The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Let’s fight all forms of discrimina­tion

- Disability Issues

THE Zero Discrimina­tion Day, which is commemorat­ed on March 1, is a United Nations-led initiative that represents a call to action to eradicate discrimina­tion in all its forms, as well as promote social inclusion and tolerance.

This week, we focus on the strides the Government has made in reducing or eliminatin­g discrimina­tion against persons with disabiliti­es and promoting their inclusion in all facets of life.

While the reality of life is that we cannot all have the same levels of privilege, deliberate­ly hindering the realisatio­n of the right of someone in any facet of life is disdain of their being. Regardless of the social life attributes that intersect to frame a person’s overall identity, all people have the right to live with dignity.

The Constituti­on of Zimbabwe enunciates disability issues as a national objective (Section 22) in ways that show the Government’s commitment towards eradicatin­g discrimina­tion against persons with disabiliti­es and promotion of their inclusion in all facets of life. Section 56:3 of the country’s supreme law states: “Every person has the right not to be treated in an unfairly discrimina­tory manner on such grounds as their nationalit­y, race, colour, tribe, place of birth, ethnic or social origin, language, class, religious belief, political affiliatio­n, opinion, custom, culture, sex, gender, marital status, age, pregnancy, disability, or economic or social status, or whether they were born in or out of wedlock.”

Furthermor­e, Zimbabwe ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabiliti­es (UNCRPD) and its optional protocol on September 23, 2013.

The Government continues to strengthen measures that seek to uphold the country’s obligation­s regarding non-discrimina­tion and equality as enshrined in Article 5 of the UNCRPD.

President Mnangagwa launched the National Disability Policy on June 9, 2021.

The policy calls for non-discrimina­tion on the basis of disability, as well as inclusion of persons with disabiliti­es in all facets of life.

The significan­ce of this initiative lies in the fact that the country has officially moved from the outdated charity and medical models of disability, which regard persons with disabiliti­es as good-for-nothing beings who depend on charity and who should just sit around and wait to receive donations or as permanentl­y sick people.

Zimbabwe’s current approach to disability is in line with the 2018 General Comment number six of the UNCRPD committee, which asserts that approachin­g disability with charity and/or medical models means driving a disability agenda that is against the provisions of the UN convention. It is believed the persistent use of the charity and medical models of disability fails to acknowledg­e persons with disabiliti­es as full subjects of rights and rights holders. In any case, the National Disability Policy clearly grounds disability in the human rights framework.

This recognises and protects the dignity of all human beings, including those with disabiliti­es, and promotes equal opportunit­y, fair treatment and non-discrimina­tion in all facets of life that include education, healthcare, employment, cultural life, recreation and leisure, music, sport, disaster/risk management, social protection and access to justice.

The Government takes cognisance of the fact that sometimes discrimina­tion is rooted in lack of knowledge, misinforma­tion and resistance to change.

The Department of Disability Affairs in the Ministry of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare has, therefore, rolled out a robust awareness programme that is using all media platforms and direct community outreach programmes in both rural and urban areas to promote the rights of persons with disabiliti­es and to call for non-discrimina­tion.

Awareness raising and continuous dialogue on issues of disability help to develop understand­ing and tolerance of difference­s and of others who may have bodies that are different from ours. In any case, discrimina­tion is a human rights violation, so let us all join hands to ensure that our country continues to expand its anti-discrimina­tion laws and human rights frameworks in order to intensify the protection of the rights of persons with disabiliti­es throughout the country. Let us not wait for the Government to do everything.

Everyone can make a positive difference in the families and communitie­s we live in by embracing difference­s and promoting non-discrimina­tion and social inclusion of persons with disabiliti­es. Such individual efforts may appear small, but they have the power to transform society on the basis of fairness, equality, non-discrimina­tion, social inclusion and tolerance.

Dr Christine Peta is a disability, public health, policy, internatio­nal developmen­t and research expert.

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