Sun. Dec 22nd, 2024

VietNamNet Bridge – A pilot project has been launched to provide transport support services for people with disabilities in HCM City.


HCM City, disabilities, free transport

Three-wheel motorbikes offer free pick-up service in HCM City for people with disabilities.

The service will be carried out by the city’s Disabilities Research and Capacity Development Centre (DRD), in cooperation with the Korean Human Rights Forum of Persons with Disabilities in Jeju, South Korea.

With total capital of more than US$108,000 funded by South Korea’s International Cooperation Agency, the project will last through 2014.

People with disabilities will be picked up in the city’s inner districts for free until the end of the year, and then will pay a low fee next year, Luong Thi Quynh Lan, manager of the DRD’s project.

HCM City has nearly 40,000 people with disabilities, Lan said, adding that their traveling demand was very high.

Vo Thi Hoang Yen, the DRD’s head, said that only 117 city buses had low or semi-low floors that could help people with disabilities, especially wheelchair users.

About 4,000 buses operate in the city, according to a report of the National Coordinating Council on Disability in Viet Nam issued last year.

Transportation difficulties have limited the disabled’s right to take part in school, work and social activities, which are guaranteed under law.

Of the 13 million of people with disabilities in the country, nearly 40 per cent are illiterate, she said.

Only 10 per cent of them have stable jobs, she added.

Yen said she hoped the state and other organisations and companies would provide the project with funds so that it could continue for a long time.

Yang Won Tae, chairman of the Korean Human Rights Forum of Persons With Disabilities, said South Korea wanted to contribute to helping people with disabilities in Viet Nam.

He said the forum will continue to mobilise support from other organisations and companies in South Korea, he said.

The service, which is the first of its kind in the country, has a hotline number, 0935244123. People who want to use the service must call the hotline and register.

Source: VNS

By vivian