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Disability
is not Inability |
::ZIMBABWE: Disabled children embattled by education
policy
Date: 16/10/2006
Resource type: Disability News
[HARARE, 13 October] - A new report shows that Zimbabwe's
education policy for children with disabilities is skewed, with
67 percent of disabled children having no access to any form of
schooling.
"Clearly, children with disabilities are the worst disadvantaged,
and experience the most difficult barriers in accessing education,"
said a recently published report by the National Association of
Societies for the Care of the Handicapped (NASCOH).
Zimbabwe's record of 93 percent literacy among its school-going
children has ranked among the best on the continent, but a sizeable
proportion of the country's roughly 200,000 disabled children
have slipped through net.
Maria Chisunga is convinced that God has cursed her. Both her
sons have been confined to their three-roomed home in the Mbare
township of the capital, Harare, since they were afflicted by
polio during infancy.
"I don't know what crime God is punishing me for. I live
with the sorrow of seeing my relatives, friends and neighbours
avoiding me because I happened to bear disabled children,"
said Chisunga, 38, a sole breadwinner who survives by selling
tomatoes on the street.
Her husband, who has threatened to divorce her for cursing the
family, has always opposed educating the children - a 16-year-old
who cannot walk or talk and his deaf-mute 12-year-old brother.
"It would be sheer waste of money to send the children to
school because there is nothing they would bring into the family,"
is the husband's excuse.
Even if Chisunga did send her sons to school, education has been
considered a privilege for the able-bodied, said NASCOH, although
"it is children with disabilities who need education most"
because they face the "twin evils of poverty and discrimination".
According to the society, all children with disabilities received
inadequate formal education - a situation compounded by a general
lack of specialised schools, and made worse in rural areas where
such children often spent their days "idly in the company
of caregivers who are non-responsive and likely to regard them
as a burden".
Physically and mentally challenged children face numerous obstacles,
from stigmatisation in their communities and sexual abuse to prohibitive
school fees and transport costs, in an economic environment where
inflation is hovering at an annual rate of 1,000 percent and unemployment
is over 70 percent, resulting in dwindling government spending
on social welfare.
"Inflation has pushed up the cost of school uniforms, stationery,
public examination fees and bus fares, further compounding the
constraints to access of education faced by children with disabilities
who are generally poor," said NASCOH.
Although the society preferred an inclusive type of education,
in which children with disabilities attended schools that also
enrolled nonchallenged students, the environment was not conducive
to such a policy said Theresa Makwara, acting coordinator of the
Zimbabwe Parents of Children with Disabilities Association (ZPCDA).
"Lumping children with different capacities is not workable,
given our present setups in schools. Almost all the general schools
lack facilities, such as toilets that accommodate wheelchairs
... Most school heads are insensitive to the needs of children
with disabilities because they did not receive special training,
while teachers allocated to the needy pupils are discriminated
against and ostracised by their colleagues, who seem not to understand
them," Makwara told IRIN.
Even though the job of specialised teachers is more demanding,
they received the same salaries as their counterparts, a situation
that led to low morale and high turnover, with many taking their
skills to such countries as Britain where the pay and working
conditions were better.
"There are a few vocational schools for the children, some
of them offering boarding facilities which are extremely expensive.
In addition, the schools are located in isolated areas and most
of the buses that are meant to ferry the children are constantly
breaking down," she said.
The government was not allocating any money to challenged learners,
who needed expensive learning equipment such as Braille, hearing
aids, wheelchairs and tape recorders, despite its commitment to
do so, and it was proving difficult to source money from donors.
Many parents had withdrawn their disabled children from school
after learning that they had been sexually abused, Makwara said.
A 2004 report by the Save the Children Fund of Norway indicated
that 87 percent of children needing special care in Zimbabwe were
being sexually abused, more than half of them were found to be
HIV-positive, and 47 percent were mentally challenged, said the
report.
"The marginalisation of children with disabilities in the
education system is worsened by the fact that a significant number
of them are orphans whose parents died of AIDS, while we also
have cases of teenage parents who cannot fend for their affected
children and are sometimes disabled themselves," said Makwara.
James Elder, head of the media and advocacy unit at the UN Children's
Fund in Zimbabwe, which is helping to source grants and scholarships
for affected children, said the organisation did not condone the
exclusion of children with disabilities from schools. "Instead,
we support a range of school-based initiatives to include and
work with children with disabilities," Elder said in a written
response to questions from IRIN.
He commented that it was a "mark of a country's moral maturity
when the most vulnerable are accorded equal opportunities in society".
Category: Education
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