Thursday, March 15, 2012

DISABLED BEGGARS KICKED OUT OF THE MALL

…There is a serious lack of reliable information about the nature and prevalence of disability in Swaziland





It’s exactly two weeks  I heard of a saddening story about how security guards in one of the privately owned shopping malls in the country’s cities were instructed to chase away a three notable beggars (disabled beggars) at the mall.
Even though one is yet to confirm this saddening report, but I have been told that three notable faces of two disabled women who can’t stand on their own given feet and a middle aged man who are known to have found a spot to solicit money at the mall  have been told not to set the their unable bodies at the mall…What , this is when I screamed ‘Racism’ and if only I had the power to prevent such in the country’s highest courts I would have mobilised the highest paid lawyer to help the Swazi Citizens to defend their presence in the privately owned mall.
Evident to such an inhumane treatment is that I have seen one of the women whom I had developed a very close relationship in the past three months  ago sitting under the scorching sun next to the now defunct Metro Cash & Carry trying to recover from the shock of being kicked out of ‘her spot’ on the doorstep of a busy travel agency.
As I walked towards the bus ran I met this middle aged brother who moves around only with the aid of crutches trying to squeeze himself on the narrow pavement at the bridge not very far to the mall.
As I passed next to this brother my heart bled because I have known these people to have been well mannered and even interesting characters who were not aggressive, harassing the shoppers at the mall. I would always see people volunteer and donate whatever they had to the poor souls.
As I tried to gather about their ban from the mall I overheard one transport operator stating that a complaint was raised to the owner of the shopping centre that these humble souls were harassing customers. I didn’t and I don’t want to buy the story because with my over 30 years in the city of Mbabane I have never seen these individuals disturbing shoppers.
My sweet message to whosoever was behind the drive of frustrating these people is that beggars are all over the world and these people are not there to rob anyone but have been forced by the lack of proper and physical structuring of their welfare.
 People with disabilities are excluded from the mainstream of society and experience difficulty in accessing fundamental rights. There is, furthermore, a strong relationship between disability and poverty. Poverty makes people more vulnerable to disability and disability reinforces and deepens poverty.
Disability tends to be couched within a medical and welfare framework, identifying people with disabilities as ill, different from their non-disabled peers, and in need of care. Because the emphasis is on the medical needs of people with disabilities, there is a corresponding neglect of their wider social needs. This has resulted in severe isolation for people with disabilities and their families.
To the management of the mall and the country’s legislators they should know that just t because beggars make more affluent people feel uncomfortable, that is no a reason to sweep them off the streets..we are going up the road that Hitler did. he had a final solution to beggars and Romas....do people want that?
Poverty exists, that is a fact. It will always exist. Unless a society is willing to provide a safety net, tackle the causes of poverty and fight the organised gangs that exploit it, then just moving the poverty away from where it is uncomfortable for rich tourists to see it is not solving the problem.
Demonising and marginalising a certain group of the community and moving them out of sight of the mainstream is just the first step on the road that eventually led to genocide in many cases. I do not think pointing this out is trivialising this matter.
Poverty and homelessness exists, sweeping it under the carpet and pretending it doesn't exist by banning it from the country’s shopping malls , presumably because it makes the shoppers uncomfortable, is not one of the solutions.
Following such I feel I need to get back to a story by one of my close friends and ex Philile Masango about one inspiration soul (may he rest in eternal peace) Joshua Simelane who despite his blindness he was determined to overcome the lack of proper structures in the country to take care of all disabled people. He had a dream of seeing the country’s oldest institution of higher learning University of Swaziland providing a Braille facility for the blind. I  know most of the those who are able to see the sun rise and set will always laugh it off and add to the statistics of those voting against the respect of fundamental rights of all the country’s citizens.
 The right of people with disabilities are protected by the Constitution. Government departments and state bodies have a responsibility to ensure that, in each line function, concrete steps are taken to ensure that people with disabilities are able to access the same fundamental rights and responsibilities as any other Swazi.
The legislative framework is crucial. There is a need to examine the need for new legislation. Existing legislation must be scrutinised and amended where necessary. Ultimately, legislation should comply with and give substance to Constitutional requirements.

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