A total of 28.5 million children in conflict-plagued countries are being denied an education, leaders from governments and international organisations said at the UN General Assembly.
A total of 28.5 million children in conflict-plagued countries are being denied an education, leaders from governments and international organisations said at the UN General Assembly here.
“We must make an intentional and deliberate turn from past policy responses to humanitarian crises where education has typically been underfunded,” Xinhua cited Gordon Brown, the United Nations special envoy for Global Education, as saying on Monday at a meeting of “Education Cannot Wait”.
“Today, with nearly one million Syrian refugee children, we have the opportunity to take immediate action and demonstrate that we can not only prioritise, but deliver on the promise of education for all.”
More than half of the world’s 57 million primary-school-age children who are out of school live in countries scarred by war and conflict, compared to 42 percent in 2008.
Conflicts, fighting and displacement in Syria, the Central African Republic, Mali, and the Democratic Republic of Congo, have largely contributed to this increase, according to Save the Children.
Education should never be the cost of conflict, Anthony Lake, executive director of the UN Children’s Fund, said.
“Education cannot wait for battles to end … or disasters to be averted … or funding to be available. Education cannot wait .. . because children cannot wait,” Lake said.
Alice Albright, chief executive officer of the Global Partnership for Education, said that education in emergency situations is severely underfunded, accounting for only 1.4 percent of humanitarian aid.
She proposed doubling the amount and improving coordination among governments, donors and humanitarian agencies.
“We all have a duty to the children of the world, to deliver good quality education regardless of the hostile conditions under which they live,” said Tove Romsaas Wang, the chief executive officer of Save the Children Norway.
The leaders also agreed that education must play a central role in any post-2015 development plan.
-IANS