 Lack of requisite education and academic qualification are the reason why a majority of people with disability PWDS are unable to secure competitive jobs in the labour market. In line with this, government at all levels have been urged to provide grants and necessary funding to help children and young adults with special needs to be integrated into society and live valuable lives. The advice was given by the founder of Autism Awareness Foundation, or Moteco Ayo Ulu Budde, at the end of a training to educate and empower young adults with disabilities who are often stigmatised and lack jobs. This works within and other facilitators, thanks to government to provide infrastructure and mobility aids that will make lives easier for the PWDS. People with disabilities, most times they are stigmatised in the community and the lack of job. That is why these skills and position is put together for people who are in care, who are on the wheelchair and so on and so forth. The program today is to study play games and to give them a sort of income as they go forward to their individual lives. There are a lot of challenges faced by the individual living with disabilities. Either autism, cerebral palsy, dancing and so on and so forth. Some of it is the challenge of accessibility, you know, going to school, either school, either work, NMBA. Sometimes our roles are not accessible in terms of maybe people using wheelchair or people who are visually impaired. So the challenges are from school to getting a job and you know, if you don't get to school, how is it easy then to get employment in the long run? From a very young age, do not despise these children. Look at them as a gift that you can work with, that you can train. They all have skills. Even those that have behavioural challenges, even those with cerebral palsy on a wheelchair, they have skills, they have talent, they have gifts. And if we develop these gifts early enough, when they are getting older, we can fine tune it to make it into a vocation that they can use in their adult life. The challenges they are facing are enormous and one of it is social stigma and another is social acceptance and another, of course, like we say, is finance. So these three areas need advocacy, either from organisations such as this or from the individuals themselves, as well as provision of financial backing from philanthropists, from corporate organisations and from the government. For children with autism, the convener was quick to advise parents and caregivers not to feel despondent or seek necessary support. Please don't feel to them with disability at all. Don't think they have from maybe a punishment or they have witchcraft or they are possessed or something. Please bring them out for help and support. We tell to NGOs, there are a lot of NGOs that are doing wonderful things to help bring out these skills and the ability of these children. This programme is very important. This will help us to impose employment, make us employable because we are people with disability. This commission will help us to discriminate and train us. Can you give us the pleasure to do that? It will help us to do business for ourselves. So far, so good. I have been exposed because I learnt digital marketing. Prior, before now, I had engaged myself in a little business which I started earlier this year to support my education as well. I have been doing more of the physical delivery, trying to sort for clients and all of that. Due to the fact that I am visually impaired, it is not really easy to mix all of these together.