The Mercury

Deafening silence in Sona on SA’s 3 million disabled people. Why?

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DEAR President Ramaphosa, Listening to your State of the Nation Address, I was once again proud to be a South African citizen.

I was especially pleased that you addressed discrimina­tion, abuse and violence against women and children and that you are committed to implementi­ng the decisions of the National Summit on Gender-Based Violence and Femicide. But not once did you mention the plight of People with Disabiliti­es, people – especially young people who want to rise to your Thuma Mina call to realise the vision of a democratic and equitable society.

South Africa has about 3 million persons living with disabiliti­es, equating to about 7.5% of the population. Historical­ly, people with disabiliti­es have been excluded from the majority of meaningful activities in society, including access to education, health and economic opportunit­ies. Disabiliti­es are most often seen as medical defects that must be cured by doctors, a restrictiv­e approach known as the “medical model”. In most societies, people with disabiliti­es are an oppressed minority, and are often seen as having a negative effect on society.

In response to this systemic bias, disability advocates and researcher­s have called for greater attention to the need to break down historic barriers that prevent people with disabiliti­es from fully participat­ing in mainstream activities, effectivel­y promoting their inclusion as full members of society and empowering them to maximise their own level of self-determinat­ion

In the Sona, you envision a South Africa in which every man, woman and child is provided with the opportunit­y and means to make a better life for themselves.

Surely this vision should also embrace people with disabiliti­es, not only to overcome the divisions between black and white, rich and poor, rural and urban, between sexes, sexual orientatio­ns and language groups, but also between the able-bodied and disabled?

At a dinner in Davos during the recent World Economic Forum you used the term “the nine lost years”, referring to a period when we as a country could have done so much better.

This is not only true on a socio-economic level, but also when it comes to the plight of people living with disabiliti­es. I was appointed to the presidenti­al task team under your predecesso­r, and during these nine lost years, we only met once.

As you are aware, I am a staunch advocate for the rights of this marginalis­ed community. By invoking the words “daring greatly” of Theodore Roosevelt towards the end of the Sona 2019, we should dare to do more, recollect the losses of the past, and set out on a new course where people with disabiliti­es are embraced as full human beings and active citizens of this country.

DR MARLENE LE ROUX

Former member of the Paralympic committee. She also served as a commission­er on the Constituti­onal Commission for the Protection of the Rights of Cultural and Linguistic Communitie­s with discretion­ary money who do not have to buy or sell, are likely to continue to wait and watch how things unfold as we lead up to the national election on Wednesday, May 8. SAMUEL SEEFF

Chairman, Seeff Property Group

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