Manila Bulletin

War photograph­er focuses on plight of 1 billion disabled people

- By ALEX WHITING

LONDON, United Kingdom (Thomson Reuters Foundation) — When war photograph­er Graeme Robertson met a boy in Uganda whose skin looked as if it was falling off his face, he was shocked to discover the boy had been attacked for being blind.

“Sometimes when you have a blind child, they will try and kill them, set them on fire, lock them in a hut for the rest of their life, forget about them,” Robertson said, speaking from his home in London.

It is unclear who carries out the attacks, but it is likely to be relatives or members of the community acting under pressure from community elders, he said.

“I was angry that people thought that just because they were disabled, they weren’t worth anything.

“I felt I could help. I knew that they were so badly mutilated, they would make powerful images, and if somebody saw these images they would feel something,” he said.

Robertson, an award-winning photograph­er who works for the London-based Guardian newspaper, approached an internatio­nal charity for the blind, Sightsaver­s, and together they organized a photograph­y exhibition highlighti­ng the issue.

The exhibition, based on trips to Uganda and India, opened for the second time in London on Aug. 25.

Over the past 20 years, Robertson has covered wars and famines and spent years living in Baghdad and Afghanista­n.

“It’s not like I’m not used to seeing real human suffering, but this particular project really affected me,” he said.

Robertson, who is badly dyslexic, was treated very differentl­y from other children at school and told he would never succeed.

“Everybody should be given at least a chance. I felt these disabled people were not even given the opportunit­y to succeed,” said the father of two young children.

“This one girl I photograph­ed... she was really badly treated in the community – raped, beaten up, horrific stuff. I couldn’t believe this was happening.”

Robertson said communitie­s lack understand­ing about disability, money for equipment, and access to specialist schools.

Children able to attend a specialist school blossomed under the encouragem­ent and attention they received, he said.

There are an estimated one billion people with disabiliti­es, about 80 percent of whom live in developing countries, according to Sightsaver­s.

They were left out of a 15-year internatio­nal push, which expires this year, to improve living standards in developing countries, including access to health and education, and a reduction in poverty, the charity said.

Uganda has achieved free universal education, but nearly half of all children with disabiliti­es are out of school because of the lack of equipment and staff needed to support them, according to Sightsaver­s.

“This means that over the 15 years, the lives of people with disabiliti­es have got worse,” Natasha Kennedy, policy campaigns manager at Sightsaver­s, said.

Disability has now been included in a new series of developmen­t targets to be agreed by global leaders at a UN summit in September, known as the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

People with disabiliti­es are included in all the targets, including universal access to education and healthcare, and ending poverty.

“It’s huge because it means that for the first time... government­s and donors must include people with disability as a principle of global developmen­t and not as an afterthoug­ht,” Kennedy said.

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