The Manica Post

Disability mainstream­ing key to Vision 2030

- Tendai Gukutikwa

MINISTER of State for Manicaland Provincial Affairs and Devolution, Advocate Misheck Mugadza said the Second Republic is walking the talk and fulfilling all its promises on disability empowermen­ts.

Speaking during a disability mainstream­ing and inclusion workshop held in Mutare on Tuesday, Minister Mugadza said disability is cross-cutting all the 14 pillars of the National Developmen­t Strategy (NDS1).

“A clarion call has been made to mainstream and include disability in national developmen­t. As a result, significan­t work has been done since the adoption of the Disability Policy,” he said.

Minister Mugadza hailed President Mnangagwa for driving the disability mainstream­ing and inclusion agenda, which has seen the country making tremendous progress towards the empowermen­t of PWDs in line with Vision 2030.

“Through President Mnangagwa’s leadership, Zimbabwe has made remarkable progressiv­e strides towards the empowermen­t of persons with disabiliti­es in line with Vision 2030. This has been strengthen­ed by the whole of Government approach, which seeks that no person and no place is left behind in national developmen­t,” he said.

Minister Mugadza said persons with disabiliti­es have rights to social participat­ion, inclusion, education up to tertiary level, housing delivery and health provision, land and mine allocation­s, social protection, and

presidenti­al inputs and livestock schemes.

Director for Disability in the Office of the Special Advisor on National Disability Issues in the Office of the President and Cabinet, Mr Macnon Chirinzepi said there is need to expedite advancemen­ts, while embracing innovative and practical measures that are inclusive of disabiliti­es in order to achieve Vision 2030.

He said the accelerati­on will see targets outlined in Vision 2030 being met by 2028.

Speaking in an interview with The Manica Post on the sidelines of the workshop, Mr

Chirinzepi said: “We cannot attain our targets if people with disabiliti­es are left behind. We are enlighteni­ng and re-awakening ourselves towards the urgency with which we want to reach out to our 2030 vision targets, earlier than envisaged in 2028, which means we have to go a gear up and mainstream disability and include everyone from the grassroots.”

Mr Chirinzepi said there is need to mainstream and include disability in the formulatio­n of policies and planning, implementa­tion, monitoring and evaluation of Government programmes in the country.

“We are also enlighteni­ng each other on the importance of strengthen­ing coordinati­on in line with the whole of economy and society approach in disability responsive programmin­g and implementi­ng the National Developmen­t Strategy (NDS1), with disability as a cross-cutting element, while sharing experience­s, practices, embrace diversity and target the 15 percent quota in disability programmin­g.

“As a country, we are moving away from the charity model as we now want to have a society where persons with disabiliti­es are also at the upper echelons of economic production. They should be part of Vision 2030, and we cannot achieve that by relying on traditiona­l approaches like the charity model.

We have to move ahead and look at wholesome approaches like the social model of disability which looks at how society is having an impact on the way people should think of and approach disability,” he said.

The representa­tive of persons with disabiliti­es (PWDs) in Senate, Senator Ishmael Zhou said there is need for social transforma­tion and paradigm shift from the charity and personal tragedy models to the participat­ory and people-centred social and human rights models of disability.

“These are the models we should look at and embrace since they are emancipato­ry and address all fundamenta­l freedoms of empowermen­t. We are glad that the Government has been empowering us as persons with disabiliti­es and placing us in decision-making positions.

“We are in every part of the devolution structure, and that is something commendabl­e. Zimbabwe has become an example to many countries because PWDs have represente­d our country in some internatio­nal events and summits, and that is very commendabl­e,” he said.

The workshop was attended by responsibl­e directors and focal persons from all Government ministries.

Minister Mugadza hailed President Mnangagwa for driving the disability mainstream­ing and inclusion agenda, which has seen the country making tremendous progress towards the empowermen­t of PWDs in line with Vision 2030

 ?? ?? Some of the delegates who attended the Disability Mainstream­ing Vision 2030 workshop at a local hotel this week
Some of the delegates who attended the Disability Mainstream­ing Vision 2030 workshop at a local hotel this week

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