DISABILITY AND DEVELOPMENT PARTNERSWorking with disabled people and their organisations in developing countries
• Strengthening partner organisations • Disabled children and girls’ education
• Disabled people’s rights • Mental health self help groups • Deaf children’s education • Disabled people’s livelihoods 2014
Bindu Nepali of the Forumfor Human Rights &Disabled conducting aninterview with Lal BahadurChaudhari for a base linestudy in Narayanpur village,Dang district, western Nepal.
INDIA
Our work in Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadustates is with organisations dedicated to theeducation and wellbeing of disabled childrenand youths, and their families.
Junior secondary education at KiranSociety
Kiran School, a model of inclusivity where 50% ofchildren are not disabled, is providing lowersecondary education with the completion of a six-room two-storey accessible building. We are proudto enhance the learning experience for all 350children using the Kiran campus by fully equippingthree rooms for IT training, audio-visual education,and a video and science lab.
Funded by the Equitable Charitable Trust
Health Awareness and Livelihoods(HAL)
In April 2014 we embarked on the four-year HALprogramme with the Kiran Society by assembling ateam of 26 community-based workers for the 50targeted villages in Varanasi and Mirzapur districtsof Uttar Pradesh state. Our aims are to reducepoverty and hunger, and to improve the health of
mothers and the estimated 9,000 children belowthe age of five. HAL will include training for localhealth workers, anganwadi (village based nursery)workers, and post and ante natal workers. It willalso provide rehabilitation services for up to 1,000children and young people, and disability awarenessfor all. The team will also set up 40 new women ledself-help groups, and strengthen existing ones, forwomen to be agents of change and to alleviate thedeep poverty which lies at the root of poor healthand disability in rural India.
Funded by the BIG Lottery Fund
Computer training at SDET
We have supported the Social DevelopmentEducation Trust (SDET) in Virudhnagar district ofTamil Nadu state to run a vocational computertraining centre which this year has trained 35disabled and disadvantaged tribal youths.
Funded by CMG (Logica) plc Staff Charity and
North South Development Trust
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Women voice their opinions on health matters atself-help group meeting in Tikri Village
Getting to gripswith wordprocessing atKiran!
IT graduates proudly show off certificates withtheir trainer, Manimegalle (in blue sari)
NEPAL
Our focus on disabled people’s rights is nowleading to new programmes to provide accessto livelihoods, education and mental health.
Disabled people’s human rights andNepal’s constitution
Nepal Disabled Human Rights Centre (DHRC-Nepal) and DDP celebrated the conclusion of themajor five-year Disabled People’s Advocacy forChange (DPAC) programme at a gala event withlocal partners, team members past and present andwell-wishers. This project was developed seven yearsago at the end of Nepal’s monarchical rule, and wasan opportunity to invest in the democraticaspirations of disabled people, who have for so long
been marginalised and whose numbers had swelledduring the country’s 10 year conflict. Its mainobjective was to ensure that disabled people’s rightsare enshrined in Nepal’s new democraticconstitution using the tenets of the United NationsConvention on the Rights of Persons withDisability (UNCRPD).
DPAC enabled DHRC-Nepal to build thecapacity of over 50 grass roots DPOs across Nepalto participate in the democratisation process,directly informed over 25,000 people aboutdisability rights and helped them secure theirentitlements, raised the profile of Nepal’s disability
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Shudarson Subedi (centre), DHRC co-founder andcurrently President of the National Federation ofthe Disabled - Nepal joins the National Associationof the Blind rally in Butwol, April 2014
Majhi Bharati (seated on left), a deaf womancheated of her land in Sindhupalchok district,regained it after her sister (on the right) learntabout disabled people's rights
National Association of the Blind rally in Butwol,western Nepal, April 2014
movement in regional forums and internationalnetworking. It has also provided a springboard forDDP’s other partnerships in Nepal, shedding a lighton invisible disabilities such as mental illness anddeafness.
Funded by UKAid
Poverty alleviation in four districts ofwestern Nepal
This new project coordinated by DHRC-Nepal,which started in April 2014 with DPO partners inthe districts of Tanahun, Bardiya, Surkhet andDang, is a natural extension to five years of buildinggrass roots capacity through DPAC. The project willprovide quality livelihood opportunities for 1500disabled people and their families (7500 people inall) over three years.
Funded by UKAid
SHRUTI – National association forhardofhearing and deafened, Nepal
Hard-of-hearing children suffer in silence and areoften labelled as stupid because the condition is notvisible, children are unable to express their needs,and teachers are also often unaware that childrenhave hearing difficulties. We are supportingSHRUTI to conduct a pilot project to test the
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Base line study interview by Bardiya DPO
Theatre in education - DPAC takes the rights message to secondary schools
hearing of 450 children in two primary schools inKathmandu, giving practical assistance to thosewith hearing difficulties and using the findings tohighlight this neglected issue.
Funded by the Equitable Charitable Trust
Breaking the chains of stigma
We congratulate KOSHISH’s Matrika Devkota forwinning the prestigious Dr Guislain Award 2013for his outstanding work in raising awareness of andfighting the stigma associated with mental illness inNepal. We are continuing our efforts to supportKOSHISH to reform mental health policy inNepal.
ETHIOPIA
All four projects with partner BerhanLehetsanat (BL, formerly called HandicapNational) focus on girls and women, disabledchildren, and youth education and training,while the latest partnership with the DeafDevelopment and Information Association(DDIA) is for work with deaf youth.
Education and LivelihoodOpportunities for Girls and Women(ELGW)
Now in its penultimate year, ELGW, which workswith over 5,000 school pupils and 585 teachers in18 primary schools, is set to endure thanks to thededicated local team in Hawassa, and the
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Matrika Devkota (2nd from right) with his team
SHRUTI members with founders, Neeta (1st fromleft) and Maheshwar (2nd from right)
Sherbeto Yoka, one of 600 women beneficiaries ofthe ELGW project, sells insett (false banana flour)at Tulla market. She is a member of an associationof Tulla’s Ketema kebele.
constructive relationships that have been developedwith the local community and government. Thisyear we commissioned a study to find out whyharmful traditional practices such as female genitalmutilation persist in the project area, despite beingillegal. The findings have helped us to take action to
prevent these practices where possible, as they trulyhamper girls’ progress in education.
Funded by Comic Relief
From Childhood to Livelihood (FCTL)
Launched a year ago the project team has laid thefoundations of ‘education, skills training andbeyond’ for disabled youngsters. Working withHawassa College of Teacher Education they havebeen finalising and testing an inclusive teachertraining curriculum, so that all student teachers willbe trained in special needs education. By the end ofthe project in 2017 over 8,000 graduate teacherswill be putting into practice special needsknowledge and training throughout schools inEthiopia’s southern region.
Funded by BIG Lottery Fund
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Potter Manitu Geramo, one of ELGW's 600 women beneficiaries is making a better living by having a pitch atTulla market
After school girls' tutorial classes
Grades 9 and 10 students in Tulla High Schoolcan at last sit and learn comfortably in class, eachwith a desk and chair. A new eight-room two-storeyclassroom and toilet blocks have now beencompleted so that an extra 300 students areaccommodated. There has been a spectacularreduction in the drop-out rate from 67% to lessthan 1%, which the School Director attributesdirectly to the improvements brought about by thisproject.Funded by Band Aid Charitable Trust and Guernsey
Overseas Aid Commission
The Women and Girls Centre project provides adedicated space where women and girls can supporteach other, and gain access to training andopportunities they would never have had otherwise.This centre is right by Tulla High School, so that126 girl students come for extra tuition, whichhelps them pass exams to stay at school.Additionally, 54 women are attending adult literacyclasses, and 83 women have received legal advice.BL is negotiating with the local women andchildren’s office to ensure the future of the centreand its services.
Funded by Jersey Overseas Aid Commission
IT training for deaf and hardofhearing young people
We are supporting the Deaf Development andInformation Association (DDIA) who haveprovided training for 100 deaf and hard-of-hearingyoung men and women in IT and enterprise set-up. In the first enterprise venture of this type fordeaf people in Ethiopia, 70 of these young peoplewill set up 10 cyber cafe co-operatives.
Funded by Jersey Overseas Aid Commission
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Tulla High School's new 8 room classroom block
Manjula with primary school pupils in Tulla subcity, Hawassa
BURUNDI
Through DDP’s long involvement with deafchildren’s education in Burundi we have nowdeveloped opportunities to work with otherdisadvantaged and marginalised people, includingreturnees.
Signing up for deaf children in Burundi
We are supporting the parents’ association at EcoleEphphatha pour les Sourds (EES – Ephphathaschool for deaf children) to reach out to parents indifferent parts of the country to share their concernsand knowledge about their children’s education andcommunications needs. We hope that they will leadadvocacy with the ministry of education and healthfor better provisions for deaf kids. Back at EES,special needs training courses for teachers and signlanguage interpreters and sign language training forparents and siblings of deaf pupils will continue toimprove the quality of education and
communication support for deaf children inBurundi.
Funded by Jersey Overseas Aid Commission
More sports
We are helping EES pupils play more sports! Forthe first time a physical education teacher has beenemployed and sports activities time tabled for all142 pupils. The school’s field has been levelledwhere the country's first international inclusivefootball tournament will take place with fourschools competing – including a deaf school fromthe Democratic Republic of Congo.
Funded by Jersey Overseas Aid Commission, Evan
Cornish Foundation and DeafKidz International
IT training
Deaf children at EES must also prepare for workand adulthood and IT skills can be a most inclusivemedium for them. A classroom has beenrefurbished as an IT training unit with Wi-Ficonnection, a full-time trainer and 10 desktop
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On your marks, get set, go! Polycarpe Bakorishaka, physical education teacher and EES pupils
computers to introduce IT skills to EES’s childrenand teachers.
Funded by the British & Foreign Schools Society
‘Twunganire abahungutse’ (EveryoneSupports Returnees)
While discussing disabled children’s rights with theAssociation Communautaire pour la Promotionet la Protection des Droits de l’Homme(ACPDH), a human rights organisation, they
expressed an urgent need to help some of thethousands of Burundians who had been expelledfrom Tanzania in December 2012 where they hadbeen refugees for many years. Without ‘home’connections, civil rights and sometimes even thelocal language, these returnees face poverty andexclusion. We will directly help 150 families whofind themselves displaced within their own countryand support ACPDH to continue their advocacyand human rights advice work and their drop-incentre.
Funded by the Baring Foundation
Flood victims
Following unprecedentedly heavy rains, floods tookpeople unawares on the night of 10th February2014 in parts of the capital city, Bujumbura. Over70 people were killed, 1,000 homes destroyed and3,000 people, many children, were left destitute.DDP’s two partner, EES and ACPDH, were quickto contact us with news of this devastation and wethank Jersey Overseas Aid Commission whoresponded swiftly and generously to our appeal withan emergency grant of over £20,000 to provideurgently needed food, clothes, and children’s schoolmaterials for 489 families (2606 people).
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Young mother who lost everything in floodscollects essential food and kitchen items to startagain.
Bigirimana Louise, a single mother with 5 children is accommodated in the unused jail cell of Gatumbacommune administration
MOZAMBIQUE
DDP’s 20 year engagement with disabledpeople in Mozambique continues with a newpartnership and we expect about 3,000 youngdisabled people and their families to improvetheir standards of living in the two newinitiatives starting late in 2014.
Disabled youth and rights
We are delighted to partner with Associação DosJovens Deficientes De Moçambique (AJODEMO– a national disabled youth organisation). The firstproject will bridge the gap between theory andpractice in the government’s obligations towardsdisabled young people. Through awareness raising
and training disabled youths can be effectivecitizens, knowing their rights under domesticlegislation and the UNCRPD, to collaborate withlocal government officials as duty bearers to upholdthem. This two-year initiative is in 2 districts of theprovince of Maputo and includes the capital city,Maputo, and in Xai-Xai city and two other districtsof Gaza province.
Funded by the Commonwealth Foundation
Training and livelihood opportunitiesfor young disabled people
In a second and complementary initiative withAJODEMO practical assistance, through skills andenterprise training and start-up funds, will be givento 300 young disabled people to create their ownlivelihoods and support their families. With
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Cantol Pondja and AJODEMO member travelling in Quelimane to reach out to disabled youth and organiselocal branches.
training provided by the government vocationaltraining agency, candidates will be assessed forbusiness start-up kits and other materials andprofits from their enterprises will be revolved toother young disabled people to start their ownenterprises.
Funded by Jersey Overseas Aid Commission
SOUTH TO SOUTHEXCHANGES
This year we facilitated partner networkexchanges between India and Ethiopia, andbetween Nepal and Myanmar.
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Ruma Banerjee and Manjula Nanjundaiah of Seva-in-Action (SIA), from India shared their expert knowledge ofinclusive practices in schools with partners BL and the Hawassa College of Teacher Education in Ethiopia.
Jagadish Adhikari (back row, 2nd from left) of DHRC-Nepal and Shudarson Subedi (back row 3rd from right)of the National Federation of Disabled People, Nepal found much in common as DPOs in emergingdemocracies when they visited the Myanmar Independent Living Initiative in Yangon. MILI founders Aung KoMyint (1st from left, back row) and Nay Lin Soe (front row, 1st from left)
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Expenditure 2013-2014: £543,727
Programmes &Projects: £525,677 (97%)
Management &Administration: £12,868 (2%)
Fundraising &Publicity: £5,182 (1%)
404 Camden Road, London N7 0SJ, UKTel +44 20 7700 [email protected]
UK Registered Charity No 1046001
Design & Print: [email protected]: DDP, SIA, EES, DHRCNepal, SDET, AJODEMO,HN/BL, FHRD
Income 2013-2014: £588,908
Grants: £573,276 (97%)
Individual Donors: £15,389 (<3%)
Other (Interest): £243 (<1%)
DDP’s Income and Expenditure
DDP relies on you to continue our work – to seehow you can help, go tohttp://www.ddpuk.org/support.html
You can give online, print off a donation form orsimply send a cheque to DDP. If you are a UKtax payer, don’t forget to boost your donation by
adding Giftaid. If you would like to help in any other way,
please call 020 7700 7298 or [email protected] or join the chat on DDP’sfacebook page (look for us at Disability andDevelopment Partners)
HOW YOU CAN HELP
Deaf children's families learn sign language at classes organised by Ephphatha school for deaf