The UN
Special Envoy for Global Education, Mr. Gordon Brown, says there are about 11
million out-of-school children in northeast Nigeria due to the destructive
activities
of the Boko Haram terrorists.
Brown,
former British Prime Minister and chair of the Commission on Financing
Education Opportunity, told the Correspondent of the NAN in New York that the
commission was already intervening in the situation.
The UN envoy
explained that the commission was giving more funds to help the Nigerian
education system move forward.
According to
him, the commission and Acting President Yemi Osinbajo are already discussing
ways to secure global funds to address the education challenges confronting the
northeast.
“We think
there are probably around 11 million children that are not in school. We know
that the Boko Haram attacks remained a huge problem and the terrain too.
“These have
prevented girls, particularly, from going to school and we know that there have
been many abductions.
“And they
are still tragically many of the girls that were kidnapped from Chibok that
have not returned,” Brown said.
The former
British premier, however, said his commission wanted every child to be safe at
school, adding there is a new proposal to attract resources to fund the
project.
The UN
education envoy lauded the 30 million dollars Nigeria’s Safe Schools Initiative
launched in April 2014, describing it as a novel idea.
“We want
every girl to be safe and boys also to be safe when they go to school but
particularly girls.
“The Safe
Schools Initiative is designed to help fortify the schools and also help the
telecommunications between the schools and prevent the attacks.
“This is so
people can get advanced warnings and to give people the security that there
might be some better protection in case there was an attack.
“So the Safe
School Initiative has been something that other countries adopted since Nigeria
led the way.
“The Safe
Schools Initiative is being implemented in different parts of the world but
obviously we need more resources into the Nigerian system and that’s what this
new proposal is about.”
Brown said
ground-breaking International Finance Facility for Education could make it
possible to fully finance universal education by 2020 and unlock Sustainable
Development Goals.
The UN
former British premier commended the UN and the international donors and
partners for efforts to raise multilateral education aid to low-income
countries from current 1.6 billion dollars to over four billion dollars a year
by 2020.
“This up-front
investment in education, modeled on the proposals of Amina Mohammed, Deputy
Secretary-General of the United Nations, to convert billions into trillions.
“It can
ensure the delivery of our Sustainable Development Goal promises. Indeed, an
International Finance Facility for Education will not only create more
educational opportunity than ever before.
“It will
multiply job prospects, slow population growth, reduce infant and maternal
mortality and hasten a 70 per cent increase in GDP per head by 2050.
“And for the
millions of children presently locked out of an education, it will be a jolt of
hope,” Brown said. (NAN)

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