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They deserve better - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

KIRT CONRAD WALROND

YEARS AGO, Richard 'Nappy' Mayers released a song that took us back to the ole time days. He reminded us of a time when we 'cared for each other,' a time ruled by manners, respect, dignity and the values of a great generation. As children, we would often recite the national pledge in which we promised to honour our elders. But let's be honest, do we abide by the words of our pledge?

Many were justifiably incensed by the recent images of senior citizens standing in long lines or sitting in the pouring rain as they waited patiently for their vaccines. Patience is a virtue that our seniors understand. However, as a nation do we truly understand this virtue?

In her observance of World Elder Abuse Awareness Day 2021, President Paula-Mae Weekes chided 'the recent, appalling display of disregard for our senior citizens which left them standing - and when they could no longer stand, sitting - on the ground unshielded from the elements lining the nation's roads.'

The President also called on us to make care and respect for the elderly a priority, a call that may fall on deaf ears since J'Ouvert rum and Carnival 2022 are foremost on the minds of many. We cannot be serious about this issue if we sweep it under the carpet.

However, as appalling as those images are, should we be surprised? Can we honestly say we have a pristine track record of care and respect for the elderly in this country? The answer is an emphatic and unfortunate no. As a nation and as a people we have lost our way, having paid more attention to power, money, fame, politricks, Carnival and bacchanal than to people who deserve to be treated with love, compassion and human dignity. Therefore, should we be surprised when our seniors are treated like second class citizens within our own borders?

The President also lamented the fact that some of our elders are mistreated and abused by relatives within their own households, echoing similar sentiments made in June 2020 when she warned that 'elder abuse is a rampant, yet severely under-reported social ill, affecting an estimated one in six persons aged 60 years and older around the globe.'

In a report published by the Guardian on June 16, Minister of Social Development and Family Services Donna Cox conceded that elderly abuse is a silent epidemic, citing 174 cases for January 1 to May 31. Of that number, 123 cases came from private households and most stemmed from neglect. The minister also reported a rise in cases of stolen pension cheques, with reports made 'every week or every two weeks.' These are atrocious statistics that should never be accepted. One case is too many.

Furthermore, these recent statistics should not in any way be treated as an isolated wave of abuse, since history tells us otherwise. In a Sunday Guardian report of September 14, 2014, Dr Jennifer Rouse (former director of the Division of Ageing) identified the following prevalent areas of abuse against senior citizens in this land: financial abuse, physical abuse, property abuse, sexual abuse, emoti

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