A A A
Poonam Shroti with former President Pranab Mukherjee.
Poonam Shroti with former President Pranab Mukherjee.
https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/a-plea-to-make-bhopal-an-accessible-smart-city/article29550891.ece
Inclusive structures, safe public spaces remain elusive for disabled
In 2012, an international child rights agency offered a unique
opportunity to Poonam Shroti, who was desperately looking for a break
from a dull corporate job. She excitedly reached the interview spot —
a multi-storeyed hotel, with her mother pushing the wheelchair. But
the absence of a ramp as well as a lift left her dispirited, and she
came back home feeling rejected.

“I tell myself it wasn’t worth it in the first place. This showed they
didn’t care about disability,” says Ms. Shroti, who has osteogenesis
imperfecta, a bone disorder that has rendered her 100% disable. “Don’t
let a disabled feel disabled, and you end up empowering them.”

Incapacitated by pothole-ridden roads, steep ramps and uneven
pathways, she is now making a fervent pitch for a disabled-friendly
Bhopal Smart City. If there could be a ‘Swachh Bhopal’, why couldn’t
we have an ‘Accessible Bhopal’, Ms. Shroti, recipient of a President’s
Award in 2016, explained.

Even to visit her aunt’s place just 50 metres away, she is reluctantly
pushed to negotiate a minefield of potholes. And for her disability, a
bump on the road is enough to crack her fragile bones, and a jerk to
trigger vertigo. Days ago, when her car driver pressed the brakes too
late while approaching a speed breaker, a finger in her left hand
cracked.

Double whammy
“Did the project involve the disabled in formulating policies
concerning them? Was there a survey?” she asked. For her, a Smart City
must include accessible roads, washrooms and parking spots that are
routinely audited. “For disabled women, navigating public spaces is a
double whammy. There is the added element of personal safety.”

Only Singapore has offered her a workable remedy. During 10 days
there, not once did she have to get her wheelchair lifted — not even
in buses and metro rails — or have people stare at her. Thrilled, she
could travel the city independently.

“I returned with the sombre feeling of being a dependant again,” said
Ms. Shroti, 38.

Inaccessible spaces have also blocked her professional growth. Though
she had an MBA in Finance, recruiters hurled a multitude of limiting
questions at her. In essence, corporates shied away from making
structural and attitudinal changes to be disabled-friendly.

Now, Ms. Shroti trains recruiters on inclusive employment and is also
a motivational speaker and India’s only 100% disabled interviewer for
a weekly series called ‘Super 10’ on Newscrust, a website.

-- 
सादर/ Regards

अविनाश शाही/ Avinash Shahi
सहायक/ Assistant
मानव संसाधन प्रबंध विभाग/ Human Resource Management Department
भारतीय रिजर्व बैंक/ Reserve Bank of India
लखनऊ क्षेत्रीय कार्यालय/Lucknow RO
विस्तार/ Extension: 2232



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