|
Press
Release..............................
UNESCAP News Services
|
23 September 2003
Press Release No: L/33/2003
THE SECRETARY-GENERAL
--
MESSAGE ON THE INTERNATIONAL DAY OF OLDER PERSONS
1 October 2003
Over the next few decades, older persons will
form an increasingly large and important presence in communities
and societies everywhere. And yet, until recently, little attention
had been paid to how we can best use the skills of older persons
in development.
Then, last year, the Second World Assembly on
Ageing adopted the Madrid International Plan of Action, which
called for a fundamental shift in how we think about ageing
and older persons. The Madrid Plan moved policy issues on ageing
out of the narrow confines of the social welfare agenda, and
into the mainstream of development policy debate. It acknowledged
that older persons represent a powerful but untapped resource
for society. It put forward recommendations on how we can adjust
to an ageing world and build a society for all ages.
In my follow-up report to the current General
Assembly, I proposed a practical framework for both national
and international action to implement the Madrid Plan with two
main focuses: national capacity-building, and mainstreaming
of ageing into the developmental agenda.
During this first year of the implementation process,
we have seen progress on a number of fronts. At the intergovernmental
level, the modalities for review and appraisal of the implementation
of the Plan have been agreed. During 2002, Member States in
Europe and Asia developed strategies for implementation, while
Latin America and the Caribbean should have a strategy in place
by the end of this year. We expect that a process of implementation
in the African region will follow.
Every one of us can help build bridges between
generations by embracing the skills of older persons, whether
in community or family affairs, agriculture or urban entrepreneurship,
education, technology or the arts, poverty reduction or peacebuilding.
The challenge before us is to bring the invaluable attributes
of older people out of obscurity and into step with other instruments
of development -- including the work to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals, our blueprint for building a better world
in the 21st century. On this International Day of Older Persons,
let us vow to make the most of the powerful resource that older
persons represent in the work for development.
* *** *