Even now parents cannot be sure whether their children are dead or alive. Even now parents wake up worried their children are being abused by terrorists. And inspired by the passion and strength of the #BringBackOurGirls campaign a new concept has emerged. The Safe Schools plan draws on the expertise of those who have worked persistently and quietly for years on this issue, and their ideas have been brought together by A World at School. We plan to offer support everywhere girls feel too afraid of terrorists to go to school. This support will include physical fortifications, guards, telecommunications connections and protective community safeguards. The speed at which the Safe Schools plan was started and put into practice over the last year is remarkable. Backed by Nigerian business leaders, and set into action by President Goodluck Jonathan and Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala in Nigeria, it offers a way forward for the protection of girls (and boys) in the years ahead. Globally few years have seen so many threats to girl's rights as the past 12 months. From Syria and Iraq to Nigeria, India, Pakistan and Afghanistan girls' education is under attack. The basic human rights set out in the UN's universal declaration are being systematically abused by the failure to protect girls against abduction, child marriage, child trafficking, sexual abuse and violence. Once again, International Women's Day gives us the chance to refocus the world's attention on giving every girl their rightful place in school. Throughout this year events are being planned to call for access to education for girls. These young women are being prevented from learning for a multitude of reasons: because their personal safety is at risk; because they are forced to marry young; or made to work to support their families. It is time to acknowledge that the current treacherous reality is robbing children of their future. I hear this regularly from A World at School's Global Youth Ambassadors, 500 young people spearheading a new children's rights movement. This movement sees children demanding an education and demanding it now. A global petition -- the #UpForSchool petition -- has already been signed by 3 million people. It is on the way to becoming the biggest petition for education and it won't stop there. The world is calling for a safe education for all children. People everywhere feel strongly that it is unacceptable for parents to keep children at home because they are too afraid to send them to school. With half the world's out of school children caught up in conflict and post conflict areas, with girls threatened by violence and fearful of the journey to school, it is time to act. In 2015 the world has seen education come under attack from many quarters. From diseases such as Ebola to terrorist groups such as ISIS and Boko Haram and brutal civil wars, children have been taken away from their classrooms. There is a growing call to provide properly funded education as part of any humanitarian response to children trapped in refugee camps, and displaced from their own homes. This International Women's Day we can all stand #UpForSchool for the next generation of women and ensure that they have the opportunity to grow, learn at school and lead. For #Throwback Thursday many people are posting a photo of themselves as a schoolchild. You can see mine here. |
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As We Mark International Women's Day 2015, Girls #StandUp for School
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Indonesia Rejects Australia's Offer Of Prisoner Swap To Stop Executions
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Liberia Releases Last Ebola Patient
"I am one of the happiest human beings today on earth because it was not easy going through this situation and coming out alive," Beatrice Yardolo told The Associated Press after her release. She kept thanking God and the health workers at the center. Yardolo said she had been admitted to the Chinese-run Ebola treatment center in the Paynesville district of Monrovia on Feb. 18. A mother of five, she is originally from the northeastern county of Nimba near the borders with Guinea and Ivory Coast, but lives in Monrovia where she teaches at a church-run school. The St. Paul's Bridge community where she resides and teaches had become the last "hotspot" for Ebola cases in Monrovia, according to Tolbert Nyenswah, Assistant Health Minister and head of the country's Ebola response. Nyenswah said Wednesday that there were no other confirmed cases of Ebola in the country, and as such Liberia can begin to count up to 42 days to be declared Ebola free in keeping with World Health Organization protocols and standards. He challenged all Liberians to commit themselves to achieving "zero Ebola infections" by rigidly abiding by the anti-Ebola regulations. Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has said no country can be declared Ebola-free until all the other countries have no cases. After causing nearly 10,000 recorded deaths since the outbreak was discovered a year ago, Ebola is also waning in Guinea. But new cases continue to emerge in Sierra Leone. Nine new cases were reported in a 24-hour period, according to an update from the Sierra Leone government on Tuesday. Ebola has cost the three countries an estimated 12 percent of their gross domestic product, shifted resources causing other health care problems, and hurt business as people became scared to leave their homes or go to markets. |
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