Yousaf Khan campaigns for the 2018 election
“Many people see disability as the outcome of sins committed by your parents,” says Aziz, discussing the stigma attached to having a disability in our society. “They don’t call people with disabilities by their respectful names, instead they are called by the type of disability they have, such as being blind, deaf or dumb, or lame. This destroys a person’s self-respect.”
Minhas Gul is the perfect foil to society’s unmindfulness towards disabled persons. Gul, a polio survivor, hails from Abbottabad but she works in Swat as a Hygiene Promotion Officer. She has been successful in achieving many of her life goals because of her family’s unflinching support.
Gul recalls how she was afflicted with polio at the age of four. Her mother was not educated, but she would take her to a distant hospital regularly for physiotherapy. “My family never treated me as a physically-challenged person but [treated me] the same as they treat my siblings,” she says. “I used to play outside with my cousins in my childhood.”
Throughout her education, from school to university until she completed her masters in chemistry, Gul’s teachers, parents and everyone around her supported her every step.
“Girls with disabilities have no access to faraway schools in rural areas,” Gul points out. “If they are admitted to schools their drop-out ratio is high because their families lack the financial resources for transportation costs or to arrange a helper for them. In rural areas, women with disabilities have no skill development opportunities for their survival and to become financially independent,” says Gul.
“Most of the poorest people struggle with disabilities,” says Bahadur Ali, 45, who is the father of two children with disabilities. “My two sons, aged four and nine, suffer from cerebral palsy [a group of disorders affecting movement, posture or muscle tone] and I have already lost two daughters, aged three and 14, to the same disability,” says the resident of Kharerai village in Swat. “My kids were born normal but a week or two after birth, they suffered from severe fever and fits which doctors diagnosed as cerebral palsy.”
Ali points out a correlation between poverty and disability. “Disability adds to financial constraints and, in the absence of proper education and job opportunities for persons with disabilities, more problems arise. Little or no money leads to poor nutrition, unhygienic living conditions and lack of awareness to protect themselves from accidents,” he says. “There are no facilities of free health, education and transportation which are available in developed countries,” he adds. “Financial constraints and being the mother of paralysed kids has led to psychological issues for my wife.”
Political Empowerment For The Marginalised
After failing to get a ticket from any political party, Yousaf Khan, a social worker with disability contested the 2018 general elections as an independent candidate for the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial assembly. Khan, who lives in Matta Tehsil in Swat, asserts that disabled people should have a political presence. “Unfortunately, there is not a single member of the National Assembly with disability or a senator who could voice our accessibility issues,” he says. “Similarly, in all provincial assemblies you won’t find a member with a disability. Political parties don’t bother involving people with disabilities in political activities, to build their capacity as political workers — anything from working on party manifesto, policies, communication skills, nominating them for political talk shows — or to issue them party tickets before elections.”
Although, he lost the elections, Khan is proud and feels satisfied in the knowledge that he paved the way for other persons with disabilities to participate in politics, to get elected and highlight their issues in the parliament. “My target was to represent thousands of persons with disabilities of my constituency.”
Sheikh says, “In 2013, we requested the mission of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific [ESCAP] who came to Pakistan to meet Pakistan Bureau of Statistics [PBS] to include Washington Group Short Set of Questions on Disability in the forthcoming census, but our request was not accepted.
During the meeting in 2013, the PBS replied to the inclusion of Washington Group questions by saying that disability was not their priority. These are a set of six questions to identify persons with disabilities in the census or survey format.
Abia Akram, Director Projects at Step in Islamabad, has represented Pakistan’s women with disabilities all over the world. She says, “After the disabled persons’ organisations approached the Supreme Court of Pakistan, it finally ordered the inclusion of four questions from Washington Group Short Set of Questions on disability, in the census questionnaire of 2017.
“Since the order came two days late, the census had started and the questions were written out on a separate paper. And as the workers were not trained, they couldn’t ask the questions properly,” says Akram.
“Asif Bajwa, the chief census commissioner later admitted in a press conference that the questions were added late, and the staff was untrained but he assured us that the sample survey of 25,000 households would be carried out to find the exact number of persons with disabilities,” says Sheikh.
The apex court had agreed to the request made by Step to train the staff of PBS to carry out a sample survey for 0.2 million households. Akram says they hope to get accurate sample data this time which can formulate the basis for planning and mainstreaming of people with disabilities as a concrete step in their development.
Meanwhile Khan emphasises the importance of political participation among disabled persons and says making polling stations accessible for persons with disabilities could help increase voter turnout.
“Persons with disabilities should vote for only those candidates who will further the issues of the disabled,” he says. “In this way, politicians will be pressured to talk about people with disabilities. Active people with disabilities must join political parties and rise to higher positions so that they can influence decision-making at a higher level.”
The writer is a social activist and holds a master’s degree in European studies
Published in Dawn, EOS, December 22nd, 2019