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..Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 23
September 2004
Press Release No: L/52/2004
THE UNITED NATIONS SECRETARY-GENERAL
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MESSAGE ON THE INTERNATIONAL DAY OF OLDER PERSONS
1 October 2004
The theme of this year’s International
Day of Older Persons -- “Older Persons in an Intergenerational
Society”-- recognizes the important role that older
persons play in their families, communities and societies. On
this 10th anniversary of the International Year of the Family,
the theme also recognizes that the youth of today, who constitute
the largest group of young people ever, will be the older persons
of the year 2050. They will make up the largest group of older
persons ever.
Yet in many places, both young and old remain
excluded from meaningful participation in their societies, and
the tremendous contribution they could make towards society’s
development is often ignored. Older persons suffer because of
outdated stereotypes that depict them as frail and needing care.
What is overlooked is that many older persons, far from receiving
care, actually provide care for others – as with grandparents
who care for grandchildren while the parents go to work. In
some places, especially in the developing world, what was a
temporary arrangement has in many cases become permanent; the
“middle generation” of parents is absent, having
migrated in search of employment, or died as a result of HIV/AIDS
or other diseases.
Populations in developing countries will age most
rapidly in the coming century. Yet those countries have only
limited economic resources with which to respond to the ageing
of their societies. The challenge will be to ensure that those
countries do not experience the ageing of their societies as
a burden, but derive from it added value and opportunities for
development through an actively engaged older population. In
other words, the challenge will be helping those countries build
an intergenerational society.
The Second World Assembly on Ageing, held in Madrid
two years ago, marked a turning point in our thinking. The Assembly
recognized ageing as a global phenomenon and supported its inclusion
in the international development agenda. Among its many recommendations,
the Madrid Plan of Action encouraged Governments to review policies
to ensure generational equity, and to promote the idea of mutual
support and solidarity between generations as key elements of
social development. Only in this way can we hope to build a
truly intergenerational society. On this International Day,
let us rededicate ourselves to that mission.
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