BANGKOK (ILO News) – Participants at a three-day
ILO/Japan meeting beginning on Tuesday at the United Nations’
Conference Centre (UNCC) will be addressing the important
challenge of improving vocational training and employment opportunities for
people with disabilities.
This issue is of particular concern in Asia and the
Pacific, where half of the world’s disabled population lives. Some
238 million disabled people in the region are of working age, and
this group is disproportionately underrepresented in schools and training
centres. Without the opportunity of education and training
opportunities, they face additional hurdles in securing jobs or starting businesses. People with disabilities frequently face
obstacles that are physical, social, attitudinal and policy-related,
which ultimately represents discrimination. The end result is that
people with disabilities often face the prospect of poverty and a lack
of opportunities, and society loses the benefit of their contribution.
The ILO/Japan Technical Consultation on Vocational
Training and Employment of People with Disabilities represents the ILO’s
initial contribution to the recently extended Asian and Pacific Decade
of Disabled Persons (2003-2012). It aims to advance the training and
employment targets adopted by governments in the region in Otsu, Japan as part of
the Biwako Millennium Framework of Action towards an Inclusive,
Barrier-Free and Rights-Based Society for People with Disabilities in Asia and the Pacific.
Representatives of governments, disabled persons
organizations, trade unions and employers’ groups from fourteen
countries will participate, making this the largest ILO meeting in the
region to address the employment and training needs of people with
disabilities. The meeting will identify priority areas for action and
ways in which these can best be addressed.
"This meeting provides the ideal opportunity
for people with disabilities, governments and social partners to
strategize about how to address the high rates of unemployment,
poverty and social exclusion people with disabilities face throughout
the region," says Debra Perry, ILO senior specialist in
vocational rehabilitation for the region. "We also hope to bring
renewed attention to ILO Convention 159 which calls for equal
opportunity and treatment for disabled persons."
Following the three-day meeting, a consultation
will take place on 17 January, on the ILO project ‘Employment of
People with Disabilities – the Impact of Legislation’.
Funded by the Government of the Republic of Ireland
through the Ireland Aid-ILO Partnership Agreement, this project
examines the operation of laws and policies to promote employment
opportunities for disabled persons and provides technical assistance
for countries in Asia and Africa in improving the effectiveness of existing legislation or
developing new laws or regulations. Coordinated by the ILO’s
Disability Programme in Geneva, this project will play an
important role in supporting countries in the region to achieve the targets laid
down in the Biwako Framework for Action.
The ILO has long supported the rights of people
with disabilities, and has been a strong advocate for the rights of
disabled workers. This year marks the twentieth anniversary of the
adoption of the ILO’s Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment (Disabled
Persons) Convention (No. 159). Countries that ratify the Convention
pledge to develop programmes and practices to implement a vocational rehabilitation policy based on equal opportunity and
treatment for disabled persons, in consultation with representative organizations of employers,
workers and people with disabilities. So far, six countries in this region - Australia, Japan,
Mongolia, the People’s Republic
of China, the Philippines and the Republic of Korea – are among the
73 countries which have ratified Convention 159.
In November 2001, the ILO Governing Body adopted
the Code of Practice for Managing Disability in the Workplace. This
provides guidance to employers on how to recruit people with
disabilities and maintain employment for workers who become disabled,
enabling them to benefit from the contribution which workers with
disabilities can make. The Code also highlights the important roles of
governments, employers’, workers’ and disabled persons’
organizations in promoting equal opportunities for disabled people at
work. Both Convention 159 and the Code of Practice provide importance guidance on the issues which countries
of Asia and the Pacific are now facing in promoting opportunities for
people with disabilities.
Mr Yasuyuki Nodera, ILO Regional Director for the
Asia-Pacific, and Mr Weerasak Kowsurat, Advisor to Minister of Social
Development and Human Security, will deliver addresses during the inaugural session on Tuesday at 8.30 am at the United Nations’
Conference Centre (UNCC) in Bangkok.
Media representatives are cordially invited to attend the opening
ceremony.
Interview slots may be arranged for the following:
Venus Ilagen, World Chair, Disabled Peoples’ International
Barbara Murray, Manager, Equity Issues, Skills Development Department
(IFP/SKILLS), International Labour Organization (ILO)
Debra Perry, Senior Specialist in Vocational Rehabilitation, EASMAT/BAO,
ILO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific.
Further information is available from the ILO Public Information
Officer, Stephen Thompson. Telephone + (662) 288-2482, Fax + (662)
288-3062; E-mail: thompsons@ilobkk.or.th