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FG to empower 20 youths with disabillities in northwest zone to be self-reliant

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The Minister of Youth and Sports Development, Mr Sunday Dare, says the ministry will empower 20 youths with disabilities from the North West Zone to be self reliant and discourage alms begging.


Dare said this in a statement issued by Mrs. Lere-Adams Adjobome, the Director Press in the Ministry, on Tuesday in Abuja.
He said that the ministry in collaboration with governors of the seven states in the North West was organising an empowerment training programme in Kano State, to mentor and impart life enhancement skills for Youths With Disabilities (YWDs).
According to him, the programme, which is targeted at YWDs from the Northern zone, is also meant to increase the level of awareness of the public to accommodate youth with disabilities aspiring to political offices.
He said that the programme would also ensure their participation in economic, social and cultural activities, with equal opportunities.
Dare said the programme was designed for 120 youths with disabilities from the seven states of the North-West Geo-political zones, comprising those with physiological (functional and /or mobility impairments), visual and hearing disabilities.

EVAPWDS condemns nomination of Ms. Lauretta Onoiche as INEC commissioner

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TQM report,

The Campaign for Equal Voting Access for persons with disabilities (EVAPWD) is worried over the nomination of Ms. Lauretta Onochie, a foot soldier and senior sympathizer of the ruling APC, and Senior Special Assistant to the President on Social Media as National Commissioner of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) representing the South-South.

In a press release signed by the Chairman of the group, Mr. David Anyaele, they stated that the honesty and integrity of Ms. Onochie to serve as INEC official is questionable as she has been very partisan in the last 5 years. Hence, Item F, paragraph 14 of the third schedule of the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria (as amended) prohibits a person with questionable integrity from serving as a member of INEC

EVAPWD called on the Nigeria Senate to reject her nomination to avoid contamination of the successes recorded so far by INEC and protect the election management body from political party influences.

BEYOND DISABILITY: A life-experience sharing book published by a PWD to be presented in Ebonyi

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[Dr. Victor Nwani, a Person With Disability and an author. He authored a book titled BEYOND DISABILITIES: FINDING ABILITY IN DISABILITY.

The book would be presented to the public on Saturday October 17, 2020 @ OSBORN LA PALM, HOTEL ABAKALIKI, EBONYI STATE. All persons with disabillities especially those in the southeast, development partners, special educators, Disability rights advocates, CSOs, MDAs working on disability issues and the general public are expected to grace the event.

The book is showcasing how disability can be surmounted.

Let’s be his guest and support the project.

The Invitation Details:

Support us with housing and our children education, a widow with disability appeals to government

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Rahila Ishaya Tokkit is a woman with disability from Pankshin local government of Plateau State. She had Polio at age of seven, I now walk with the aid of two walking sticks.   

This widow and a mother of two children had the privilege to go to school and today, she has NCE and she is working with Primary Education Board as a Teacher here in Pankshin local government of Plateau State.

In a chat with Bulus Baba Izang our Jos correspondent, she spoke about her work and her life as a widow with two children.


Rahila Ishaya Tokkit

TQM: Do you have challenges performing your work as a teacher with disability?

No, I perform my work as a teacher well despite my disability.  However, I do have difficulty of getting to my place work and going back home daily, I have to engage the services of a commercial motorcycle rider and the fare is high and by the end of the month, a good amount of my salary is spent on transportation and little would be left for feeding and other needs.

TQM: How is life like for you as a mother, a widow and a person with disability?

Life have not been easy, providing for myself and the children, especially when it comes to the payment of their school fees and the payment of house rent, add that to other daily needs like feeding and other bills, you will find out that the salary is just not enough.

TQM: Since you said, the salary is not enough to settle your bills. How do you make up?

After School hours, I have a table by the roadside that I use to sell soup condiments like seasonings, kukka, karkashi, and food items like rice and beans in little quantity. I also do some knitting of babies clothes which I sell for additional income.

TQM: Being a person with disability, how do you cope with moving around to get these items and sell them?

I have some children that use to help me in carrying these items to and fro to my table stand. And if I go to market to buy these things, I usually engaged the services of commercial wheelbarrow pushers and commercial motorcycle riders to carry the Items for me.

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TQM: How does the engagement of these extra hands affects you?

It really affecting me, sometimes I experience delays, because at times they may not be close by so, I wouldn’t have any other option than to wait for them or look for them, and again, the cost of paying them reduces my profit. But these are necessary cost I have to bear.

TQM: You earlier mentioned the payment of house rent, are you not staying in your late husband’s family house?

No, I am staying in rented apartment here in Pankshin town with my two children.

TQM: If you will have a chance to appeal for assistance, what would you appeal for?

I would like to have the house of my own no matter how small it may be and I would need assistance in the payment of my children’s School fees. Government should come to rescue on these areas, we are going a lot payment house rent and our children’s school even the high cost of living that disability is bringing.

TQM: Thank you for your time.

You are welcome and God bless you


This story is part of The Qualitative Magazine Project “CONNECTING OUR VOICES TO THE WORLD”-propagating the potentials and challenges of Persons with Disabilities in Plateau State supported by VOICE NIGERIA

Abiru seeks inclusion of persons with disabilities in governance process

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The candidate of All Progressives Congress (APC) for senatorial by-election in Lagos East, Tokunbo Abiru Monday said he would promote legislation that would make inclusion of persons with special needs in governance process mandatory in the country.

Abiru, a former Commissioner for Finance in Lagos State, equally promised that if elected on October 31, he would work with other lawmakers in the National Assembly to champion the empowerment of people with special needs if elected.


The candidate of All Progressives Congress (APC) for senatorial bye-election in Lagos East, Mr. Tokunbo Abiru (middle) at a meeting with persons with disabilities on the bye-election scheduled to hold on October 31 in Somali, Lagos… Monday

The candidate of All Progressives Congress (APC) for senatorial by-election in Lagos East, Tokunbo Abiru Monday said he would promote legislation that would make inclusion of persons with special needs in governance process mandatory in the country.

Abiru, a former Commissioner for Finance in Lagos State, equally promised that if elected on October 31, he would work with other lawmakers in the National Assembly to champion the empowerment of people with special needs if elected.

He made these promises on Monday during a meeting with some persons living with disabilities (PLWDs) in Lagos ahead of the forthcoming senatorial bye-election scheduled to hold on October 31.

At the meeting held in Somolu, Abiru specifically said he would pursue legislation aimed at promoting the well-being and welfare of persons with special needs if elected in the forthcoming poll.

He explained that with the enactment of the 2018 Discrimination Against Persons with Disabilities (Prohibition) Act, the era of exclusion against persons with special needs “is gradually becoming a thing of the past.”

He, however, said: “We are at the age of embarking upon well-structured advocacy and systematic lobby to ensure that all provisions of the Act are enforced, observed and accorded with due recognition.

“This may even require the amendment of the Act to introduce provisions that will make mandatory the inclusion of special persons in our governance process and elective offices. I am committed to legislations that will promote the welfare and well being of every citizen with special needs.”

He, therefore, pledged that he would team up with civil society organisations (CSOs) to ensure that you are not excluded from accessing privileges and opportunities that other citizens access without let or hindrance.

Abiru, who retired as the Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of Polaris Bank Limited on August 30, also promised “to pursue some agenda that will deepen a sense of accommodation of persons with special needs be it in Lagos East or Lagos State.

“Within the mandate of a Senator of Federal Republic of Nigeria, I will use the instruments of law-making, law enforcement and policy execution to promote social adaption, inclusion and empowerment of people with special needs,” he said.

He observed that evidence showed that persons with special needs “are economically disadvantaged and extremely poor not because they are destined to be so, but because there are constrained on the account of their special conditions.”

He said: “I am here to assure you that your condition will no more be a setback for your progress, but a stepping stone to realising your aspirations and dreams. Already, the United Nations Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) recognises and addresses this challenge.

“For every person with special needs, the Convention promotes the rights to economic empowerment. Nigeria is a signatory of the Convention. With the passage of the Discrimination Against Persons with Disabilities (Prohibition) Act 2018, the federal government has also domesticated the Convention.

“The federal government has committed herself to your economic empowerment in the spirit of the UN Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities.”

He, therefore, urged concerned stakeholders “to leverage on these legislations to push for the enforcement of your rights to economic empowerment.

“I have realised that economic empowerment is the only effective means through which you can meaningfully fend for yourselves; reduce poverty and provide for your immediate families,” the APC candidate said.

He added that he would set up an endowment fund that will largely accommodate persons with special needs in Lagos East. He also said he would promote legislations and policies that will institutionalise the empowerment of every person with special needs in the country

Also at the meeting, APC Vice Chairman (Lagos East), Chief Kaoli Olusanya described Abiru as a competent and trusted candidate. He said the candidate gave a good account of himself as former CEO of Polaris Bank by transforming the bank for better service delivery.

Olusanya said Abiru would work for the people of Lagos East with the same character and zeal if elected, saying he would not disappoint. He said Abiru had great plans for people with disabilities and residents in general, urging the people of the district to vote for him.

Support my business to enable me train my son in school…Kakwmakat Ishaya, a single mother with disability begs

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Kakwmakat Ishaya is a woman with disability who became a person with disability when she was a child, she was playing with other children, a boy picked a nail and threw it at her and it hit her at the back which injured her. At first, she could not even crawl, but after much medical care she was able to walk with the aid of crutches.

Years after the incident, her father died. Life in the village became difficult for her, so her aunty, from her maternal home decided to take her and she stays with her in Pankshin town. While she was there, her Aunty’s husband enrolled her in primary school and while I was still in primary school, the man died. That ended her dream of being educated. 

In this interview with Bulus Baba Izang our correspondent in Jos, she told us how she had to go into vocational skills to earn a living instead of begging for alms.

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TQM: Are you doing something for a living?

I knit sweaters for sales using knitting pins (needles), I also sell chin- chin. This is what I do to earn some little income that sustains me.  

TQM:  Do people discriminate against you as you relate with them, especially as you do your business?

No, maybe, because, I don’t crawl on the ground. I don’t face any discrimination.

TQM: Are you married or are you into any relationship?

I am not married but I have a son, the father of my son died some years ago.

TQM:  Is your Son in school?

He has finished Secondary school but could not go further because of financial limitation. Even when his father was alive, he was not providing for us, it was out of the proceed of my little business that we have been managing.

And now that things are so difficult, we are only thinking of how to feed ourselves nothing more.

TQM: Have you ever received financial support from anywhere to do business?

No, for now I have not received such support.

TQM: If someone, somewhere will want to assist you, want kind of assistance would you want?

I will need money to increase my business and to help me finance my Son’s education to higher Institution.

TQM:  Thank you for your time

You are welcome and I appreciate


This story is part of The Qualitative Magazine Project “CONNECTING OUR VOICES TO THE WORLD”-propagating the potentials and challenges of Persons with Disabilities in Plateau State supported by VOICE NIGERIA

The story of a blind woman who trains the sighted people

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It may sound outlandish that a blind woman trains people in arts and crafts. That is the story of  58-year-old Madam Christiana Kehinde Akinrinmade, the proprietor of Chrisken Training Centres.  OMOLOLA AFOLABI reports

The strike embarked upon by doctors at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) in 2012 is almost a decade old, but its effects on individuals and families are still up-to-the-minute. Some survived the ordeal to tell their stories.

One of such survivors is a 58-year-old Madam Christiana Kehinde Akinrinmade who is blind. She is the proprietor of Chrisken Training Centre; an arts and craft training centre, where she trains those who have no eye problems and the blind. She was not born with a disability. She lost her sight to glaucoma and to the strike action by doctors.

If the sight could be restored, Akinrinmade would have sacrificed all to get hers back. According to her, it was a very grueling time for her as it was difficult to come to terms with her condition after spending some of her professional years as a top-notch practitioner in the banking sector.

Any wonder that she takes to fright any time she learns about an impending national strike, especially by doctors. Her mind would be in flux. She would begin to imagine the pains some patients would be subjected to, having had such nasty experience that led to her loss of sight.

Her visual impairment, according to her, began between 2010 and 2011. She said she was driving one day and her son drew her attention to the fact she was driving off the road. She added that but for God’s mercy, they would have been involved in a serious accident.

She thought the capacity of her eyeglass lenses was weak.  She drove to the hospital to see an ophthalmologist and she was diagnosed of glaucoma. Having lost her left eye, she was advised not to drive until correctional measures were taken.

“I was advised to go for eye surgery to save the right eye. I was booked for the surgery. Unfortunately, on getting to the hospital for the surgery on the appointed date, I discovered that the doctors were on strike,” she said.

Determined not to be weighed down by her current situation, she decided to make the best out of a seemingly useless situation. Then, an idea flashed through her mind. She thought of setting up a training centre that would enable youths to engage in wealth creation by converting wastes to wealth.

That was how Chrisken Training Centre, an arts and craft training centre was established.

She said she went into the business of waste recycling in a bid to reduce, re-use and recycle wastes which will help in cutting down the amount of waste we dispose of while maintaining a sustainable environment.

Akinrinmade also revealed that she started the training programme in order to enable the youth to maximise their time at home during the period of lockdown induced by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Seeing a lot of car tyres that people burn gets me upset. That was one of the reasons I began the art and craft centre to recycle these tyres into beautiful household tables,” she said.

In a chat with our correspondent during the graduation ceremony of the students of the arts and crafts school, three of whom are also visually impaired; Madam Akinrinmade said “the training began during the COVID-19 lockdown. It has lasted up to four months now. One of my students was able to make a huge profit from the proceeds of his sales.”

One thing is peculiarly spectacular about Madam Akinrinmade. She is blind. Nevertheless, she trains those who are sighted and those who are blind. She gives a vivid description of all that happens around her to people’s amazement.

For instance, welcoming this reporter when she visited the Chrisken Training Centre, she said in a heartwarming compliment. “You look very nice! Your hair is so well made. I like your dress!”

Taking the reporter round the centre to intimate her with the workings of the centre, Mrs. Akinrinmade, with a boisterous ambience that is somewhat contagious, said. “We are all sighted.”

One of her trainees, Cassandra Nwokporo, whose story was reported in The Nation in a special report, titled “Challenges Special Needs Children Face amid COVID-19”, expressed her surprise at how a visually impaired woman would be training her.

“I was wondering how she would be able to see what we were doing. But so far, it has been very interesting. It has been a successful journey,” she said gleefully.

Another visually impaired graduate, Uduak Effiong whose mother guided to the graduation ceremony mentioned how Akinrinmade always wishes that doctors do not go on strike again as the damage is too much to bear.

Examining the moral justification of doctors’ strike, Brecher in Researchgate suggested that “strike actions are only justifiable if it presents long-term benefits to the striking doctors and positive improvement to the health care industry. Yet this strike with a focus on personal and financial gains of doctors at the expense of treating patients seems difficult to justify on such grounds.”

Glaucoma, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) remains the second-largest cause of blindness after cataract. This global statistic is, however, more damning due to the peculiar nature of the public health sector in Nigeria.

The eye disease presents an even greater public health challenge than cataract because its resultant blindness is irreversible.

Experts in health matters have expressed the view that the government should show more commitment toward addressing the infrastructure deficits in the health sector, even as they maintain that the government should not wait till strikes are called for by members of staff of any critical segment of the economy.

It is their view that the welfare of doctors should be given priority attention since they constitute first responders in any emergency such as the current COVID-19 pandemic.F

Bayelsa to build psychiatric hospital

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Simon Utebor, Yenagoa

THE Bayelsa State Government has announced its plan to establish a psychiatric hospital to adequately take care of people with mental disabilities.

The move, according to the Commissioner for Health, Dr. Pabara Igwele, will help rid the streets of Yenagoa and its environs of mentally challenged people.

Igwele spoke yesterday during a meeting with members of the Standard and Ethics Committee of the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria, Bayelsa State chapter.

He described as an eyesore the number of mentally sick persons roaming the streets, saying it was not befitting for a state like Bayelsa that regularly plays host to dignitaries and major events.

Igwele restated the state government’s commitment to eliminate quackery from the nursing profession in the state, and applauded his guests for imbibing the spirit of professionalism in the discharge of their duties.

While sharing instances of Bayelsans who have died as a result of quackery, the commissioner urged members of the committee to go around health facilities for routine checks to confirm the professionalism of nurses.

In her remarks, the Director of Nursing Services in the ministry, Mrs. Cynthia Boufini, said Bayelsa would soon commence ‘The Year of the Nurse 2020’ which would play a pivotal role in improving nursing services in the state.

She appealed for the upgrade of the State School of Nursing into a College of Nursing to better serve the needs of scholars in the state.

The representative of psychiatric nurses in the state, Mrs. Efuwa Agbana, expressed her delight that the government had already begun working on establishing a psychiatric hospital.

She lauded government’s effort at giving attention to the need of nurses in the state and called for more attention to be paid to people who sell illicit drugs in the state which is also responsible for increasing crime rates.

Jail corrupt govt officials stealing from persons with disabilities, Disability rights activist urges Buhari

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By Lukman ABOLADE

THE Joint National Association of Persons with Disabilities (JONAPWD) has urged the Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari, to jail corrupt government officials who steal from people with disabilities.

The association made this call Wednesday when its Public Relations Officer, Obinna Ekujereonye featured on a radio program, Public Conscience produced by the Progressive Impact Organization for Community Development, PRIMORG.

“I‘m advocating for a jail term and I know a lot of people are advocating for it. if you leave these corrupt officials to go the way they are going, I tell you, the corruption will keep increasing by the day,” said Ekujereonye.

Speaking on an investigative report that indicted the Women Affairs and Social Development Ministry for Spending N275 Million on non-existing Rehabilitation Institutes for Persons with Disabilities, he demanded that the corrupt officials must be made to pay a high price for their corruption.

“I want the government to really look into this corruption issue. I think the government said they are fighting corruption but I don’t think they are doing their best and I don’t know if it is lip-service or they truly mean the fight against corruption.

“What the government should do is at least let us see someone who stole N1 million jailed for ten, twenty or thirty years,” he further stated.

Ekujereonye commended the federal government for the passage of the Persons with Disabilities Bill, he, however, lamented on action towards the implementation of the act.

“This bill has been part of the act and we have it in our kits but the problem remains implementation.

“If you go to public buildings, most of them don’t have lifts or parking lots for persons with disabilities. If the commission is set up fully, I think after five years they will begin to pursue and make sure this act is implemented to the latter,” Ekujereonye said.

Earlier in the programme, Peace Oriaku Ezekiel, the Monitoring and Evaluation Officer of the Centre for Citizens with Disabilities (CCD), regretted that the vast majority of the 25 million Nigerians with disabilities are not aware of the N275 Million swooped on rehabilitation institutes by the Women Affairs Ministry.Advertisement

She stressed that PWDs suffer a great deal of injustice in employment and in several sectors due to systemic corruption.

Speaking on the efforts of the CDD, Ezekiel said, “We have a project to strengthen citizens’ resistance against the prevalence of corruption which we have run for five years, they are; Scrap-C project, and Upright for Nigeria Campaign. We have it in Akwa Ibom, Lagos, Kano, Kaduna states and in Abuja. This project helped us to build persons with disabilities on resisting corruption.”

It will be recalled that the Department of Rehabilitation was moved from the Federal Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development to the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management at the inception of President Buhari’s second term in 2019.

However, the co-convener of the programme, Adaobi Obiabunmuo revealed that PRIMORG’s effort to bring both ministries to join the programme proved abortive as they never responded to their invitation during the programme and after the programme.

The ICIR investigation had revealed how the Ministry of Women Affairs spent N275 million on non-existing Rehabilitation Institutes for persons living with disabilities.

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Save the Children strengthens the capacity and knowledge of OPDs to enhance disability inclusion in social protection programmes

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by Chris Agbo,

Saheed Mustafa, senior policy and advocacy advisor, Save the Children facilitating one of the sessions

Save the Children organized a four-day CDGP Social Protection Training Workshop for Organization of Persons with disabilities (OPDs).

CDGP, is a UKAid funded social protection programme, implemented by Save the Children and Action Against Hunger that commenced in Nigeria in 2014. During its first phase, the progamme was positioned as a “Cash Plus for Nutrition”, aimed at contributing to the reduction of the high malnutrition levels in Northern Nigeria, by targeting and providing cash-transfer to pregnant women and women with children under the age of two years, in selected communities of Zamfara and Jigawa states.

In the second phase, CDGP will focus on supporting the Federal government and selected state governments to strengthen their social protection systems, in order to contribute to a greater coverage of inclusive and accountable social protection.

Through the Federal and State government, CDGP will also contribute to systems and capacity strengthening across all 36 states. CDGP’s ultimate aim is to ensure the existence of an enabling environment, strong systems and adequate capacity for the scale up of social protection in the country, thus contributing to the country’s poverty reduction efforts and simultaneously improving the ability, opportunity and dignity of the poor and vulnerable. 

The training was organized to strengthen capacity and knowledge of OPDs on social protection programmes to mainstream disability inclusion in ongoing social protection programmes being organized by government.


Esther Angulu, Social Inclusion Officer, CDGP facilitating a session

The CDGP trainers took the OPDs on understanding social protection, social inclusion, policy to practice, social accountability and nutrition.

On day four, the participants were grouped and they worked on action plan to be implemented to mainstream persons with disabilities in the Federal and State governments social protection programmes.

Some of the action plans are carrying out a needs assessment to ascertain how much persons with disabilities has been excluded from social intervention programmes, advocacy and awareness creation, capacity building of relevant stakeholders on disability inclusion in the social protection programmes.

Some notable participants at the training were Jake Epelle(The Albino Foundation TAF), Dr. Irene Ojiugo Patrick-Ogbogu( Disability Rights Advocacy Centre(DRAC), Patience Ogolo (AWWDI), Lois Auta ( Cedar Seeds Foundation and Network of Disabled Women, Chris Agbo (The Qualitative Magazine TQM), Rasak Adekoya (Sightsavers), Sola Aderibigbe (JONAPWD), Jesse John( Inclusive Friends Foundation), Avershim Akighir (Possibility TV), Ina Ejindu Obasi ( FCTA Staff with disabilities), Adaobi Ebonyi(NAB) and many others.

Mariam Yakubu of Save the Children facilitating a session

Some participants at the workshop told TQM that the training was an eye opener to them as they have not been working in that area even though social protection programmes are geared towards poverty reduction and poverty dwells more among persons with disabilities and in programmes like these, there should be deliberate effort to include persons with disabilities.

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SOME PICTURES OF THE PARTICIPANTS