Tag: disabilities

  • Group urges INEC to support people with disabilities

    A non-governmental organisation, the Centre for Citizens With Disabilities, has appealed to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to provide support for people with disabilities in the September 22 Osun governorship election.

    The Executive Director of the Centre, David Anyaele, advised the INEC to have proper data of people with disabilities to be able to provide adequate electoral materials for them.

    He also advised the electoral body to train its staff and deploy some of them to where there would be special needs for people with disabilities.

    Anyaele who was represented by Senior Programme Officer, Mr. Kola Ogunbiyi, said past experience has shown some of the challenges people with disabilities face during elections as a result of lack of provision for them by the INEC.

    He said: “We have made recommendations to INEC to provide separate ballot papers for the blind but up till now there is no positive response. Also, we asked INEC to have proper data of people with disabilities in the provision of electoral materials for them. We believe INEC should be made to train their staff and employ sign interpreters, as well as provide Braille in future elections.

     

  • Buhari to unveil special scheme for people with disabilities

    PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari has hinted of plans to initiate special support scheme for people with disabilities.

    Buhari said this during a gala night organised by the ActionAid Nigeria in partnership with the Federal Ministry of Information and Culture to support the less-privileged through arts.

    It was held on Sunday night in Abuja to raise funds for the rural communities and the disabled persons.

    The President, who was represented by his Senior Special Assistant on Monitoring and Evaluation, Mr. Tunde Osibamowo, decried the social neglect of the vulnerable group.

    He stressed that despite the various social interventions to reduce poverty and unemployment, the special group appeared to be non-inclusive, thus the need for the proposed intervention.

    The President explained that plans were ongoing to organise a town hall meeting to get direct feedback from the targeted group.

    “A lot of people, who are vulnerable, have great artistic sense and particularly the disabled people.

    “Most definitely, at the moment, we are planning a lot of programmes and projects in the very near future for disabled people. They are not as well represented in a lot of government’s programmes.

    “Within the next few months, we are planning a lot of engagements for them,” Buhari said.

    According to him, a lot of disabled people are intelligent and resourceful and need to be supported.

    ActionAid Country Director Ene Obi said many Nigerians were creative and committed to artistic growth, especially in rural communities.

  • ‘Stop discriminating against persons with disabilities’

    ‘Stop discriminating against persons with disabilities’

    The Lagos State Office of the Public Defender (OPD) has urged people to shun discrimination against Persons Living with Disability (PLWD).

    OPD Director, Mrs. Olubukola Salami, said PLWD had the same rights as their able-bodied counterparts under the law.

    She spoke last week at the National Stadium, Lagos, on the theme: ‘Say no to discrimination against Persons Living with Disability’, as the agency marked OPDZero Discrimination Day.

    The event featured OPD officials and participants from the Lagos State Office for Disability Affairs (LASODA).

    Nollywood actor and member, Lagos State House of Assembly, representing Surulere Constituency 1, Desmond Elliot, joined the group on a roadshow from the National Stadium to Ojuelegba.

    Salami said: “We must take all measures to ensure the full and equal enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms, including equal access to health, education and recreational services by Persons Living with Disability to ensure the recognition of their dignity, to promote their self-reliance, and to facilitate their active participation in the state.

    “In order to ensure all inclusive governance, the state government established the Lagos State Office for Disability Affairs (LASODA) to cater for their needs through the Lagos State Special People’s Law.

    “The law seeks to uphold the rights of persons living with any form of disability (PWDs) in Lagos State by safeguarding them against any form of discrimination and giving them equal rights and opportunities.

    “OPD is determined to ensure that the poor, the physically challenged, pensioners, widows and other disadvantaged members of the society who cannot afford the legal fees of lawyers are not left without necessary support, to make life meaningful to them.”

    She urged people to stop treating those PLWD with pity “rather, they should be treated with respect. All human being are equal.”

     

     

  • CAN begins moves to uplift persons with disabilities

    CAN begins moves to uplift persons with disabilities

    The National Executive Council of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) has approved an eight-point recommendation from its ad hoc committee to tackle the challenges facing persons with disabilities (PWDs) in the nation.

    The four-man committee headed by Archbishop Magnus Atilade recommended a national day for awareness, sensitisation and care of PWDs in churches, starting from July 22.

    It also urged the umbrella Christian body to develop a draft policy for disability matters in all the national, zonal, state and local government areas of CAN.

    The committee further called for establishment of a disability desk at all levels of CAN operations to network with other bodies and organisations working with PWDs.

    On training, the committee, which has Rev Dr Ikiye, Rev Dr Ibrahim Wushishi and Bishop Stephen Adegbite as members, advised CAN to run continuous skill programmes for PWDs, especially women and children.

    It also called for establishment of a scholarship board to assist in educating persons with disabilities.

    NEC members applauded the committee for a job well done, approving all its recommendations with immediate effect.

    Atilade said with the adoption of the recommendations, the committee will proceed immediately to implementation.

    “Christian churches have a history of being involved with PWDs. We have them in our churches and all around. It is our responsibility to give them a lift and make life worth living for them.

    “We have to support them with resources, training and what have you to ensure they are better human beings with more productivity,” he explained.

  • Project Alert raises the alarm on violence  against women with disabilities

    Project Alert raises the alarm on violence against women with disabilities

    STARTING from last Wednesday, September 23, Project Alert on Violence against Women, an NGO, will be embarking on enlightenment campaigns to stop violence against women with disabilities amongst communities in Lagos. The exercise, the organisation’s Executive Director, Josephine Effah-Chukwuma, said, is with support from Christoffel Blinden Mission, CBM Office Nigeria and in collaboration with Disability Rights Advocacy Centre, DRAC .

    Titled “Networking to Stop Violence Against Women & Girls with Disabilities Project,” Effah-Chukwuma at a media briefing last week, said the campaign is to bring to public notice “yet another form of Gender-based Violence, GBV, which has been going on for long, but remain largely under-reported and shrouded in silence and secrecy. We’re talking about GBV and women with disabilities.”

    She said Gender based Violence as defined by the United Nations is “any act of violence that can result in, or is likely to result in physical, sexual or mental harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or private (domestic) life.” She added that this includes women with disabilities.

    While not acquiescing to the pointed question of whether there have been an increase in cases to warrant such new campaign dimension, Effah-Chukwuma said she prefers to say that there have been ‘recurrent cases reported’ in recent time.

    She said, “This project is based on some of the cases we see in our office,” stressing that “abuse of women with disability is double jeopardy on such women because they cannot defend themselves nor fight back.”

    Citing two specific cases that have caught her attention this year alone, she spoke of a woman on wheelchair, whose husband always denied access to her wheelchair whenever they had a quarrel, leaving her helpless and dejected; and a young cripple lady, who went through the ignominy of being forcefully raped several times by two able-bodied men.

    She said it is such few cases that are fuelling suspicion that there may be more unreported cases which victims may be keeping to themselves due to ignorance.

    The project is therefore aimed at creating awareness on the various forms of violence, discrimination and exclusion, that women with disabilities are subjected to. Aside just Lagos, Ekiti, Jigawa and Bauchi, she said very little is being done legally amongst the 36 states of the federation, to protect or ameliorate the plight of women with disabilities.

    Project Alert will therefore be carrying out four-pronged activities over the next three months. The first, a one-day meeting with women with disabilities, has already taken place. It was titled Understanding GBV & Women with Disabilities. The second, another one-day meeting, will be an interaction with religious leaders, aimed at enlightening them on their role in the issue. This will be followed by another one-day meeting with religious leaders; and finally, a two-day meeting with civil society groups on their role in the anomaly.

  • Finally, succour for persons living with disabilities

    SIR: Despite the cliché – ‘there is ability in disability’, there are innumerable cultural, political, economic and social barriers that have served to deter full participation of persons with mental or physical disabilities in various gatherings be it in academic circle, sports, arts, business, politics, social events and even religious gatherings, thereby hindering their well-being.

    While some are born with physical and mental disabilities, some end up as casualties of a sudden, yet are equally accorded second-class status in our polity. Succinctly, the doctrine of human frailty should make all appreciate that today one may be fit, yet not have the same luxury of agility tomorrow. This buttresses the need to show utmost concern to the needs of the physically and mentally challenged in our society by providing the enabling environment for them to realize their full potentials in all spheres of human endeavour and closing the structural nature of the prevalent gap.

    It has been recognized that domestic legislations remain one of the most effective means of facilitating social change and improving the status of disabled persons. Thus the Senate passed the Discrimination Against Persons with Disabilities (Prohibition) Bill 2016. There are numerous laudable provisions of the Bill including but not limited to: protection against discrimination of PLWD, easy access to public premises/road/sidewalk, prohibition of use of persons with disabilities to solicit for alms, free education, free healthcare, right to work and employment, right to participation in politics, a National Commission to address complaints of harassment, discrimination and harmful practices amongst others.

    Remarkably, Lagos State is at the fore-front of recognizing that there is ability in disability and has a Special People’s Law of 2011 to give PLWD a sense of belonging and had only recently launched a Disability Trust Fund. Happily, in Lagos State, upon registration and issuance with a certificate and badge by the Lagos State Office of Disability Affairs, there are numerous opportunities such as: free ride for physically-challenged persons on Bus Rapid Transit and LAGBUS,exclusive right to designated parking lots, special consideration for access to the Lagos State Employment Trust Fund facility, amongst others.

    The Federal Government must be humble to take her cue from Lagos and even exceed the giant strides the United States of America has recorded by virtue of the Americans with Disabilities Act, (ADA), which was introduced on July 26, 1990. Of note, the ADA was bolstered by the Supreme Court’s ruling in the Olmstead decision which determined that, under the ADA, people with disabilities cannot be unnecessarily segregated. Similarly, the Affordable Care Act tremendously advanced health equity and reduced health care disparities among Americans.

    The Discrimination Against Persons with Disabilities (Prohibition) Bill 2016, though laudable will only produce the desired result if and only if there is sincere commitment on the part of the populace and the relevant authoritiesto make life more comfortable for Persons Living with Disabilities.

     

    *Michael O. Ogunjobi,

     Lagos.

  • Ambode launches N500m Disability Trust Fund

    Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode has launched a N500million Disability Trust Fund for physically challenged persons.

    He said the fund was in line with provisions of Section 12 of the Special People’s Law and called on individuals, corporate organisations, Non-governmental organisations and other stakeholders to support the fund to maximise the disabilities of challenged persons.

    Ambode, who spoke at an event held at the Lagos House, Ikeja, tagged ‘Ability in Disability’, said he chose to celebrate Democracy Day with persons living with disabilities.

    He said that the decision to host them was not only in line with the commitment to run an all-inclusive government but to emphasise his pledge to give every individual a voice in his administration.

    He said the event afforded them the opportunity to showcase their talents just as he enjoined Nigerians to encourage and show love rather than pity them.
    “Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, let me use this opportunity to appeal to all Lagosians to embrace people living with disabilities. Do not discriminate against them. All they require is care, support and opportunity to live a fulfilled and productive life just like any of us,” he said.

  • ‘How we have survived despite our disabilities’

    ‘How we have survived despite our disabilities’

    It’s always a great feeling to perform extra-ordinary feats, but it’s even more so, when this act is done despite a terrible disability. Daniel Adeleye x-rays the lives of some young men who have refused to be caged in a corner by their disabilities.

    Tuesday August 21, 1992 started like every other day for Sikiru Omiesan Adewale, a machine operator in a plastic producing company; bright, beautiful and full of hopes. But by 10.am that morning, the gleam of hope for a brighter future for indefatigable Adewale was suddenly replaced with a bleak one. By sheer accident, the machine he had operated for years slammed into his right hand, turning it into mangled flesh and bone in an instant. Long faces of horror greeted doctors’ declaration that bubbly Adewale’s right hand would have to be dismembered.

    However, following the amputation, the 30-something year-old refused to be down-cast.

    He said: “After the accident and my right hand was amputated; I summoned courage and began to think of my future and what I could do for a living again. With my little education, I could not afford to be a waste. Although I was highly depressed, I took a decision right there in the hospital and called on a nurse to get me a pen and an exercise book. I began practising with my left hand, because I was right-handed before the accident. First, I learnt to write alphabets A – Z, and later I practised how to write words. That was how I switched to doing things with my left hand. Although life has placed me in Canyon’s gloom, being an eager beaver, I summoned courage. I can actually say that I work harder now than before the accident; maybe because of how I trained myself. I even continued playing football as pastime after the amputation. I only stopped recently because of age.”

    When asked if he felt any different going on the football pitch with only one hand, Adewale said “I felt as if nothing had happen to any part of my body. I enjoyed dribbling my opponents and I even scored against them. Even now, I still organise football competition in the company where I work. We play inter-departmental matches and also play against other companies.”

    On how he feels seeing other people with their full complements, while he is condemned to going about with a stump for a right hand, Adewale said one of his greatest fears when the accident first happened and the idea of amputation was muted was losing his friends and peers at work. But that has not been the case.

    He says, “I have more friends now than before. People in and outside my company have been so wonderful to me. There are however two occasions when I really wished I had my two hands. First was the day I was discharged from the hospital, when children from the neighbourhood took to their heels on sighting me with one hand. Second was when some of my friends and I went to a certain farm. On that farm, we were plucking mangoes and cashew. My friends climbed the trees and began displaying all manner of acrobatics. On those two days, I was highly depressed at my condition. But I immediately put those moments behind me, because it could happen to any human being. Before the accident, I was seeing people in that form too.”

    What is it that motivates him? We ask.

    Adewale said “I derive motivation whenever I see someone who is hard working. I always feel uncomfortable calling people to do something for me because I believe I can do them  myself, even if it takes me longer time. Can you imagine that I buckle my wrist watch myself? I wash clothes, and I drive a car!”

    Surprised, at his last claim, this reporter wanted to know how he manages to drive a car. His response was: “Driving is something I had been doing before the accident; it has become like a part of me. So after the incident, it occurred to me that even people with two hands occasionally drive with one hand; so that thought galvanised me. One day my brother came with his car; unknown to him, I took the car key to see if my imagination can come to reality. I started the ignition, and to my surprise the car was moving. I was able to control it and I found it easy to do.”

    He practically threw a jab at lazy able-bodied youths, when he declared that he does a lot of chores himself, including washing, farming, riding bicycles and even participating in the monthly Environmental Sanitation Day clean-up.

    “Sometimes when I go on a delivery mission, because I now work with my company’s marketing department, I would be the first person to step out of the vehicle and start off-loading the products. One day my manager (marketing manager) nearly slapped one of our staff, when he sighted me carrying the goods while the other guy stood akimbo looking at me. I was the one who was now pleading for him. That is because I took a decision not to be a waste product after the accident. Look around and you’d see many of my equivalents on the streets, begging for alms; that perhaps is why people look at me with surprise when I give them alms, even though we are supposedly in the same condition. I tell you, being slothful is worse than death.”

    Speaking more on his condition, Adewale said “Before the accident, my dream was to have a university degree; it doesn’t matter if I used it to work or not. But I stopped along the way because of the accident. Now at age 54, I am still going to pursue my original dream of acquiring university degree at National Open University of Nigeria, NOUN. That will be an impressive accomplishment for me. It will also give me a sense of fulfillment.”

    Aside the ambition to obtain a degree, Adewale says he will also like to run his own business venture. “God willing, after my retirement from the company where I work now, I hope to venture into business and probably delve into local politics in Oyo State. I’m someone who likes to see to the affairs of people around me, so I’d be glad to play my part in whatever way to help my people politically or in form of philanthropy.”

     

    Ibrahim Lateef, the one-armed bus driver

    Adewale is not alone in this tale of dogged refusal to bow to a cruel fate. The case of Ibrahim Lateef is almost similar, except that he is nine years younger and a commercial driver.

    Lateef, who drives popular Paragon passenger bus otherwise known as ‘danfo,’ shuttles between Agege and Mushin in Lagos Metropolis. He recalled how he got involved in a ghastly accident on the ever-busy Lagos-Ibadan Expressway on a fateful Saturday morning, while traveling with his family. Luckily, Lateef’s wife and children came out of the accident unhurt, but he unfortunately lost his left hand, as it got cut off in the crash.

    According to him, “When the accident happened and I lost one hand, it was as if the world had come to an end. I went back to my parents in Ibadan, to receive treatment. I was in that condition when news came that my wife has left for another man, because she was not ready to go through my darkest moment with me. I was saddened by her sudden change of heart. To say the news hit me like thunderbolt is to grossly understate a glaring fact. I thought I would never become anything again in life; I even thought of committing suicide.”

    Lateef’s voice had a low rhythmic tenor, with his lips moving with a slight tremor as he narrated his ordeal. “It came to a stage, unknown to my parents, when begging for alms was a weapon of last resort for me to survive. Along the line, a small still voice ministered to my heart against what I was doing to myself. At about that same time, my parents and siblings got wind of my new lifestyle and came to take me home. Thereafter, they encouraged me and tried to make me see that my condition is not the end of the road and that enlivened me.

    “Because of this, I put myself together and returned to Lagos. When I got to Lagos, I went to Brown Street, at Oshodi. The fraternal sympathies from friends, the then leaders of NURTW in the zone brightened my spirit and made me face my life squarely. Since I was a commercial driver before the accident, I decided to toe that line, but I couldn’t do much. My people at Brown Street retrained me in driving and I started all over again as a bus conductor. From there I was able to move vehicle, until I became an expert at driving again.”

    On how he obtained driver’s license even with one hand, he said, a friend helped him to get it, but when it became necessary to renew it, he went to Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) office.

    “When I got to FRSC, they asked me how the accident happened, I explained to them. I also let them know that I was a commercial driver before the accident. They conducted a driving test for me and discovered that I could drive very well. The only thing they told me after the test was that I should try and fix an artificial hand, to enable me feel more comfortable while driving. But to me I don’t see it as necessary, because I can even drive more than most people that have two hands.”

    So now The Nation asked how he copes with the street urchins otherwise known as “Agbero” at motor parks and bus stops. We also wanted to know how he copes with the unending arguments and insult from aggressive passengers.

    First, Lateef says he endures the Area boys, and as for the passengers, he says nothing concerns him with them, because most of them may not even know that he has only one hand.

    Asked if he ever considered his present condition as a stigma and a setback, Lateef’s reply was: “I wish I had two hands, I would have done better than this. In driving a commercial bus, there are lots of insults, especially from the passengers. Assuming I had two hands and I am able to further my education to a degree level, that would have possibly earned me a white collar job and  me due respect. Sometimes I consider my condition  shameful but at the same time, I thank God for giving me the grace to try in my little way to achieve what some people out there, even with their two hands, cannot achieve. I believe that destiny cannot be altered, what will be, will be. So I accept my fate. And I am using this opportunity to appeal to those people out there who have been unwittingly discriminating against physically handicapped to have a rethink.”

    Isiaka Adio

    39 year-old Isiaka Adio, fondly called ‘One Nation’ by his friends was hit by a stray bullet from sporadic gunshots by a careless mobile police officer in 2001. As a result, his right leg was amputated.

    Adio had graduated, following years of apprenticeship as a panel beater in 2001; but his inability to raise funds to establish himself, forced him to take up commercial bus driving as a temporary measure.

    Recalled Adio, “After I completed my training in panel beating, I went into driving and I shuttled between pen cinema and Ojodu/Berger axis to raise money for my graduation and buy tools that the job required. However, one morning, about 8 months after I started this struggle, my bus developed a fault and for some reason, I swapped roles with my conductor, so I could monitor the vehicle, while he drove. During one of the trips, we were heading towards Ojodu/Berger, after dropping some passengers at a bus stop, when I suddenly noticed that some mobile police officers riding in a bus were chasing us. So we decided to park by the Agege Stadium and find out what the problem was, but as I came down from the bus to ask what we had done wrong, the next thing we heard were gunshots and a bullet hit me in my right thigh. To cut the long story short, the Mopol ran away, and I was taken to General Hospital, Ikeja for treatment. But to add salt to injury, the doctors were on strike, and I was in that hospital for two weeks without adequate attention from any doctor. By that time, the leg had begun decomposing and stinking; this prompted my aunty to take me to another hospital, where the leg was eventually amputated.”

    As a result of the amputation, Adio said he became disillusioned. “It took the timely intervention of my elder brother to stop me, when one night, I attempted to poison myself. That was because I never knew I could ever become anything again in life. He was with me in the hospital for the five months that I spent there, pleading and feeding me with words of wisdom and encouragement. One day, they brought another patient whose condition was more critical than mine and he died few days later in the process. When I saw this, I realized that when there is life, there is hope. So I summoned courage to live again.”

    However, following that resolve, Adio said, “I was without a job for 12 years, sitting in the bus stops and motor parks. During this period, I got married and was blessed with three children.”

    Upon this revelation, one couldn’t help but ask how he got married under his condition and without any source of income.

    His response: “Before the incident, my wife and I were already courting. And when it happened like this, she refused to dump me. She stood by me throughout the months I spent in the hospital. My wife is a virtuous woman. Among her virtues are loyalty, courage and truthfulness.”

    Asked how he got back to driving and why he chose to drive even with one leg, Adio said “With one leg, I couldn’t go back to panel beating. So one day, my friend, Femi, had closed for the day and he ran out of fuel in his bus. He sent his conductor to buy fuel in a can to refill the tank, but after refilling, the ignition was taking longer time to start; so they had to push it and his conductor alone could not push it. I requested that I sat at the driver’s seat and start the ignition, while he and his conductor pushed the vehicle. To my greatest surprise, I discovered that I could still drive. So I quickly pleaded with my friend to let me drive the bus the following day, so I could earn some money to feed my family. He accepted, and that’s how I came back to driving.”

    But how does he cope driving with one leg, and left leg for that matter?

    Adio said: “I had no choice but to do something. I needed to cater for my family; my parents were not financially balance and my children were growing older every day. To pay their school fees was becoming increasingly difficult, and there was no other means of eking a livelihood. I am clearly in pains doing the job, but what can I do? Sometimes I go on just one trip and back, and usually, the person who gives me the bus does it out of compassion, so I can put food on the table for my family. Besides, I cannot continue using my disability as an excuse to beg for money every day.”

    We also asked how he fared with the tough conditions of the Federal Road Safety Corps, FRSC and the Vehicle Inspection Officers, VIO to obtain his driver’s license.

    “Disabled people are classified under category J in the FRSC plan.” He answered. “What they did was conduct a test for me to see if truly I can drive, and I passed. The VIO occasionally stop me on the road, but they are always being gentle with me. Besides, most of them knew me before the unfortunate incident.”

    On the issue of the ‘agberos’ or transport unions, Adio says, he doesn’t give them up to what other people give because they know his condition.

    FRSC, VIO speak

    How safe is the public with physically challenged drivers on the road. Can they be trusted to drive carefully enough, considering that even full-bodied people still exhibit some inadequacies that sometimes result in fatal accidents? Is the procedure of getting a driver’s license for the physically challenged the same with able-bodied people? We sought answers from officers of the responsible agencies.

    Asst. Corps Commander Leye Adegboyega, Ota FRSC Unit Command, says the procedure is the same, but the group where the physically handicapped falls in FRSC’s plan for obtaining a driver’s license is different.

    Adegboyega said, “The physically handicapped is classified under plan J of FRSC. Though issuance of driver’s license is a tripartite arrangement among FRSC, VIO and board of internal revenue, before a form is downloaded to any applicant, be it physically challenged or able-bodied, we need to access the extent of their physical fitness by presenting to us their physical fitness certificate, which is mandatory. After this, we take them to the field for driving test before we send them to VIO and later to the board of internal revenue, where they will get driver’s permit.”

    Echoing the same position, head of Vehicle Inspection Office, VIO Ota, Kehinde Paul Osukoya, says a physically challenged person is expected to obtain learner’s permit and also must have attended a private driving school with medical report.

    “Although a person may be medically fit to drive but VIO have the right to use its discretion to find out if the person is really capable. Medical fitness and capability are two different ball games. For instance, a person that has one eye may be medically fit to drive, but if anything happens to the one eye he uses to drive, he may not be able to control the vehicle.” Osukoya said.

    Explaining further, the VIO officer says a person that has only one leg cannot be issued a driver’s license because the position may be awkward to the throttle and break peddlers. Even if medical doctor says he can drive, such case is not acceptable unless the car such person wants to drive has been converted for that purpose.

    “Sometimes, people with amputated hand or somebody who does not have fingers to grip the wheel steering, cannot be given a driver’s license, unless he obtains it through the back door, which is now endemic in our society. Fingers have vital roles to play during driving.”

    He frowns at the claim by some people that they are more comfortable driving with one hand, than when they are using two hands.

    Osukoya also expresses dissatisfaction at the policy of government that makes the issuance of a driver’s license a tripartite alliance. He says the policy encourages fake driver’s license.

    “Government policies must be abided by, but the long process the applicant’s have to go through has contributed largely to the issue of fake driver’s license, because many applicants are coward of procedures. It’s supposed to be one short arrangement, where people could get their license at the right place and devoid of extortions.”

  • Persons with disabilities shut down Calabar

    Persons with disabilities shut down Calabar

    Over 300 members of the Joint National Association of Persons with Disabilities yesterday blocked the Murtala Muhammed Highway in Calabar to protest the alleged insensitivity of the Cross River State government to their plight.

    This crippled businesses in Calabar for hours as the highway is the only road in and out of the city. Most of them just laid on the tarmac.

    They carried placards, reading: “Why are we treated like less human, stigmatised in our state? “If disability is a crime, give us amnesty,” “Governor Ayade, respect the United Nations Convention on human rights of persons with disability,” “Governor Ayade, give us appointment, we also voted you into office, disability can affect anyone,” among others.

    Chairman of the association Ogar Inyang said: “The government of Cross River State is insensitive to our existence; they behave as if we do not exist. They treat us as if we have committed crime being disabled.

    “We’ve exhausted all avenues to dialogue with government. We wrote to the governor, deputy governor, chief of staff, we wrote to the House of Assembly, wrote to the commissioner of Police, made efforts to see the wife of the governor to plead with her to talk to her husband to listen to us but all efforts were in vain.

    “We need a secretariat and vehicles to cater for our transport need. One of us should be appointed as special adviser on persons with disabilities to give us a sense of belonging.”

    Also speaking, Etim Okon, the group’s Southern Senatorial District coordinator, said the solution to the quagmire was for Governor Ayade to address them in person, else “no retreat, no surrender.”

    “We are on the road because the government has refused to respond to our efforts. We have been dehumanised, reduced to beggars despite our intellectual capabilities.

    “The government is giving appointment, SA this, SA that, but we are never considered.  Last week, we staged a warning protest but nobody answered us. Today’s protest is a child’s play compared to the next one. We shall close down this state for days.

    “In Nigeria, we have almost five million people with disability and a number of them are in Cross River. They are not catered for in the budget. Let me ask, what is government’s policy on the education and health of people with disabilities? They are talking of housing, what are their plans for housing for people with disabilities?

    “Ordinarily, people pay N100 from this place to Watt market, but we spent as high as N400. Nobody cares about us. Disability is not bought in the market, if it was, none of us would buy. Ayade, as a learned man, knows how people like us should be treated but he is turning a blind eye, why, why?”

    Commissioner for Sustainable Development Mr Oliver Orok said: “This is the first time we are meeting since I assumed office. They have not come to complain about anything. So, I am wondering why they should do that. We are passionate about what they are passing through but they have never come to us with their complaints.  Those things are things that can be taken care of. Government is not God that will now sit down and know what your problem is.  Government has made it you will not pay tax. They have 10 per cent of employment for them, among others. As I talk to you, there are so many of them in my office working here just to make sure we accommodate them.  Those things are not issues. If it is appointments, is it not to announce appointments. If it is buses, we can get buses for them. But the governor is not in town. So I plead with them to give us one month, let them come and we sit on a round table and talk. They have never come here to talk or complain.”

  • Encouraging persons living with disabilities

    SIR: Today December 3, the world over commemorates the International Day of Persons with Disabilities. The United Nations (UN) Decade of Disabled Persons was held from 1983 to 1992 to enable governments and organizations at all levels to implement measures to improve the life of disabled persons all over the world.

    As the decade drew to a close on October 14, 1992, the UN General Assembly proclaimed December 3 of every year as the International Day of Disabled Persons. It was first observed on December 3, 1992. Subsequently, on December 18, 2007, the Assembly changed the observance’s name from the ‘International Day of Disabled Persons’ to the ‘International Day of Persons with Disabilities’. The new name was first used in 2008.

    The term ‘disability’ broadly describes impairment in a person’s ability to function as an individual, caused by changes in several subsystems of the body or in mental health. The degree of disability may range from mild to moderate, severe, or profound. A person might also be suffering from multiple disabilities. Irrespective of the degree or nature of the disability, it can be measured objectively or subjectively.

    The condition could be inherited or genetically transmitted; congenital, meaning caused by a mother’s infection or other diseases gotten prior to or during pregnancy as well as soon after birth, or via embryonic/foetal developmental irregularities. It could also be acquired, such as conditions caused by illness or injury; or even of unknown origin, as the case may be.

    Whichever type that is involved, it is worth noting that an individual with disability can function as effective as, even more effective or efficient than, able-bodied individuals if given the needed support or encouragement.

    Against this backdrop, we are expected to always endeavour to do everything within our reach and humanly possible to ensure that persons living disabilities at our respective jurisdictions are duly given a sense of belonging starting from the classrooms to working places with a view to strengthening nation-building.

    It is no longer news that in the labour market as well as political settings, the degree of discrimination faced by persons living with disabilities is on the rise. In view of this, there’s a compelling need for the legislators to enact a strict law that would stipulates a basic statutory percentage of persons with disabilities expected to be found in any public sector, or a certain minimum number of persons with disabilities that must be employed or appointed in the civil service or political arena, as the case might be, in accordance with the recommendations of the United Nations.

    Recently, several prospective students with disabilities such as HIV/AIDS or physical challenges were deprived of their chances of securing admission thereby making most of them lose interest of furthering their education.

    As Nigeria joins the rest of the world to commemorate the International Day of Persons with Disabilities, I enjoin every Nigerian and civil society organizations to at all times in their respective capacities endeavour to protect the rights of the teeming persons living with disabilities found within our various communities. We can do this by confronting any norm or perception that condones any kind of discrimination against them.

     

    • Comr Fred Doc Nwaozor

    Owerri