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Disability
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:: Kenya: Report on Ambitious National Disability Conference
By Phitalis Were Masakhwe
In January 2004, Kenya hosted the first National Conference focusing
on the African Decade of Persons with Disabilities, 1999 - 2009.
Though a belated development, this conference should herald a
new era for Kenyans with disabilities. Will it do that?
For starters, what is the African Decade for Persons with Disabilities?
What is its origins and goal? What is the expected outcome of
the decade? Will it be another wasted decade? This decade has
its roots and veins in the United Nations Decade of People with
Disabilities.
The origin of "disability decades"
The United Nations Decade of Disabled Persons, 1983 - 1992, was
a period in which UN member states were expected to implement
the world programme of Action concerning PWDs. The Decade raised
many expectations on the part of disabled people everywhere. It
had been hoped that after the UN Decade, the quality of life of
disabled people in the world would have improved and that they
would be part of mainstream society. While some states did something
of note during the Decade, others just let it pass by. The UN
decade had its successes and failures.
The successes were more pronounced in the Northern Hemisphere
than elsewhere. It created an opportunity for disabled people
to meet globally to discuss their issues; it resulted in an improvement
in attitudes in some parts of the world towards people with disabilities;
it resulted in the formulation of the Standard Rules on Equalization
of Opportunities; it led to the creation of more organizations
of disabled people during the decade than at any other time, and
to the strengthening of those already in existence; it led to
the creation of the African Rehabilitation Institute (ARI) by
the Organization of African Unity to spearhead disability issues
in Africa.
However, the Decade had major setbacks too. The UN decade was
not well publicized by the UN; and some governments, despite supporting
the UN resolution, did nothing to promote the Decade. The UN itself
and many governments did not provide adequate funding for the
Decade's activities. The funds that were mobilized for the Decade
were not adequately monitored, resulting in ineffectiveness of
some programmes. The UN decade was, by and large, a global approach
to the problems of disability and the solutions that were offered
were general and global, or based on assumptions of availability
of economic and technical resources.
The experience of the UN decade led to calls for a decade of
disabled people in various continents, including Africa, providing
a local approach to the problems of disability and thus developing
local solutions to those problems.
Kenyan objectives
In the same vein, the continental Action Plan for the African
Decade of Persons with Disabilities calls on African Union member
states to internalize and domesticate the Decade objectives. Member
states are required to meet, reflect and develop national strategies
and plans on the decade. It was therefore fitting that the first
Kenya National Conference on the Decade, held on 18 th - 23 rd
January, 2004 in Mombasa, had the theme, "Kenya: Reflection
and Action".
To start with, the goal of African decade is the full participation,
equality and empowerment of people with disabilities in Africa.
Against that background, the Mombasa conference had the following
objectives:
1) to develop and launch the country plan of Action for the Decade,
to explore the status of disabled persons in Kenya and formulate
a comprehensive plan of action in accordance with the Decade objectives,
2) to share Decade experiences from other countries and draw lessons
to inform the process of developing Kenya's National Decade Plan
of Action, and 3) to develop and put in place mechanisms for monitoring
the country's Decade Plan of Action.
Conference highlights
The conference ably hosted by the ministry of Gender, Sports,
Culture and Social Services, a couple of disability-oriented NGOs
and the United Disabled Persons of Kenya (UDPK) brought together
a mixed grill of government representatives, players in the civil
and faith based organizations, notable professionals and disability
advocates drawn from the public, private and civil society, not
forgetting the media.
The conference was graced by the presence of, and addressed by
the Vice president of Disabled People International ( DPI), African
Region, Mr. Khalfan Khalfan, and by Hon. Alex Ndezi, a powerful
Ugandan member of parliament who has a hearing and speech impairment.
Mr Ndezi is also the National Chair, National Union of Disabled
People of Uganda ( NUDIPU). Finally Mr. Prayat Punogn from Thailand
shared the experiences of the Asian Pacific disability, to mention
but a few.
The conference organizers had also sent invitations to leading
disability luminaries in South Africa. They however could not
attend because the conference coincided with the meeting of the
UN Working Group on the Disabled People's Convention in New York.
The National Steering Committee for the conference carefully chose
what was to be discussed and factored in the national strategy
and plan. The topics included a discussion on international Human
Rights Instruments as they appertain to people with disabilities,
historical development of the African Decade, the Asia Pacific
Decade experiences and lessons learnt, poverty, development and
disability, service provision and disability, the issue of universal
design, education, health and training, disability and media,
dynamic and responsive disabled people's organizations, gender,
parents, ageing and children with disabilities, positive images--
breaking barriers, policy and legislation and the new Kenyans
with Disability Act 2003.
So far so good! But, will this conference be a turning point
in our history? Will this conference lead to renaissance in Kenyan
disability matters? Will it galvanize national consciousness and
commitment to disabled Kenyans? Indeed it should!!
Key areas in draft strategy and plan
A look at key areas in the draft strategy and plan may help. Delegates
broadly agreed on the following key issues as a way forward for
the Decade in Kenya:
There will be need for massive awareness and publicizing of the
Decade across the country. The Ministry of Information and Tourism,
development partners and the media should take a great lead on
this. Development partners, some of whom were represented in this
conference, such as UNDP and USAID, will need to recommit themselves
morally and materially to support the operationalisation of not
only the national strategy and plan for the Decade, but also the
implementation of the new Kenyans with Disability Act, 2003.
Capacity development, effective use of media
Consensus was also arrived on the need for serious capacity development
of parents' and disabled people's organizations. These groups
and organizations were found wanting in many respects. This has
adversely affected their capacity for self-advocacy and engagement,
demand for service, including quality control and participation.
Delegates underscored the indispensable role of the media. They
recommended that disabled persons be supported to learn the ropes
of effective media engagement for purposes of public awareness,
stigma reduction, positive image and the use of media as a powerful
tool of advocacy.
Self-representation
Delegates also agreed that there will be need to put in place
an effective strategy to enhance self-representation of disabled
persons in key organs of planning and decision making. In this
respect, they called on the Kenya government to include a member
of parliament with disability among the 5 MPs that are to represent
Kenya in the Africa Union Parliament.
Call for national secretariat & African disability rights
convention
To monitor, coordinate and harmonize progress of the decade, delegates
agreed that the government establish a secretariat with adequate
resources and appoint a national standing committee to track progress
of the Kenya chapter on the Decade. As a follow-up of what is
contained in the Continental Action Plan objective 8, the government
was asked to support efforts aimed at the development of an African
Convention on the rights of people with disabilities, inclusion
of disability issues in the implementation of human rights instruments
at national level and support the development of sign and tactile
languages and recognize them as the official languages of deaf
and deaf-blind people respectively.
Delegates also agreed that there is a need to lobby government
to allocate responsibility for coordination of disability related
policies, programmes and services to the President's Office and
to establish a disability desk in all government ministries and
state organs. This recommendation is borrowed from the South African
model, which in addition to having a parent ministry for disability,
has an office of the status of disabled people in the Presidency.
Lastly, delegates strongly recommended that the Ministry of Planning
and National Development in conjunction with development partners
should move with speed to undertake a national census on disability.
This conference was indeed a mouthful and only time will tell
as to whether it translates into enhanced lives for Kenyans with
Disabilities.
The writer is a regular commentator on disability and development.
Source Disabilityworld
A bimonthly web-zine of international disability news
and views
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