Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia, the seat of the AU and a variety of regional andrninternational organizations is a city where persons with disabilities continue to face everydayrnchallenges especially lack of access to primary health care services. This thesis intends tornscrutinize the issue of accessibility right to health care services in Ethiopia with a specialrnreference to Addis Ababa’s Yeka Sub-City. Yeka sub-city has been chosenas a research arearnpurposively considering the landscape, data availability and its being forestry andrnmountainous with long outer boundary line with rural woredas all of which are not suitablernfor PWDs. Compared to other Sub-Cities,Yeka Sub-City consists of low status residents whornare not able to help persons with disabilities to access required services.PWDs, healthrnprofessionals and some persons in the society have been selected applying purposivernsampling to give the required data and information. PWDs consist of physical, visual,rnhearing and speech impairments. Health professionals consist of doctors, health officers,rnnurses and health assistants. Persons in the society include directors, officers andrnassociation leaders. A total of 60 participants of which, 34 male and 26 female hasrnparticipated in the interviews and two focus group discussions.rnIn the course of the research, international and regional human rights instruments, togetherrnwith national legal frameworks, policies and strategies, which are relevant to the researchrnissues as well as practical situations and implementations in health care centers have beenrnobserved and studied deeply. The research has also employed review of literatures, interviewrndiscussions, focus group discussionsand observations as data collection tools.In the research,rnit is realized and understood that the problem of accessibility to health care services tornPWDs is more prevailing in Ethiopiadue to the negative impacts of barriers.Lack ofrnmonitoring mechanisms, ineffective enforcement mechanisms and failure to institutionalizerndisability issues aboutPWDs’ benefits and human rightscauses violations of their rights. Thernresearcher analyzed the thesis using qualitative method and descriptive analysis andrnstructured it organizing the required data and information.Additionally, the problem ofrnaccessibility to health care services for PWDs is attributed to the low level of informationrntransmission in the community and lack of disaggregated legal frameworks, policies andrnstrategies in accordance with each disability types. The health care service provisionrnproblem for PWDs is very high and complex in Addis Ababa and it is possible to imaginernhow it is even worse in rural areas of the country.rnTherefore, the country particularly the city administration, needs determined action torndevelop horizontal accessibility laws (laws which govern non-state or private actors onrnhuman rights), disaggregating disability types and develop convenient legal frameworks;rndesign policies, strategies and guidelines; train and educate health professionals aboutrnhuman rights of PWDs, and create awareness integrating community based organizations.rnAll these should be backed by adequate budget and effective monitoring and evaluationrnmechanisms to realize the access to health care services for persons with disabilities asrnperthe standards of international and regional human rights instruments, and national legalrnframeworks.