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Governor: I think as we try in Hong Kong to establish welfare programmes which are commensurate with our prosperity as a community, one of our most important priorities is to ensure that those with disabilities are properly integrated into the whole community. That's the civilised and decent way of behaving, to ensure that everybody can make the absolute maximum of their considerable abilities. The key to integration, in my view, is employment and the key to employment is education and training. Now we have made some progress, as you know, in improving training. But I hear what you say about the importance of adequate school facilities for those with a disability. You will know better than me, that with older buildings there are quite often very considerable expenses involved in modifying a building to make it available easily for those in a wheelchair or with some other mechanical device that they need to move around. But I can assure you that I will speak to the Education Department and see what programme we have and what progress we've made in providing for students with a disability.
I also agree with you about the importance of resource centres. Let's be clear about one of their considerable benefits. One of their benefits is reminding people, or showing people, that they're not on their own. That they're not islands, that there are other people with the same problems and challenges as them who can share the way they rise to those challenges and who can provide one another with more initiative and frankly, even more courage to face the problems of daily living. We're having some success in providing centres for the chronically ill and I will certainly look at whether we should, and could, provide the sort of centre that you are talking about, for people with disabilities, people who are wheelchair bound and people who cope spectacularly well with problems of transport, with problems getting to work. There's a very good coffee shop which some of you may have been to, near Pacific Place, which is entirely run by mostly young people with disabilities. One of the most interesting things is to hear them individually tell you how they get to work, what a challenge it is, the difficulties that they have to go through. So, I hope that we can perhaps follow up your advice and maybe if I can have another meeting like this next year I'll be able to report progress on that.
Gentleman No. 2.