The Executive Secretary of
Ghana’s National Council for Persons With Disabilities (NCPD) Kwamina
Dadzie-Dennis, has called on Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies
(MMDAs) in the country to employ persons with disabilities (PWDs) who are
knowledgeable and skilful.
According to Mr. Dadzie-Dennis, it defies logic when MMDAs refuse to
engage the services of PWDs after spending the tax-payer’s money to train them
to acquire skills in vocations such as carpentry, sewing/dressmaking,
shoe-making, catering, ICT, electrical and electronic work among others.
“We (NCPD) are saying that, after using the PWDs’ share of the
district assembly’s common fund to train them in such vocations, engage them to
manufacture furniture for schools in your area....engage those who have skills
in catering under the school feeding programme. This is not too much to ask
for.
“PWDs with skills in ICT can also be engaged to maintain computers
and other electronic equipment of all decentralised departments. Engaging the
services of PWDs is a prudent and best way to promote inclusiveness in our local
governance system”, Mr. Dadzie-Dennis made this call at a two-day meeting and
training of leadership of various PWD groups and state agencies in Tamale.
He observed that, when MMDAs seriously begin to consider the
knowledge and skill sets of PWDs and engage them fairly as they would do in the
case of persons without disabilities, many PWDs would be lifted out of misery
and poverty.
The meeting and training programme in Tamale which was organised by
the Human Rights Advocacy Centre (HRAC) in collaboration with the NCPD, Ghana
Federation of Disability Organisations (GFDOs) and NORSAAC, was sponsored by
the US State Department in Accra.
The programme was part of the implementation of a project dubbed: “Improving
Conditions For PWDs”. The objectives of the programme were among other
things, to discuss the implementation of the PWDs Act (Act 715, 2006) and the
Mental Health Act (MHA), Act 846, 2012; gaps between the laws and actual
practices; and challenges inhibiting implementation.
Passed by the Parliament of Ghana into law in
2006, the PWDs Act seeks, among other things, to guarantee PWDs access to
public places, free general and specialist medical care, education, employment
and transportation. It also seeks to ensure that PWDs play an active and
central role in all aspects of life, regulate the commitments and responsibilities
of state and private duty-bearers.
The MHA on the other hand was passed
in 2012, and seeks to bring an improvement towards the care of poor, vulnerable
people with mental illness or epilepsy, protection of their human rights and
promotion of their participation in restoration and recovery. The law, which
has been hailed by the WHO as one of the best legislations worldwide, also seeks
to ensure that adequate provision of resources has nine parts consisting of a
Mental Health Board, a Service, a Review Tribunal, Visiting Committee,
Voluntary Treatment and Involuntary Treatment.
Sadly, many PWDs and persons with mental illness and epilepsy
(PWMIE) are accommodated in prayer camps and healing centres, owing to
prevailing beliefs that disabilities arise from evil spirits. Some victims are
chained to trees outside in the heat/cold weather with often inadequate care.
This is largely due to the fact that, the government is yet to begin with the
implementation of the PWDs law after nearly a decade of its enactment.
The Northern Regional Coordinator of GFDOs Abraham Boah, also noted
that many PWDs were increasingly being denied employment in both the public and
private sectors. “The situation is causing a lot of frustration among our
members and some have resorted to begging on the streets in spite of good
academic qualifications.....their children can’t have education because there
is no money at home”, he disclosed.
Mr. Boah further lamented over the inaccessible nature of many
public buildings and urged a speedy implementation of the disability law, which
he believes, could address the situation. “This is one of the reasons why PWDs
are denied employment....they can’t have access to their offices even when
they’re employed”, he observed.
About 10 percent of Ghana’s total population (approximately 2.2
million) have different forms of disabilities. They consist of the visually
impaired, hearing impaired, crippled, amputated, epileptic/ mentally retarded,
albino, autistic, dyslexic among others.
There are inadequate special schools for these groups of people and
even where they exist, they are poorly resourced. From the highest to the
lowest echelons of the entire Ghanaian society, persons with disabilities are
discriminated against.
Take for instance, disability sports; they are treated differently as
compared to the other national teams made up of able-bodied young men and
women. No training facilities for them, no training kits and always, no funds
for them to participate in local and international competitions. Even where the
funds are there, it is insufficient to cater for their needs. It is a pathetic
situation.
Wendy Abbey, Technical Advisor, HRAC |
Technical Advisor at HRAC Wendy Abbey urged government to begin with
the implementation of the PWDs law since that held the key to the door through
which PWDs could demand access to many things as spelt out in the law.
There was also the need to carry out advocacy and outreach
programmes, she noted, adding that “These should target PWDs, PWMIE, service
providers, families of PWDs/PWMIE and government to ensure the realisation of
the rights of PWDs/PWMIE as stipulated by the two Acts and all other
international regulations”, she stressed.
While encouraging private institutions to employ PWDs since they
stood to benefit tax rebates from the state, Ms. Abbey also entreated civil
society organisations that promote the interest of PWDs to begin to take legal
actions against public and private institutions that infringe upon the rights
of PWDs and PWMIE.
Meanwhile, participants appealed to government to provide special
schools such as the school for the deaf and blind with teaching and learning
tools and equip health facilities with special diagnostic equipment so as to ensure
early detection of disabilities among children.
They also asked government to consider awarding scholarship to
people studying sign language at the tertiary level as well as ensure the
teaching and learning of basic sign language and interpretation in all basic
schools in the country in order to promote peaceful coexistence among the
hearing and hearing impaired.
They further recommended government establish special schools for
different disability groups in each of the ten administrative regions of Ghana
so as to ensure close monitoring and involvement by families and relations of
such children.
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