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No Mumbai for the disabled as civic works ignore accessibility laws

Mumbai’s people with special needs and the elderly left stranded amid chaotic digging and inaccessible footpaths. Under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution, citizens have the right to safe mobility. Yet, the concreting of roads has only made life hard for disable persons

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Raju Waghmare, 46, a visually challenged social activist working with JJ Hospital, struggles to navigate a dug-up stretch near Siddharth College in Fort. Pic/Shadab Khan

Raju Waghmare, 46, a visually challenged social activist working with JJ Hospital, struggles to navigate a dug-up stretch near Siddharth College in Fort. Pic/Shadab Khan

As Mumbai undergoes one of its largest infrastructure overhauls in recent history, persons with disabilities (PwDs) are struggling to cope with dug-up roads and broken footpaths. Despite the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPwD) Act, 2016—mandating accessible infrastructure—Mumbai’s streets and public spaces remain largely non-compliant. The needs of over four lakh disabled citizens are being sidelined amid chaotic civic work.

Resident Rajesh Ashar at Shimpoli Road, where ongoing work has turned Kastur Park in Borivli West into a one-way route, causing major disruption. Pic/Satej Shinde
Resident Rajesh Ashar at Shimpoli Road, where ongoing work has turned Kastur Park in Borivli West into a one-way route, causing major disruption. Pic/Satej Shinde

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