‘International Days’ range from the sublime to the ridiculous

The UN puts on hold new proposals for international days, weeks, months, years and decades

GOAL: The UN General Assembly recently adopted a resolution to designate 25 May as World Football Day, but does not want any more 'days'. Photo: LOEY FELIPE / UN

The 193-member General Assembly, the UN’s highest policy-making body, routinely designates International Day of This or International Day of That.  

The wide range of subjects and events range from the sublime to the ridiculous, turning some urgent international problem into something silly and absurd.

Commemorations range from the well-known International Women’s Day and the International Day to Combat Islamophobia to International Moon Day and World Bicycle Day. There is World Tuna Day, World Bee Day, International Day of Potato, World Horse Day, World Pulses Day and International Day of the Arabian Leopard.

The United Nations observes 218 international days annually (and counting) out of the 365 days available.

One of the first designations came from the UN General Assembly’s declaration in 1947 that 24 October should be celebrated as United Nations Day, the anniversary of the adoption of the UN Charter that founded the organisation.

Since then, UN Member States have proposed more than 200 designations, presenting draft resolutions to the General Assembly so the entire membership, representing 193 nations, can vote on the proposals.

But a new resolution aimed at revitalising the work of the General Assembly 'notes with concern the significant increase in the number of proposals to proclaim international days, weeks, months, years or decades'.

The resolution decided to put on hold consideration of new proposals for international days, weeks, months, years and decades during the eighty-first and eighty-second sessions.

The resolution also requests the President of the General Assembly, effective from the eighty-first session in 2026, to group all proclamation requests for international commemoration into a single resolution per agenda item, where each proposed commemoration contains its own operative paragraph focused on its establishment. 

international days
international days

Republished under an arrangement with Inter Press Service (IPS).