Shimelis TsegayeSenior Policy Research
SpecialistThe African Child Policy Forum
19 March 2011
“Living with disabilities makes life a series of perpetual negotiations, not only with doorways or stairs but also with languages, stares, assumptions and policies … daily survival for many people with disabilities requires them to work with needs and feelings of the non-disabled”
(Holmes 2001:27).
“Living with disabilities makes life a series of perpetual negotiations, not only with doorways or stairs but also with languages, stares, assumptions and policies … daily survival for many people with disabilities requires them to work with needs and feelings of the non-disabled”
(Holmes 2001:27).
ACPF’S WORK ON DISABILITY ACPF’S IDEOLOGICAL ORIENTATION VIS-À-
VIS DISABILITY BACKGROUND
EXTENT OF DISABILITY IN AFRICACAUSES OF DISABILITY IN AFRICA
CHALLENGES & OPPORTUNITIES INADEQUATE LAWS AND POLICIESDEBILITATING DISCOURSE AND ATTITUDELIMITED ACCESS TO SERVICESHOUSEHOLD POVERTYSOME OPPORTUNITIES
CONCLUSION AND PRIORITIES FOR ACTION
An overview on the situation of children with disabilities-as part of ARCW 2008
A retrospective assessment into violence against cwd’s
Cameroon, Ethiopia, Senegal, Uganda and Zambia
Surveys in four countries on the life situation of children with disabilities
Ethiopia, Senegal, South Africa and Uganda Studies on the state of laws & policies
related to children with disabilities, with emphasis on education
Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Sierra Leone, South Africa and Zambia
DISABILITY THEORY OF SOCIAL PATHOLOGY DISABILITY THEORY OF SOCIAL PATHOLOGY
Environmental approach(consequence of environmental factors and service arrangements) •Treatment: through increased individual control of services and supportsPrevention: through elimination of social, economic and physical barriersSocial responsibility: to eliminate systemic barriers
Human rights approach(consequence of social organisation and relationship of individual to society)•Treatment: through reformulation of economic, social and political policy•Prevention: through recognition of conditions of disability as inherent in societySocial responsibility: to provide political and social entitlements
THE POST-STRUCTURAL/RADICAL STRUCTURAL PARADIGM
Disability as a cultural and political construct Disability needs to be decoded and deconstructed in order to set forth the basic orientations and unstated assumptions about disability and people with disabilities. Rejects the impairment-disability dualismit focuses on cultural artifacts and texts to understand what is happening
In any one country at least one person in 10 is disabled by physical, mental or sensory impairment
At least 25 per cent of any population is adversely affected by the presence of disability.
Half a million children go blind every year, of whom 60 per cent die in childhood, leaving a total of about 1.5 million, of whom four-fifths live in the developing world
Between 1999 and 2006, 35 per cent 2-9 year-olds in Djibouti, 31 per cent in Central African Republic and 23 per cent in Sierra Leone lived with at least one reported disability
Poverty and inadequacy access to basic health services –hence most causes are preventable with little investment: 85 per cent of visual impairment and 75 per
cent of blindness can be prevented or cured (WHO 2009 cited in ACPF 2010a).
50 per cent of all cases of deafness and hearing impairments are avoidable through prevention, early diagnosis and management of diseases such as meningitis, measles, mumps, chronic ear infections, malaria and tuberculosis (WHO 2010 cited in ACPF 2010a).
Asphyxia during birth, often resulting from the absence of a skilled attendant, leaves an estimated 1 million children with learning difficulties and impairments such as cerebral palsy (UNICEF 2008b cited in UNESCO 2010).
Maternal iodine deficiency leads to 18 million babies being born with mental disabilities and deficiency in vitamin A leaves about 350,000 children in developing countries blind
About 70 per cent of cases of spina bifida – a disability that affects from 1,000 to 3,000 children per million in Africa – are preventable if folic acid supplements are taken by women before and after pregnancy and during the first trimester
Armed conflicts350-500 people become amputees due to
landmines every dayover 20,000 people in Sierra Leone suffered
amputations during the civil war
Encouraging – but limited- law and policy frameworks A general zeal to ratify International and RHRI Generic constitutional protections ensured Specific legislation put in place in some countries Most legislation littered with deficit and
biomedical discourses – not in keeping with IRHR standards
Laws and policies seldom concretized through specific strategies and programmes
Limited funding- disability at the tail of funding priorities an attempt to link investment to future economic
productivity of cwd’s or to provide for their needs as cheaply as possible - as the burden of the ‘normal’ tax payer
Negative societal and expert attitude & belittling discourses still prevalent In the Kisangani dialect of Lingala (DRC), the term makutu
mafwa is used to refer to people with visual impairments, and literally means “one with dead eyes”. Makutu ve is used to refer to people with hearing impairments, and can be literally translated as “one without ears” (Wa-Mungai 2009).
donkoro in Amharic – in Ethiopia – is used to refer to the hearing impaired, and literally means “one who cannot understand” or “idiot”
Tendencies to hide cwd’s from public purview Children in some communities are kept shackled in
windowless storerooms, hot household courtyards with little or no interaction, even with those within the household
More than 79 per cent of children with visual impairments are not registered in Ethiopia, while in Uganda, about 79 per cent of children with multiple disabilities are not registered at birth.
Systemic concealment of pwd’s-spatial shifting of ‘the problem’ of disability & spatial discrimination-the way buildings and other public facilities are designed and built, which tend to effectively exclude persons with a certain type of disability from entryMarking ‘otherness’ through spatial demarcations and social practices of categorisation and the ordering of groups in society – e.g. mental asylums and residential/institutional care systems, special schools Spatial markers which set them apart, socially estranged and outside the mainstream of society, effectively
Demonizing & criminalizing tendencies still prevalent In Central Afri. Rep., boys with physical deformities or with
autism are accused of being witches and subjected to abuse
In that country, witchcraft is a criminal offense under the penal code, punishable by execution in cases where the ‘witch’ is accused of homicide
Article 339(2) of the Ethiopian Civil Code equates the mentally disabled with drunkards, drug addicts and spendthrifts.
Drug addiction is a criminal offense punishable by imprisonment & a fine (Article 525(4)(b) of the Ethiopian Criminal Code)
In some cultures, persons accused of wrong doing such as theft and adultery would have their hands cut off as a punishment.
zeru the Swahili word for ghost is used to refer to Albinos
Violence still commonchildren with disabilities are less likely to be able
to protect themselves, flee from attackers, or report attackers to the police.
girls with hearing and speech impairments could be seized by assailants and – given their inability to scream – victimised with relative ease.
In some cases, witnesses were seen as being ‘incompetent’, when in many cases the level of language used in court proceedings was in fact too complex, and incomprehensible to many of the victims
Some force cwd’s for begging
The heart-breaking plight of albinos - Albinos are hunted to death for their flesh and blood believed to add potency to black magic rituals, or to bring good fortunes - tens of thousands in hiding
Miners for gold, rubies and mineral tanzanite are said to pay large sums for charms made with a potion mixed from albino body parts.
Fishermen believe if they weave the red hair from an albino into nets, fish will be attracted by the glimmer
A complete dismembered body, including all limbs, genitals, ears, tongue and nose, sells for up to $75,000
Limited access to health and education services Many of the children live in households that suffer
severe deprivation Live in inaccessible and ill-adapted housing
98 per cent of parents of children with disabilities surveyed in Senegal reported that the doors of their houses were not wide enough to allow free mobility
only 9 per cent of children with disabilities in Ethiopia surveyed were reported to have access to appropriately modified toilets.
Lack of assistive and adaptive devices -in Ethiopia, the average cost of crutches is about USD 8, and a wheel chair costs USD 224
Inaccessible school and health infrastructures In some schools visited in Sierra Leone- disabled
children have to crawl to the toilet or be carried on the back of their peers
Poor access to water and sanitation services
VERY FEW CHILDREN GET ACCESS TO SCHOOL 76% of children with disabilities in Sierra Leone are out of school; in
Ethiopia less than 1% of disabled children have access to education; 67% of children with disabilities aged 6-14 years are not attending any form of schooling in the Central African Republic; in Senegal, 64% of child respondents to the ACPF survey did not attend school at all, and 55% had never had the opportunity to attend.
EPISTEMIC ACCESS DEPLORABLY LOWThe majority lack proper assistive educational devices
A ream of Braille paper in Zambia costs Kwacha 300,000 (equivalent to USD 64), while an ordinary ream is about Kwacha 30,000 (equivalent to USD 6.4) – ten times less expensive.
In Ethiopia, an imported hearing aid has an estimated cost of about USD 160
A lack of teachers proficient in sign language and the limited pedagogic involvement of parents – mainly attributed to limited parental education and the inability of parents to communicate in sign languageInappropriate school environment & infrastructure
Social assistance in the form of the Care Dependency Grant (CDG), a non-contributory monthly cash transfer of approximately 144 USD per month to caregivers of children with disabilities who receive permanent care.
Fee-abolition encouraging school participation School-feeding programmes–addressing
nutritional and intellectual challenges Commendable awareness creation campaigns –
mainly NGO-driven Tough legal measures on abusers seen in some
countries
A deep level of political commitment and a fundamental shift in thinking and practice at both state and individual levels
Challenge negative attitudes to disability, through public sensitisation and education programmes
Put in place appropriate legislation & policy in keeping with current human rights and disability thinking & practice
Build the capacity of disability organisations for self-advocacy
Ensure adequate funding for: Improving & expanding existing services for children with
disabilities & for providing a skilled supply of relevant personnel;
Invest in both preventive and curative healthcare programmes and nutritional interventions; and attain efficiency through inter-sectoral co-ordination
Reduce household poverty, through cash and in-kind transfer programmes
Put in place proper research, data collection and monitoring systems
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