Niger Delta
Stakeholders Make Case For Children With Disabilities
The Founder/Chief Executive Director of Lifeline Organisation for Children Empowerment (LOCE), Miss Ngozichukwuka Obiyo has expressed regret that 30million children with disabilities are not given any chance to explore their potentials in the society.
Obiyo stated this during a two-day stakeholders’ dialogue forum and sensitisation awareness on inclusive education with the theme: ‘Train Teacher And Parent (TTAP) Project,’ held last Wednesday, in Port Harcourt.
The convener of the event stressed that the TTAP event was organised as a wake-up call to all stakeholders to achieve inclusiveness and equitable quality education for children with special needs, adding that this would require increasing efforts of all in the society.
According to her, TTAP aims at training educators, school owners, teachers as well as parents and caregivers by building their capacity to support children with neuro issues and other development delays with inclusive education bias.
She called for inclusive education policy by all tiers of government and other stakeholders to protect children with special needs, grants/scholarships programmes that could help interested students to take up courses on special education both at the undergraduate and postgraduate levels and other workshops on best practices to support these children.
The Executive Director, Community Initiative for Enhanced Peace and Development, Mrs Egondu Esinwoke-Ogbalor noted that only one person cannot change the society, but would require the collective efforts of all well-meaning individuals, adding that to achieve an inclusive education for children with special needs, all stakeholders must work together.
She noted that there was ability in every disability, and charged all never to discriminate against children with disabilities.
The Senior Special Adviser on Physically Challenged Matters, Itekena Altraide, stated that there were inclusive laws already enacted by the Rivers State Government designed to benefit children with special needs, noting that his office had made special recommendations to the state Governor, Chief Nyesom Wike on ways to empower people with special needs.
Susan Serekara-Nwikhana & Victory Amirani