The Scotsman

Voices of disabled must be heeded

The recovery and reconstruc­tion in Ukraine, when it comes, must foreground disability, writes Dr Kiril Sharapov

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Soon after the Covid-19 pandemic was declared by WHO in March 2020, it became clear it would have a substantia­l impact on disabled people – from the increased risk of poor outcomes from the virus and reduced access to essential healthcare, to the effect of social distancing and isolation measures.

Robust data collection systems did help some government­s, including in the UK and Scotland, to identify the impact of the pandemic on the most vulnerable individual­s and communitie­s, and to set up additional protection measures. These included shielding arrangemen­ts for those deemed ‘extremely vulnerable’, and their prioritisa­tion for vaccinatio­n. In other countries though, the situation has been much worse and persons with disabiliti­es were not identified as a priority and often overlooked altogether.

At the end of 2020, the UK Government, throughuk research and innovation, sup po rte du k-based researcher­s to work with colleagues in low and middle-income countries to explore the impact of the pandemic on persons with disabiliti­es and to find out how recovery efforts could include disability considerat­ions.

At edinburgh na pier, we are proud to have a range of internatio­nal research networks which included the National Academy of Science of Ukraine. By working together with the academic colleagues and disability activists in Ukraine, we designed are search projectwhi­ch put persons with disabiliti­es in ukraine and their voice sand experience­s of living through the pandemic at its centre.

For disability activists across the world, the slogan ‘Nothing About Us

Without Us’ is both a principle and a demand for meaningful inclusion and recognitio­n of the multiple voices of persons with disabiliti­es in all aspects of social, economic and political life. This includes having barrier free access to shops, schools, hospitals, museums – everything that makes up the normal ‘everyday’ which non-disabled people often take for granted, to having the voices of persons with disabiliti­es heard at all levels of political decision-making. Participat­ion and collaborat­ion are key words for researcher­s who are truly concerned about people they are ‘researchin­g with’ rather than ‘researchin­g on’.

We collected evidence from more than 100 disability charities in Ukraine about how the pandemic affected their organisati­ons. We recruited and trained more than 20 disability activists to interview 300 disabled persons from across Ukraine about their experience­s of living through the pandemic. Some of the responses were shocking and heart-breaking but they needed to be heard. We worked with persons with disabiliti­es to develop a list of recommenda­tions for the Ukrainian authoritie­s on how to include disability considerat­ions in their ongoing response to the pandemic and to any future health emergency.

However, nobody could have anticipate­d the scale or the magnitude of another emergency – the Russian invasion. People with disabiliti­es are among the most affected in situations of war. in the current context where the course of this war is uncertain, and as the humanitari­an relief efforts are hindered,disability charities are one of the last remaining systems of support for people they have been taking care of within the context of the pandemic and now within the context of war. They continue, where they can, to provide support to the most vulnerable individual­sand their families, and their expertise must inform all current and future relief efforts provided by the government of Ukraine and by internatio­nal donors and humanitari­an agencies.

As researcher­s, we are working with our partners in Ukraine to develop a research project to document the experience­s of persons with disabiliti­es of

living through unimaginab­le violence and terror. these voices must be key in ensuring that the recovery and reconstruc­tion in Ukraine, when it comes (and it will), foreground disability and recognise the immense toll of war on persons with disabiliti­es who are among the most marginalis­ed in any crisis-affected community.

Dr Kiril Sharapov, from the School of Applied Sciences at Edinburgh Napier University

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 ?? ?? 0 A rescuer assists a disabled man after he was evacuated from the city of Irpin to the outskirts of Ukrainian capital Kyiv last month
0 A rescuer assists a disabled man after he was evacuated from the city of Irpin to the outskirts of Ukrainian capital Kyiv last month

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