Latest News

25 September 2008 – Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today highlighted the key role of education for reaching the globally agreed set of eight targets for slashing poverty, illiteracy and other socio-economic ills by 2015, known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

“We have ample evidence that education improves individual incomes, economic growth, child and maternal health, resistance to disease and environmental practices,” Mr. Ban told an event focusing on the goal of “education for all,” which the world’s governments agreed in 1999 in the Senegalese capital, Dakar, to try to achieve by 2015.

The Secretary-General to the “great” progress achieved so far in the area of education, noting that more children are in school than ever before and that more girls are getting the equal education that they deserve. “We have to build on this momentum based on the conviction that education can drive economic and social progress,” he stated.

Mr. Ban stressed that one of the best investments that any country can make is to educate girls and women, “so they can earn more income, improve their family’s well being, and show their daughters, in turn, what is possible once you can read and write.”

At the same time, he pointed to a need for a commitment to equity, noting that currently children from poor communities, rural areas and minority groups are almost always struggling to learn under worse conditions than others in society.
“If we do not close this gap, we put a whole generation at risk, and we allow problems to fester,” said the Secretary-General. “But if we ensure that all children get the education they deserve, we put both individuals and countries on a sure footing toward a stable future.”

The six “education for all” goals are to expand early childhood care and education; provide free and compulsory primary education for all; promote learning and life skills for young people and adults; increase adult literacy by 50 per cent; achieve gender parity by 2005 and gender equality by 2015; and improve the quality of education.


Comments
The Programme of Action is a

The Programme of Action is a program of empowerment. It aims to accelerate research strategies for the future of the advancement of women and remove all obstacles to women’s active participation in all spheres of public and private life through a full and equal participation in decisions economic, social, cultural and political decision. this means that the principle of shared power and responsibility must be established between women and men at home, at work and in national and international community. equality between women and men is a matter of human rights and a condition for social justice and is also a necessary and fundamental to equality, development and peace. A partnership based on equality between women and men is a condition for a sustainable development focus. Sustained commitment and long term is essential, so that women and men can work together for themselves, their children and society to meet the challenges of the XXI century. (RSS)

Post new comment