Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana Federation of Disability Organisations (GFD) is urging the government to move quickly on the long-awaited revised disability Bill, describing it as essential for protecting the rights and dignity of more than two million Ghanaians with disabilities.
Addressing a press conference in Accra, Gender Representative of the Federation, Martha Coffie, said the Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection must fast-track all remaining processes and present the revised Bill to Parliament without delay.
She added that once the Bill reaches the House, legislators should “not hesitate” to pass it.
“The revised Bill will modernise our legal framework, clarify institutional responsibilities and improve access to education, employment, health care, transport and justice for persons with disabilities,” she said on behalf of National President, Joseph Atsu Homadzi.
According to the GFD, the current Persons with Disability Act, 2006 (Act 715), no longer aligns with global disability rights principles or Ghana’s obligations under the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD), which the country ratified in 2012.
Martha Coffie said the long delay in updating the law has created “persistent accessibility and participation barriers” and weakened compliance across public and private institutions.
These gaps, she noted, undermine national progress on inclusive education, employment opportunities, transport, justice, digital inclusion and access to social protection.
“With government’s renewed commitments at the global and national levels, now is the moment to translate words into action,” she added.
The Federation pointed to recent pledges made at the 2025 Global Disability Summit and the national launch of the Free Tertiary Education initiative, where the government reaffirmed its commitment to breaking barriers for persons with disabilities.
However, Martha Coffie said legislative action has been slow, leaving millions without a modern legal framework that reflects their aspirations.
GFD has also called on the National Council on Persons with Disabilities to intensify stakeholder engagement, public awareness and technical coordination ahead of the Bill’s passage to ensure strong institutional readiness once it becomes law.
The Federation insists the revised disability law is crucial for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and ensuring equal opportunity for all Ghanaians.
Latest Stories
-
NPP set to finalise Ayawaso East candidate without primaries
48 seconds -
Ekuban inspires late Genoa comeback in thrilling Bologna victory
58 seconds -
AG’s accusations do not equal conviction- Kwakye Ofosu
15 minutes -
Fidelity Bank deepens community impact with nationwide end-of-year social interventions
17 minutes -
Ken Ofori-Atta cannot receive special treatment under the law -Felix Kwakye
18 minutes -
Black Greek Life in Ghana: Divine Nine, NPHC and rise of Heritage Tourism
23 minutes -
280 cases of corruption are under investigation – Kwakye Ofosu
27 minutes -
IMF does not build nations; Ghana must move beyond economic stability – Solomon Owusu
31 minutes -
Joseph Opoku marks injury return with goal in Zulte Waregem’s seven-goal thriller
33 minutes -
NRA and other US gun activists push back at Trump officials over Minneapolis shooting
37 minutes -
Caribbean cannabis growers eye budding domestic sales and exports
38 minutes -
Job scam survivors warned as over 100 youths rescued in Ho trafficking bust
44 minutes -
None of Agenda 111 hospitals were operational before Akufo-Addo gov’t left office – Kwakye Ofosu
47 minutes -
Agenda 111 was rushed and poorly thought through – Kwakye Ofosu
48 minutes -
UK-Ghana JET programme urges faster decarbonisation of Ghana’s transport sector
49 minutes
