Following is UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon’s message on World Down Syndrome Day, to be commemorated on 21 March
2012:
Today marks the first
commemoration of World Down Syndrome Day. I congratulate the global partnership
of Governments, activists, families, professionals and others that worked so
tirelessly and passionately to bring this Day into existence.
For too long, persons with Down
syndrome, including children, have been left on the margins of society. In many
countries, they continue to face stigma and discrimination as well as legal,
attitudinal and environmental barriers that hinder their participation in their
communities.
Discrimination can be as invidious as forced sterilization or as
subtle as segregation and isolation through both physical and social barriers.
Persons with Down syndrome are often denied the right to equal recognition
before the law, as well as the right to vote or be elected. Intellectual
impairments have also been seen as legitimate grounds for depriving persons with
Down syndrome of their liberty, and for holding them in specialized
institutions, sometimes for their entire lives.
In many
countries, girls and boys with intellectual disabilities lack sufficient access
to mainstream education. The prejudice that children with Down syndrome
obstruct the education of others has led some parents of children with
intellectual disabilities to put their children in special schools or keep them
at home. Yet research shows — and more people are coming to understand — that
diversity in the classroom leads to learning and understanding that benefit all
children.
The United Nations has worked for
decades to ensure the well-being and human rights of all people. These efforts
were strengthened by the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of Persons
with Disabilities in 2006. The Convention embodies a paradigm shift in which
persons with disabilities are no longer regarded as objects of charity and
welfare, but as persons with equal rights and dignity who can make an enormous
contribution to society in their own right.
On this day, let us reaffirm that
persons with Down syndrome are entitled to the full and effective enjoyment of
all human rights and fundamental freedoms. Let us each do our part to enable
children and persons with Down syndrome to participate fully in the development
and life of their societies on an equal basis with others. Let us build an
inclusive society for all.
No comments:
Post a Comment