The Zambia Agency for Persons with Disability (ZAPD) has observed an increase in the number of foreign blind people on the streets in Lusaka and on the Copperbelt province who are begging for money.
ZAPD Acting Director General, Charles Mwape, said some of the blind people are suspected to be from Zimbabwe and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Dr. Mwape told ZANIS in an interview in Lusaka today that this has affected the reintegration programme which the agency, working with government under the auspices of the ministry of Community Development and Social Services, has embarked on.
He said government and the agency have found it difficult to clear the blind persons from the streets because of the new people that have since thronged the streets.
Dr. Mwape has since appealed to the Department of Immigration to help scrutinize travel documents of the suspected foreigners on the streets.
He said the department of immigration should move in if the programme of integrating the blind is to succeed.
Meanwhile, the Zambia Agency for Persons with Disability (ZAPD) has extended the period of registration for its affiliates.
Dr. Mwape has disclosed that the agency has extended the registration period to May 27, 2009.
He said the extension follows an appeal by stakeholders to have the date extended after ZAPD ran out of application forms for the registration.
He has however maintained that no organization whether local or foreign, that will not register with ZAPD would be allowed to operate and offer services to disabled people once the extension period elapses.
Dr. Mwape said there is therefore need for all organizations dealing with disabled people to register with his agency so that the agency can start monitoring their activities and help better the lives of the disabled people.
Act 33 of 1999 of the Laws of Zambia provides that every organization providing services to the disabled should be registered with ZAPD.
ZANIS