By Tabe Ishimael Danirayi
1. Executive Summary
This advocacy paper highlights the exclusion of people with hearing impairments during the recent public hearing on Constitutional Amendment Bill Number 3 in Zimbabwe due to the absence of sign language interpreters. Despite constitutional recognition of sign language as an official language, the failure to provide interpretation services undermines democratic participation, equality, and human rights.

The paper calls on the Government of Zimbabwe and relevant stakeholders to urgently institutionalize the provision of sign language interpreters in all public processes. It outlines practical, actionable recommendations to ensure that people with hearing impairments can fully participate in national governance and decision-making processes.
2. Problem Statement
The recent public hearings on Constitutional Amendment Bill Number 3 exposed a significant gap in Zimbabwe’s commitment to inclusivity. Individuals with hearing impairments were unable to effectively participate due to the absence of sign language interpreters.
This exclusion:
Violates constitutional provisions recognizing sign language
Limits access to critical national discussions
Marginalizes a significant portion of the population
The issue reflects a broader systemic failure, as similar barriers persist in courts, police stations, and other public institutions.
3. Advocacy Goal
To ensure that all public hearings and national processes in Zimbabwe are fully accessible to people with hearing impairments through the mandatory provision of sign language interpretation services.
4. Objectives
To promote enforcement of constitutional provisions on sign language
To advocate for inclusive participation in governance processes
To influence policy reforms that mandate accessibility in public services
To raise awareness on the rights of people with hearing impairments
5. Key Advocacy Messages
Inclusion is a constitutional right, not a privilege.
No public participation without accessibility.
Sign language access equals democratic participation.
Nothing for us without us.
6. Legal and Human Rights Framework
Zimbabwe’s Constitution recognizes sign language as an official language, placing a clear obligation on the State to ensure accessibility in public communication.
Additionally, principles of equality and non-discrimination require that:
All citizens have equal access to information
Public participation processes are inclusive
Marginalized groups are not excluded from decision-making
Failure to provide sign language interpretation constitutes a violation of these rights.
7. Evidence and Justification
Evidence from the recent public hearings confirms that:
No sign language interpreters were present
People with hearing impairments were unable to follow proceedings
Participation from this group was effectively blocked
Previous studies further reveal that:
Courts and police stations lack interpretation services
Communication barriers deny access to justice
There is limited institutional capacity for inclusive service delivery
This demonstrates a systemic issue requiring urgent policy and institutional reform.
8. Target Audience
Parliament of Zimbabwe
Ministry of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs
Ministry of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare
Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission
Civil society organizations
Organizations representing persons with disabilities
9. Advocacy Strategies
9.1 Policy Engagement
Submit formal recommendations to Parliament
Engage policymakers through meetings and public forums
9.2 Public Campaigns
Use media platforms to raise awareness
Promote stories highlighting exclusion experiences
9.3 Strategic Partnerships
Collaborate with disability advocacy groups
Work with human rights organizations to amplify the message
9.4 Capacity Building
Advocate for training of sign language interpreters
Encourage institutions to adopt inclusive communication practices
10. Recommendations
To address the identified gaps, this paper proposes:
10.1 Mandatory Sign Language Interpretation
Require sign language interpreters at all public hearings and national events
Develop a regulatory framework enforcing compliance
10.2 Institutional Strengthening
Establish a national pool of certified interpreters
Allocate budgetary resources for accessibility services
10.3 Monitoring and Accountability
Introduce oversight mechanisms to ensure compliance
Penalize institutions that fail to provide accessibility services
10.4 Capacity Development
Invest in training programs for interpreters
Integrate disability inclusion training in public sector institutions
10.5 Inclusive Policy Design
Involve people with hearing impairments in decision-making processes
Ensure policies reflect the needs of all citizens
11. Call to Action
The Government of Zimbabwe, policymakers, and all stakeholders must act urgently to address the exclusion of people with hearing impairments from public processes.
We call for:
Immediate deployment of sign language interpreters in all public hearings
Long-term institutional reforms to guarantee accessibility
Active inclusion of people with hearing impairments in governance
Inclusive democracy requires the voices of all citizens. Silence, whether intentional or systemic, must not be allowed to exclude any group from shaping the nation’s future.
12. Conclusion
The absence of sign language interpreters during the public hearing on Constitutional Amendment Bill Number 3 is a clear indication that Zimbabwe still faces significant challenges in achieving inclusivity. This advocacy paper emphasizes that accessibility is not optional—it is a constitutional and human rights obligation. Ensuring full participation of people with hearing impairments will strengthen democratic governance, promote equality, and uphold the dignity of all citizens













