Don Héctor: 18 years of representing older people at HelpAge
Friday, June 25th, 2010At the end of June 2010, HelpAge’s regional centre in Latin America celebrates Don Hector Sandoval’s 18 years of service. Don Hector has worked as a messenger, assistant, collaborator and is a friend to many staff, partners and older people fighting for their rights in Latin America.
“I fulfilled my dream”
Don Hector says: “I fulfilled my dream of working for an organisation that supports older people. I feel I have done the institution, myself and my family proud.”
At the tender age of 64, Don Hector joined Valerie Black Mealla, the regional representative of HelpAge in Latin America at the time, to establish the Regional Development Centre in La Paz, Bolivia.
He says: “It seemed like a great opportunity to expand my knowledge and experiences inside Bolivia as well as beyond its borders.”
Don Hector had previously worked in the mines in Potosi and as a mechanic in La Paz. He then joined HelpAge as an office assistant and messenger. He has participated in public fundraising campaigns, ran the documentation centre and organised the publications.
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Bridget Sleap, HelpAge’s Rights Policy Advisor, (pictured left) writes about older people’s rights on Human Rights Day:
I met the children at Bigwa primary school who are brought up by their grandparents, having lost their parents to AIDS. They have dreams of becoming doctors, lawyers prime minsters and sung of education being the key to life.
‘Age helps’
Believing that older people are a crucial resource for development of the country, in 1991 Ngoc Trai decided for an early retirement and devoted the rest of her life to establish The Research Center for Ageing Support (RECAS) together with leading social scientists. It is the first ever Vietnamese non-governmental organisation in the field of ageing, working for the rights and well-being of older people.



