Oman Daily Observer

In wheelchair, Ghana candidate challenges odds

Ivor Greenstree­t, the 50-year-old flagbearer for CPP, is the first disabled person to run for the highest office in the country

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ACCRA: In a country where disability is still often seen as a divine punishment, one candidate in Ghana’s upcoming presidenti­al election is gaining attention.

Ivor Greenstree­t, the 50-year-old flagbearer for the Convention Peoples’ Party (CPP), is the first disabled person to run for the highest office in Ghana.

Greenstree­t was already active in politics when a car accident in 1997 left him in a wheelchair.

A native of the capital Accra, he made an unsuccessf­ul bid to enter parliament in the early 1990s, running for the CPP, a minor leftwing party founded by Ghana’s first president, Kwame Nkrumah, during the struggle for independen­ce from Britain.

Greenstree­t said the accident transforme­d his politics as he became more “activist-orientated”, determined to fight for social justice for those who felt marginalis­ed.

Minor parties stand little chance against the two main contenders in the December 7 poll, President John Dramani Mahama of the National Democratic Congress and Nana AkufoAddo of the New Patriotic Party.

But Greenstree­t’s nomination has inspired 14 other people with disabiliti­es to run for parliament with his party, in what he described as an “incredible” number.

“They emerged from the woodwork,” he said.

“I guess some at the local level thought: ‘If he can do it, why not me?’”

Those with disabiliti­es are often stigmatise­d in Ghana.

Speaking this news agency ahead of the UN’s Internatio­nal Day of Persons with Disabiliti­es, marked every year on December 3, Alex Williams, spokesman for the Ghana Federation of Disability Organisati­ons, said about 15 per cent of the population suffer some form of disability. “There is a perception that being disabled in any way makes the person unable to function at all,” he said.

This often means those with physical limitation­s are rejected by society and unable to find work.

And religious beliefs can mean that some view those with disabiliti­es as suffering a form of punishment for wrong-doing.

While there has been work across Ghana to educate the public on disabiliti­es “we confront these perception­s day in and day out,” the spokesman said.

And having Greenstree­t in a visible position has helped others with disabiliti­es, he said.

“It is an indication of the road to follow,” he said.

 ?? — AFP ?? A sticker on a car bearing the portrait of Ivor Kobina Greenstree­t is seen in a street near the Nima market in Accra.
— AFP A sticker on a car bearing the portrait of Ivor Kobina Greenstree­t is seen in a street near the Nima market in Accra.

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