If you are able to walk and see and are a determined pedestrian,
Chennai’s apology for footpaths might still be negotiable. However,
for those with disabilities, footpaths such as these are best avoided.
By Ramya Kannan
http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/chennai/for-the-disabled-footpaths-are-a-nightmare/article4895765.ece

“For a disabled person, using the pavements in Chennai is a
nightmarish experience,” says Rajiv Ranjan, member, Disability Rights
Alliance (DRA).

“Using pavements in Chennai is not easy for anyone – both for people
without, and those with disabilities,” says T.A.P. Varadakutty,
president, Tamil Nadu Udavikarm Association for the Welfare of the
Differently Abled. “But for people like me, with crutches or people on
wheelchairs, it is especially so.”

Where pavements do exist in Chennai, they are beset with three broad
kinds of issues: height, cuts and hurdles, he says. And it is these
three that make pavements unusable for disabled persons, according to
him.

Height is the primary issue: in some areas, one has to do a pole vault
to actually climb on to the pavement. “Technically, there should be a
gentle incline to facilitate wheelchair users to wheel themselves up
on to the pavements. Those with crutches also find it easy to mount
the pavement if this facility is provided. But no one even thinks of
such things when laying a pavement in this city: it is not part of the
plan,” Mr. Varadakutty says.

Hurdles are physical objects placed in the way, hindering easy
passage. In Chennai they take the form of shops, construction debris,
vehicles, lamppost bases and transformers. “When space is limited,
navigation is already a problem. For a wheelchair user, it is not
possible at all,” Mr. Varadakutty says. His pet peeve is the stretch
in Pondy Bazaar, T. Nagar, which he claims is completely inaccessible
for disabled users.

Pavements where tiles are turned up, or have come loose, or are
missing, are truly treacherous. “Those with crutches can easily fall
or slip and injure themselves,” says Meenakshi B., member, DRA. A
number of friends, with movement disorders, and blindness (without
markers to guide them) have had such falls and been hurt badly, she
says.

But forget disability for a moment. Anyone with a temporary sprain or
fracture, and is limping, or even a senior citizen, finds it difficult
to use footpaths. “Disability is a condition. Anyone can have it at
any time. Just ensure that your footpaths follow the guidelines of
universal design, make them all accessible, and barrier-free, all the
time,” Mr. Varadakutty says.

Talk Back

We invite readers to participate in this campaign. You can email
pictures of bad pavements (size not more than 1.5 MB) to
myri...@thehindu.co.in

Please send a picture of yourself.

In the email, please give your name, contact information, location of
the pavement, description of the issue and action required.

Your pictures will be posted on www.facebook.com/chennaicentral and
will also be considered for publication in the newspaper.

Website: http://thne.ws/mychennai




-- 
Avinash Shahi
MPhil Research Scholar
Centre for the Study of Law and Governance
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi India

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