Tag: Disability Bill

  • Missing disability bill causes ripples at National Assembly

    Where is the Disability Bill? This is the question persons with disabilities want the National Assembly to answer without further delay.

    The Executive Director, Centre for Citizens with Disabilities, David Anyaele, who addressed journalists in Abuja as part of activities to mark this year’s international week for persons with disabilities, claimed that the whereabouts of the Nigeria Disability Bill, is unknown.

    Anyaele said that the alarm over “the missing bill” became imperative following fruitless efforts to trace the whereabouts of the bill at the National Assembly.

    He said that the quest to get the bill passed started in 2000 and lamented that 17 years after, instead of passing the bill, “we are told that the bill is missing with nobody to say exactly where to locate it.”

    He noted that the bill appears to have become a cash cow for the National Assembly members with every session of the parliament showing interest in it, sponsoring and holding public hearing, only to disappoint at the end.

    Anyaele vowed that this time around, persons with disabilities in the country are determined to ensure that the bill is passed at all cost.

    He said that they have concluded arrangements not only to march round the Eagle Square in Abuja but also to occupy the National Assembly to force the two chambers to fish out the bill wherever it is hidden.

    He wondered why the bill will be declared missing at a time it had been passed by the two chambers and the harmonization adopted.

    He noted that they have been tracking the bill up to December 6, 2016 when the Senate version of the bill was adopted at a conference committee meeting of the Senate and the House of Representatives.

    Anyaele also said that on March 3rd 2017, disability advocates visited the Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, to extract a commitment that the bill would be passed.

    He added, “As I speak to you, the bill is nowhere to be found. We are asking where the Nigeria Disability Bill is. The National Assembly must tell Nigerians where the Disability Bill is.

    “It becomes necessary to call on the National Assembly to locate the bill, pass it and transmit it to the president for assent. Without passage of the bill, the lives and welfare of over 25 million persons with disabilities in Nigeria will continue to be in disarray.

    “It is the duty of the state to protect the vulnerable group in the society. We are drawing attention of Nigerians to the missing bill.

    “We are asking why the bill must last this long. It has turned to a cash cow. Every session that come, they will promote the disability bill, organize public hearing, spend money and there it ends.

    ‘We will hold a warning protest, move round the Eagle Square to draw attention to the missing bill and ask that the bill be located wherever it is.”

    On how he got to know that the bill is missing, Anyaele said that he was at the National Assembly on December 4th only to be told that the whereabouts of the bill was unknown.

    He said that he spoke with relevant individuals who should know and was “shocked to learn that nobody knew where the bill is.”

    He said, “We want to demonstrate that we are serious. The National Assembly should tell us where the bill is. We don’t need a crowd to demand for the bill. We want to benefit from the bill. The pain of living with disability must stop now.”

    Some of the flyers distributed at the brief read: “Disability is not inability; persons with disabilities have great potentials; Support the right of persons with disabilities; Support the passage of the Nigeria Disability Bill now; The society discriminate against us because of our disabilities; Say no to discrimination against persons with disabilities; Section 42 of the Nigerian Constitution is silent on prohibition of discrimination on the grounds of disability.”

    Some National Assembly members spoken to expressed concern that the bill has been dragging and now “declared missing.”

    A senator who spoke on condition of anonymity because “I am not the spokesperson of the Senate” promised to take up the matter with the Senate leadership.

  • FG will facilitate passage of Disability Bill, says Alhassan

    FG will facilitate passage of Disability Bill, says Alhassan

    The Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Hajia Jummai Alhassan, has assured that the federal government will facilitate the passage of the Nigerian Disability Bill.

    She spoke in Abuja at an event to mark the 2015 International Day of Persons with Disabilities with the theme ‘Inclusion Matters: Access and Empowerment for people of All Abilities.’

    The theme was aimed at empowering people with disability towards maintaining the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) agenda.

    She said disability was one of the major challenges that continually threaten human existence and the attainment of meaningful development, noting that marking the day was a wake-up call in ensuring the domestication of the law in Nigeria.

    She further explained that the UN conventions on the rights of persons with Disabilities by Nigeria in 2007 and 2010 were geared towards the development, care and welfare of persons with disabilities.

    The minister also said that the aim of the call was to awaken UN member states toward encouraging and promoting activities that would ensure interaction, mainstreaming and empowerment of persons with disabilities.

    While urging the society to assist and empower people with disabilities, especially in the areas of job creation, health, nutrition, education as well as social protection, the minister added, “It is only when people are empowered that they can prepare to take advantage of opportunities and become agents of change and can more readily embrace their civic responsibilities.’’

    In her address, Mrs. Binta Bello, the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development, said the objective of the day was to create awareness, promote understanding of disability issues and mobilise support for dignity and rights of persons with disabilities.

    Bello, who gave an estimated number of 19 million Nigerians living with disabilities, noted that it was an area that must be given adequate attention.

    The permanent secretary urged stakeholders to work out plans that would meet the needs of such persons, adding that budgetary allocations could not shoulder all their needs.

  • Senate seeks accelerated consideration of disability Bill

    Senate seeks accelerated consideration of disability Bill

    The disability Bill scaled sending reading in Senate Wednesday.

    The Bill sponsored by Senator Francis Alimikhena (Edo North) seeks to ensure full integration of persons with disability into the larger society.

    It made provision for the education, health care and protection of the social, economic and civil rights of persons with disability.

    Alimikhena in his lead debate quoted Section 14(2)(b) of the Constitution which provides that “the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government.

    He noted that disability abounds everywhere, from north to south and from west to east.

    The lawmaker said that the bitter truth is that the Senate cannot afford to be disinterested in the matter because disability may occur at any time in a man’s life either congenitally, through accident or even by natural development as one attains old age.

    He asked the Senate to commend the efforts of the 6th and 7th National Assembly which culminated in the passage of the disability Bill but unfortunately did not receive presidential assent.

    He said that passage of the Bill is the surest and most potent way of ensuring compliance with international best practices in the treatment and relation with persons living with disability.

    Alimikhena who quoted the World Health Organisation, said that 20 million Nigerians are living with disability which makes them the largest minority group in the country.

    He said, “They have the highest rate of unemployment, poverty and have the lowest level of education among any minority group.”

    He lamented that there is no commission specifically overseeing the affairs of the people with disability.

  • Disability Bill scales second reading

    A Bill for an Act to ensure full integration of persons with disability into the society scaled the second reading in the Senate yesterday.

    The Bill, sponsored by Senator Nurudeen Abatemi-Usman, also has a provision for the establishment of a National Commission for Persons with Disabilities and vests it with the responsibility for their education, health care and the protection of their social, economic, civil rights and other related matters.

    Abatemi-Usman said the Bill, if passed, would be a major milestone in the lives of the people living with disabilities, as it seeks to check all forms of discriminations against them, while also putting in place measures that would address their conditions.

    Senator Oluremi Tinubu (Lagos Central) said the Senate should consider the Bill in its entirety to make it a wholesome legislation that even generations yet unborn would hail the Senate for.