Foday Mattia

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Picture 1

This picture shows a bicycle accident involving one of Foday’s friends, a fourteen year-old boy with a speech and hearing impairment. He has just been involved in a collision with a pedestrian and an argument has broken out. Accidents in the street are more common for people with speech and hearing impairments, as they cannot hear the noise of the cars and the traffic. The roads in Freetown are in very poor condition with few sidewalks and many holes, so walking in the streets can be extremely dangerous for people with physical disabilities.

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Picture 2

These two girls live near Foday, in a dilapidated area where there is a lot of rubbish. They are going to collect water. The majority of Sierra Leoneans live below the poverty line, and a child with a disability can put an added financial strain on a family’s already restricted resources. These children are often seen as a burden that costs the parents too much money. A huge number of children and young people with disabilities in Sierra Leone have been abandoned by their families. Many are now living on the streets of Freetown. Because of the high costs of technical disability equipment, parents are often faced with the choice of whether to spend $150 on a wheelchair for one child, or to feed all their five children for three months with the same amount of money. Furthermore, the financial gains of having children to support their parents in later life, are not identified in children with disabilities who are sometimes considered to be useless, and this is another reason for discarding them.

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Picture 3

Foday took this photo standing from his house looking out into his community on a rainy day. Young people with speech and hearing impairments are one of the most excluded social groups in Sierra Leone. There is a strong social barrier between those with disabilities and those without disabilities, and this is especially the case when it comes to people with speech and hearing impairments who struggle to communicate with others. The communities often see them as outcasts and it is not easy to make friends.

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Back to main page: The voices of young people living with speech and hearing impairment in Sierra Leone

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