NEW MINISTER FOR WELFARE MINISTER OF MALAYSIA

NEW MINISTER FOR WELFARE MINISTER OF MALAYSIA
Badan Latihan dan Hidup Berdikari Malaysia (ILTC) pada 23hb Mac 2016 menyerahkan memorandum kepada ahli-ahli parlimen mendesak supaya golongan orang kurang upaya (OKU) dikecualikan daripada cukai barangan dan perkhidmatan (GST).

Disabled Members Protest

Disabled Members Protest
Disabled Members Protest at JPJ Wangsa Maju

ILTC Malaysia members staged a protest outside JPJ Wangsamaju KL.

ILTC Malaysia members staged a protest outside JPJ Wangsamaju KL.
Disabled group’s protest disabled drivers required to produce doc's medical report.

Friday 7 August 2009

5th Asean Para Games in Kuala Lumpur from Aug 15 to 19

Malaysia will be hosting the 5th Asean Para Games in Kuala Lumpur from Aug 15 to 19 and which will feature athletes from 11 countries, including Timor Leste.
The government has allocated RM4 million to host the Asean Para Games but don't just be the best hosts but try to become the best contingent.

Meanwhile, Asean Para Sports Federation president Datuk Zainal Abu Zarin in a speech at the launch of the Games torch mission relay urged the public to give support and watch the games.
The Rakan Muda youth volunteering squad - Unicefare, is seeking about 40 volunteers for the games and rehearsal will be conducted from Aug 10 to Aug 14.

Those interested and aged between 15 and 25 are encouraged to apply.

For more information, contact Azmi at 012-939 8186 or Hasimah at 012-459 8819.

Wednesday 5 August 2009

Chew: Not a must to register

Tuesday August 4, 2009



Chew: Not a must to register
By NG CHENG YEE

THE Government has no plans to make registration with the Welfare Department compulsory for disabled people, Deputy Women, Family and Community Development Minister Datin Paduka Chew Mei Fun said.

She said this was because persons with disabilities must be given informed choice.

“As of March 2009, 256,364 disabled people were registered with the department and the actual figure is expected to be significantly higher,” she said at the National Advocacy and Awareness Disability Campaign in Petaling Jaya recently.

However, she said, it was necessary to create awareness among persons with disabilities and their families on the importance of registration and to encourage them to register themselves.

“Persons with disabilities encounter a myriad of physical and social barriers and challenges that impede their participation in society. The society’s attitude, prejudices, beliefs and ignorance create obstacles to inclusion,” she said.

She said the lack of accommodation in employment, education and transportation also presented a serious challenge.

“As a result, persons with disabilities often do not have access to the same opportunities as others, have higher rates of unemployment, live in poverty and are more likely to be socially isolated,” she said.

However, she said Malaysia had put in place the National Policy on Persons with Disabilities to enhance their well-being and ensure that they enjoyed equal rights and full participation in the society.

It’s the disabled who need help, not students

Monday August 3, 2009



It’s the disabled who need help, not student

The Prime Minister announced recently that first year university students are to get 100 units of ASM for free. I can’t help feeling sad and annoyed when I read the report.

I have nothing against college or university students, but why must the Government pamper them so much. To be able to attend university or college usually means one’s future is quite secure in terms of employment.

Compare that with the disabled. Most of them have no chance at all to attend college and may never get a proper job. Shouldn’t they be more deserving of our help? Yet time and again, they are left out when Government “goodies” are handed out.

Not too long ago, the Government announced that college students are entitled to second class wards at Government hospitals whereas the disabled will still have to make do at the crowded third class wards.

And recently, I was told that special pupils can only remain in schools up to when they are 19 years old (reduced from 20 previously) which means they only have an extra two years to sit for PMR and SPM.

After that, their options are limited. So, why the hurry to kick them out of school?

Don’t get me started, but I could go on and on about how the Government seems to lead the way in marginalising the very people who needs assistance most.

CONCERNED MOTHER,

Kuala Lumpur.

Monday 3 August 2009

A safe haven for the elderly

Friday July 31, 2009

A safe haven for the elderly
By CHARLES FERNANDEZ

FOR some, The Little Sisters of the Poor St. Francis Xavier Home for the elderly in Cheras may seem extravagant.

But in planning the new home, the Catholic Church saw the need to provide facilities, equipment and fittings suitable for the comfort, convenience and safety of the elderly residents.

The home is an epitome of love where nuns go about feeding, washing, bathing, cleaning and tending to the sick to ensure that those who are with them can live out the last years of their lives with dignity and comfort.

These women have been taking care of men and women in their twilight years who have little or no income and no family to take care of them. Caring: Sr Cecelia chatting with centarian Wong as Sr Marie Angela gets ready to take her out for a stroll.

“These people have led a hard life, many are in their twilight years who come from poor families or have no family to care for them,’’ said Sister Cecilia, sister-in-charge of the home.

The home was motivated by Jeanne Jugan who founded the Little Sisters of the Poor one winter evening in 1839 in St. Sevan, France.

She opened her heart and her home to an elderly, blind, paralysed woman who found herself all alone after the death of her sister. Jugan carried Anne Chauvin through the streets of their small town to her apartment and placed her in her own bed.

Soon another old woman followed, then a third and this was how the congregation of the Little Sisters of the Poor, with its unique mission of hospitality to the elderly was born.

The Little Sisters of the Poor arrived in Kuala Lumpur in 1965 during the feast of St. Francis Xavier.

At the Cheras Home, voluntary doctors and dentists offer their services and many people have also taken an active interest in the residents’ welfare by taking them out for picnics, games or simply coming for a chat.

“We want to bring back to them the dignity that they have lost or have been deprived of. That is why in their new home they each have their own room with attached bathroom for better privacy,’’ added Sr Cecilia.

There are now 67 residents at the home. The oldest is centenarian Wong Lai Yong.

Wong has been at the home for the last 30 years when the Little Sisters of the Poor had their humble beginnings at a 16-room bungalow which once belonged to a Chinese millionaire, in the then Klang Road.

Many are bedridden, the more able ones sit about in the courtyard chatting away while some help the volunteers and nuns with the daily chores of preparing food in the kitchen and laying the tables for meals.

“There is no time to day-dream as there are various activities lined up for the residents each day,’’ said Sr Cecilia.

From Monday to Thursday, residents take part in Bible sharing, on Tuesday there is a 45-minute bowling session conducted by Paul Duane, an American who has volunteered his services beyond bowling lessons, physioteraphy every day and a 90-minute taichi lesson every Saturday.

“There is no feeling of being unwanted and abandoned as there is self-giving love for everyone.

There is a spawn of dedicated volunteers who care for the elderly with love and personal attention,’’ said Sr Cecilia.

Unlike the hundreds of old people who have been left abandoned by their children or next-of-kin in government hospitals and old folks homes throughout the country, the Little Sisters of the Poor has a mission — to provide constant maternal protection to those entrusted under their care.

The home is equipped with air-conditioning, lifts, full kitchen and laundry facilities, a physiotherapy department, doctor’s office and treatment room, pharmacy and dental clinic for the physical needs and comfort of the residents.

The home also has a proper chapel which conducts Sunday services, a separate multi-purpose hall, games room and a hair salon.

The St Francis Xavier’s Home for the elderly is at No. 3 Jalan 5/96, off Jalan Sekuci, Taman Sri Bahtera, 5th Mile Jalan Cheras, 56100 Kuala Lumpur. (Tel: 03-9131 1464 ).