Category: Press-releases
Karachi Times
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Access Denied
Despite signing UN treaty on rights of persons with disabilities, Pakistan far from making its infrastructure inclusive
By Ferya Ilyas
The line at this NADRA office stretched outside the narrow entrance, and there were no ramps to accommodate people with disabilities. PHOTO: ZORAL NAIK
Structures of the state
Having struggled with movement all her life, Rasheed says lack of access to buildings is a major hindrance for people with disabilities who want to live a regular life. “Personally, I don’t go to places that don’t have proper access, and that is 80% of all places,” she says. “I don’t go because I don’t want to be lifted and transported by others.”
An MBA graduate and marketing professional, Rasheed is the force behind the Show You Care (SYC) initiative which aims to create acceptability and increase accessibility for people with disabilities. “Accessibility is not a ‘favour’ or special treatment; it is a basic human right,” Rasheed reiterates.
Speaking about government buildings in Pakistan, Nabil Shaukat, Program Manager at Network of Organizations Working with People with Disabilities, Pakistan (NOWPDP), says the structures are nowhere close to being accessible for people with disabilities. “In Pakistan, many government buildings are rented or taken up properties post-Partition, which don’t allow access to people with disabilities, specifically persons with lower limb physical impairment, which is the most common of all disabilities in Pakistan. Certain buildings are built in such a complex manner that they cannot be made accessible unless demolished and re-created,” he says.
The sketch depicts how this facility could have been made accessible to people with disabilities. PHOTO: ZORAL NAIK; ARTWORK: AAMIR KHAN
Misbah Ali, a building control officer with Sindh Building Control Authority (SBCA), agrees. “Very few new government buildings are constructed and the old ones were built long ago; they can only be readjusted to accommodate the needs of people with disabilities,” she says. For her two years of service at the department, Misbah says she has personally not come across a single proposal for making an old public office building accessible.
The irony here is, NOWPDP’s Shaukat says, that the very department – Social Welfare Department, Sindh – which caters to persons with disabilities in Karachi doesn’t have a ramp of the right proportions. “Access for people with disabilities is the last item on the list for most people and for some it is not even on the list,” Shaukat laments.
A visit to the department confirms the claim. The building, located between the Supreme Court Registry and Arts Council, has surface-level but broken pavement at the main entrance. The pathway from the main entrance to the actual office compound is smooth but the gate leading to the office compound has a steep ramp. There is also not enough space for a wheelchair to move easily from the gate to the offices, with manholes and other concrete structures blocking the way.
Riaz Fatima, the department’s deputy director, says they are aware of the inadequacies and will make sure the building’s accessibility is in line with universal standards. “We have special instructions from Minister Shamim Mumtaz to provide facilities to people with disabilities,” she says. “We have written letters to Works and Services and Zakat and Ushr departments, recommending the construction of ramps in office buildings as well as mosques. Our target is to make all the 18 centres of our department across Sindh accessible before the end of this year.”
D J Science College in Karachi did not have any ramps around the main entryway. Our sketch shows how the structure could be easily modified to cater to the needs of people with disabilities. PHOTO: ZORAL NAIK; ARTWORK: AAMIR KHAN
Codes and concrete
According to the NOWPDP official, Pakistan has a standard accessibility code developed specifically for persons with disabilities and must be applied to all public and private infrastructures. “But because of lack of checks by the government, the compliance and implementation of these standards have been neglected,” he shares.
Dr Noman Ahmed, chairperson of NED University’s Department of Architecture and Planning, says the most commonly followed building law – Karachi Building and Town Planning Regulations – in the country’s biggest city outlines in detail the general conditions and provisions needed for making structures inclusive. He, however, says there are big gaps when it comes to implementation of those provisions. “When buildings are made, there are aggressive checks for entry points and emergency exits but not so much for accessibility provisions,” he states.
This ramp outside the NADRA office at Awami Markaz in Karachi was a good example of a facility that serves persons with disabilities. PHOTO: ZORAL NAIK
According to Dr Ahmed, most developers argue that if a building has an elevator, it is accessible to people with disabilities because they can move vertically as envisioned in the accessibility codes. “But once these buildings are in use, these provisions stop functioning due to lack of maintenance or power outages. Lifts in many public buildings stop working and are never made operational again,” the professor says.
When approving designs for new structures, Dr Ahmed says the building control authority inspects plans based on the information provided by the developers, who make sure not to submit anything which might get the project struck down. “Sadly though, these plans are changed considerably during the construction phase and the control authority fails to review the constructed building against the approved design,” he says.
This building of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Pakistan in Karachi has a ramp but no railings and a steep inclination. PHOTO: ZORAL NAIK
Misbah from SCBA corroborates the assertion. “I have been working here for two years and our department has never issued a ‘No Objection Certificate’ for a project that violates rules. The fact that we don’t have accessible buildings is because approved plans are changed over time,” she says.
According to her, building plans are reviewed carefully in light of regulations for access, recommendations are made for inadequacies and violations are noted once the project is complete. Misbah says if changes are not made to the structure, the building authority files a case in court and depending on the verdict, the builder either makes the changes or SCBA demolishes the portion.
A building control officer, who did not wish to be named, says this is the standard procedure but in reality, regulations are violated at various stages and the enforcers turn a blind eye for their own interest.
The main building of DJ Science College had a staircase leading up to the classrooms, but no facilities for people with disabilities. PHOTO: ZORAL NAIK
Beyond buildings
Improving access for persons with disabilities entails much more than just making good buildings. NOWPDP’s Shaukat says access has to be ensured in transportation, physical environment, information and public services.
Last year, a participant for a Special Olympics Pakistan (SOP) marathon left his house at 5:00am on his customised bicycle to reach the venue at 7:30am as he could not commute by bus, rickshaw or taxi. Sarah Amin Ali, an SOP officer, says people with disabilities are unable to leave their house and pursue jobs or get an education because our transport system is not inclusive. “People in the lower income bracket have the worst problem of inaccessibility,” she emphasises.
Rasheed of SYC initiative echoes the concern. “There’s so much focus on employment quota for people with disabilities but how will the person reach the place of work if our public transport is not accessible, if our buildings are not accessible,” she asks.
It might take up quite a few years for Pakistan to give complete access to persons with disabilities but Shaukat says someone has to start somewhere and public buildings is a good place. For its part, NOWPDP has done a review of major public buildings in Karachi and given recommendations to the government on how to ensure and improve accessibility for places like Board of Intermediate Education, Karachi railway station and Karachi airport.
The NADRA registration centre on Khayaban-e-Ittehad in Karachi. PHOTO: ZORAL NAIK; ARTWORK: AAMIR KHAN
For a better tomorrow
As people with disabilities are not facilitated to move freely, their visibility is limited in public giving the impression that they don’t really exist. “For a very long time, I thought I was the only wheelchair user in Karachi because I could not see anyone else,” SYC’s Rasheed shares. This absence in public has far-reaching effects as people with disabilities are ignored in research, academia and policy making.
To ensure public buildings are accessible to everyone, NED’s Dr Ahmed says there is a need for public awareness as well as an increased emphasis in educational institutions on international best practices. “There should be proactive campaigning by the civil society for sensitising the management of government buildings and asking them to readjust the structures,” he says.
Rasheed further urges people to see providing access as their personal responsibility and to start from their own house. “Building ramps does not even cost much. It is not a matter of money; it is a matter of mindset,” she says.
On our society’s indifference towards the need for accessibility, Rasheed says it is easier to be oblivious to this issue unless you or your loved ones go through the problem. “I have physical limitation by birth but this could happen to anyone after an accident or certain diseases. Why do we want to wait for that moment, why don’t we make efforts for everyone for the sake of humanity,” she asks.
Pointing out that even the so-called educated class in Pakistan is not fully conscious of the need, Rasheed says her movements are more restricted since she moved from PECHS to Defence – supposedly the poshest neighbourhood of Karachi – a decade ago. “Zamzama and Shahbaz in DHA have great places to eat and shop but I don’t go there because out of 50, only five are accessible,” she shares.
The fault, Rasheed says, is in the original planning which does not allocate space for ramps. “So now if someone decides to build a ramp, they have to encroach street space,” she says, wondering what one can expect from a common person if the educated class, architects and interior designers are not mindful of inclusivity.
Source: Tribune
Pond’s Miracle Women
Ronak Lakhani, chairperson for Special Olympics Pakistan, nominates Farhat Rasheed as one of the Pond’s Miracle Women 2016 – a journey to identify and celebrate the unsung heroes of Pakistan.
Reference: ePaper, Dawn
Wonder Woman
The first few months of a baby’s life involves the usual turning points that mark a human being’s development. His first word, his first step; such milestones that are bound to invoke ooh’s and aah’s from parents and others alike take place, making for some of the most memorable moments ever experienced.
SBCA Announcement
Karachi
The Karachi commissioner directed the Sindh Building Control Authority (SBCA) on Monday not to approve the construction of any building that did not facilitate the physically challenged and did not have a ramp for them.
Shoaib Ahmed Siddiqui said builders must realise the problems of the physically challenged and construct ramps so that they could easily enter buildings.Siddiqui urged against neglecting the needs of the physically challenged as they were among the helpful citizens of the country as well.
An association representing the physically and mentally challenged people in Pakistan arranged a ceremony on the eve of International Day of People with Disability, which is observed across the world every year on December 3, during which the commissioner distributed three automatic wheelchairs on behalf of the association.
International Day of People with Disability is an international observance promoted by the United Nations since 1992. It has been celebrated with varying degrees of success around the planet. The observance of the day aims to promote an understanding of disability issues and mobilise support for the dignity, rights and well-being of persons with disabilities.
Reference: The News International, 03rd December, 2013
My life in a wheelchair
I was elated when I recently read in a magazine that the newly opened Neuplex Cinemas in DHA, Karachi, had special seats reserved for those citizens who are handicapped. You see, I’m wheelchair-bound and have long been denied access to the basic activity of cinema-going. But when I went to the Nueplex Cinemas myself, this promise turned out to be tragically — unsurprisingly — untrue. They did not have any special seats and the only space that they had ‘reserved’ was the space directly underneath the screen. And from having sat there before, I can unreservedly say that the neck pains are not worth it, whatever the movie. After speaking to the authorities, I was assured that they will work on it. But that it will take time, what with the new opening and a lot of people coming in and out — which is corporate-speak for ‘we’re making too much money to be bothered by your individual request right now’. I tried to follow up with phone calls and emails but to no avail.
In another incident, I visited the South City Hospital close to Bilawal House and was shocked to know that it had no bathrooms that are accessible through wheelchairs. Medicare Clinics in Bahadurabad did not even have a lift. I witnessed bizarre scenes in which patients on hospital beds and wheelchairs were being manually lifted from one floor to the other. And these are hospitals! Most wedding halls are not accessible either.
And the sad truth is that this is normal in this country — I have experienced it. The physically handicapped are an afterthought for most proprietors, who do not even consider our mere existence. There have been numerous times when I have tried to ask store owners, guards and managers if they have ever considered installing a ramp, and it’s only once I’ve explained to them that I cannot access a building otherwise that they understand why a ramp would be necessary. Even then, certain establishments like a popular upscale Zamzama restaurant had the temerity to tell me that it cannot afford one, and would only have it installed if I foot the bill, which I did. (A carpenter charges Rs5,000 for installing a ramp. The bill for a three-course meal for one person is higher). Well, I suppose I am grateful that they have not removed the ramp yet. Lyceum School flatly refused my offer to install ramps at the entrance because the management said the ramps would ‘look ugly’.
When I was taking my O’ Level exams at Karachi Grammar School, a couple of other handicapped girls and I were given the school sick room as the examination room. There were students vomiting and fainting around us while we were supposed to be taking exams. And among the myriad of explanations that were given to us was, well, we are ‘sick’, so it makes sense for us to be in the sick room.
Reassuringly, some organisations have been supportive. Hardee’s and Ginsoy have been prompt and responsive to my inquiries and requests. Most managers and customer services representatives have been most accommodating in their words and actions. But after getting mostly supportive, some ambivalent — and a few downright hostile — replies, I started wondering whether I even belonged to society.
I learnt that the outside world is limited by accessibility, not by choice. Where do I go to university? My choices were limited to only the places that I physically could go to — not the degree on offer, not the university’s reputation. Among corporations, there are very few companies that are wheelchair friendly. My professional choices themselves were fashioned according to accessibility rather than my own ambition. That said, I am lucky to work for an organisation that is fully wheelchair accessible. Thankfully, now the trend is changing among other companies, too.
This phenomenon comes full circle when we ourselves are convinced that we do not have a role in public life. I know so many families that do not allow their handicapped children to leave the house because they believe — with good reason — that they themselves are the only ones that can provide their child with the protection and care their children deserve. The world outside is too dangerous, too unforgiving. There are no transportation facilities. When even people who can walk struggle to get on a moving, overcrowded bus, what hope does someone on crutches, let alone a wheelchair, have?
Perversely, for some, to have a handicapped child is also looked upon with shame. I know families that fear their handicapped children might jeopardise their other siblings’ marriage prospects and the families keep them at home to hide them from society.
It is only recently that I decided to fight for my own right to accessibility; my family — bless them — has primarily fought on my behalf ever since I was little. I am grateful for being from a privileged background. This has meant that I have had enough resources available to follow through with my convictions — after all, if I want society to change, I myself have to start working towards it. Many people who are not in my position do not even consider doing so. I do not need sympathy, just an equal shot, like everybody else.
I used to think I was the only one on a wheelchair. It was only when I went to hospitals for treatment that I realised there are others like me. I just think that everyone else should realise the same.
Reference: The Express Tribune, October 1st, 2013
Launch of “Junoon” in Karachi
Launch of Junoon at Karachi Arts Council,
News published in Jang Newspaper.