Review and appraisal of the
World Programme of Action
concerning Disabled Persons
Part 5 of 6
V. Selected issues in accessibility to bodies and organizations of the United Nations
system for persons with disabilities
It will be recalled that the Secretary-General submitted to the General Assembly at its
fiftieth session a comprehensive review of the action taken by concerned members of the
United Nations system to improve accessibility to United Nations facilities and
information resources for persons with disabilities (A/50/473). Selected activities
undertaken since then by the Task Force on Accessibility, convened by the Department of
Administration and Management of the United Nations Secretariat, are reviewed below.
The period under review is characterized by a significant expansion in the range of
information available in digital format via the United Nations Internet home page.30 Providing information in digital format not only facilitates
the increased and expanded use of United Nations information resources by persons with
disabilities but it offers low-cost and reliable access for all to these considerable
information resources.31
The Department of Public Information of the United Nations Secretariat is finalizing a
new guide to the United Nations building and services for persons with disabilities which
is aimed at meeting the information needs of persons with disabilities at Headquarters,
including staff members, delegates and visitors. The guide will be available during the
fifty-second session of the General Assembly, and is being compiled in cooperation with
Secretariat specialists and representatives of the non-governmental community.32
Footnotes
30 The United Nations home page is located at http:\\www.un.org.
Interested users can access the full range of digital information available from United
Nations bodies and organizations from that site.
31 The importance of access to digital information resources to the
well-being and livelihood of persons, especially among those with disabilities, is
discussed in a thoughtful commentary, entitled "Internet for the disabled
community; the Singapore experience", which was compiled by the Disabled
Peoples Association of Singapore, a non-governmental organization. The Association
notes that Internet technologies reduce the barrier between people labelled as
disabled and the majority of the population. On the network, being blind or deaf or unable
to walk constitutes no major impediment. Using Internet, intra-disability and
cross-disability communications can be enhanced. The commentary is located on the Internet
at http://www.dpa.org.sg/DPA/welcome.html.
32 An accessibility guide to New York City has been published as the
result of a joint initiative of voluntary organizations, the private sector and the City
of New York; see Access for All: A Guide for People with Disabilities to New York City
Cultural Institutions (1992).
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