empowering initiatives and creation of opportunities for everyone.

    Speaking yesterday at the launch of an entrepreneurship training programme organised for People With Disabilities (PWDs), at Alimosho Local Government Secretariat, Commissioner for Wealth Creation and Employment, Akinyemi Ajigbotafe, said every citizen, regardless of ability, had the chance to achieve financial autonomy and contribute to the economy of the state.

    He said the training was an affirmation of the Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu administration’s efforts to ensure inclusion of Lagosians in its T.H.E.M.E.S Plus Agenda.

    Read Also: EFCC to arraign ex- Anambra Gov Obiano over alleged N4bn fraud

    Ajigbotafe expressed belief that the participants would in future be in a position to contribute their quota to the socio-economic development of the state.

    He acknowledged the challenges of discrimination, marginalisation and mobility faced by persons with disabilities, noting that unemployment rate for adults with disabilities was about nine per cent more than double the national average.

    “It is in realisation of these challenges that Governor Sanwo-Olu recently donated 50 wheel chairs, 170 walking sticks, 75 white canes and 69 crutches to 364 persons living with disabilities, to aid their mobility.”

    Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Dr. Biodun Onayele, recalled that the first edition of the programme produced about 1,000 beneficiaries, who were trained in vocations and given start-up kits across three centres.

  • Fed Govt urged to promote inclusivity for persons with disabilities

    Fed Govt urged to promote inclusivity for persons with disabilities

    The Federal Government has been urged to promote inclusivity for persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities in the country.

    Such disabilities include persons living with autism spectrum disorder, cerebral palsy, fetal alcohol spectrum disorders, Down syndrome, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

    It can also include persons born with Fragile X syndrome, developmental delays, Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) and a lot more.

    National President, Association for Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities of Nigeria (AIDDN), Mrs Joko Dawodo-Omotola made the call yesterday in Abuja at the end of a two-day event to commemorate the International Day of Persons with Disabilities (IDPD).

    Read Also: Police rescue two kidnap victims in Abuja 

    She said: “In recent years, there has been a growing recognition of the challenges faced by persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities worldwide. The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 2015, sets forth a comprehensive framework with 17 Sustainable Development Goals aimed at fostering global progress. However, true inclusivity can only be achieved when vulnerable populations, such as persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities, are at the center of these efforts.

    “Collaboration lies at the heart of achieving the SDGs. By joining hands and working together, we can create an environment where persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities are given equal opportunities to thrive and contribute to society.

    “We must bridge the gap between different sectors government, civil society organizations, healthcare professionals, and academia – to ensure a coordinated and holistic approach towards inclusive sustainable development.”

    President, Joint National Association of Persons with Disabilities (JONAPWD), Abdullahi Aliyu, urged parents to ensure they train and educate their children and wards with any form of disabilities to enable them become independent later in life.

  • Only 12% of Nigerian children with disabilities are in school – UK envoy

    Only 12% of Nigerian children with disabilities are in school – UK envoy

    The Acting British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Gill Atkinson, has said that only 12 percent of Nigerian children with disabilities are in school.

    Atkinson made this disclosure while marking this year’s International Day of Persons with Disabilities.

    In a release from the British High Commission Abuja on Monday, December 4, Atkinson expressed dismay, highlighting the alarming statistic that only 12% of children with disabilities are estimated to be in education.

    Drawing from personal experience, Atkinson emphasised that individuals with disabilities can indeed contribute significantly to society and aims to make a positive impact in Nigeria by raising awareness.

    She said: “While legal developments are part of the necessary change, it is also vital that this is mirrored by culture and attitude changes too.”

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     She noted that hosting a gathering of members of Nigeria’s disability rights community and their advocates was a priority.

    Atkinson, who also lives with a disability, explained that people with disabilities can make a full contribution to society.

    The envoy said: “As I prepare to leave Nigeria, it was a priority for me that the final event I host should bring the spotlight onto the challenges faced by the disabled community in Nigeria.

    “I live with a disability myself and I know that, even with a good employer and a strong legal framework, it can be extremely challenging for people with disabilities to fulfill their capabilities and potential.”