A Ho-based NGO, Voice
of People with Disability, Ghana, (Voice-Ghana), has launched a campaign dubbed
‘Disabled children for school’ aimed at sensitizing parents, guardians and
caregivers of Children with Disability (CWDs)
on the need to enroll their disabled children in school.
Addressing the press at
a stakeholders’ meeting in Ho on Tuesday, Mr. Francis Asong, director of Voice-Ghana
said despite national and international enactments which seeks to guarantee the
right of Persons with Disabilities (PWDs) to education, the prevalence of anti-disability
sentiments and beliefs as well as institutional flaws had hindered the education
of the disabled.
Mr. Asong noted that majority
of parents still discriminate against their disabled children in the area of
formal education specially, because to them it is a waste of resources.
As a result “most
children with disability are not formally educated and this reduces their
chances of accessing gainful and meaningful employment and to be self-informed
about human rights and health issues to live descent lives”, Mr. Asong stated.
As part of the
campaign, Mr. Asong noted that, Voice-Ghana would engage the Ho municipal assembly
to consider enacting a byelaw to waive the payment of levies including PTA dues
for CWDs at the basic school level in the municipality.
This intervention, he
said “would invariably reduce the financial burden on many parents and
caregivers of children with disabilities who are already overburdened with
financial commitments in supporting their disabled children…”
The campaign which is
in collaboration with of Governance Issues Forum, a Ho-based NGO and the Special
Education Directorate of the Ho Municipal Ghana Education Service (GES), is part
of a three-year advocacy project with funding from STAR-Ghana.
According to the survey, 47 out of the 51 parents/guardians of CWDs’ are unaware of the provisions under section 16(1)(2) of the Disability Act, 715 of 2006, which states that;
(1) ‘A parent, guardian or custodian of a child with disability of school going age shall enroll the child in a school.
(2).
A parent, guardian or custodian who contravenes subsection (1) commits an
offence and is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding ten penalty
units, or to a term of imprisonment not exceeding fourteen days.’
Mr Michael Tsikudo,
Ho Municipal GES Special Education Officer, said it was the right of the disabled
to go to mainstream schools. He therfore called for the support of all to
eradicate the inequalities perpetuated against the disabled in the society.
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