Statement from the Secretary-General
Education is a major driving force for human development. It opens doors to the job market, combats inequality, improves maternal health, reduces child mortality, fosters solidarity, and promotes environmental stewardship. Education empowers people with the knowledge, skills and values they need to build a better world.
Growing up in the Republic of Korea as it recovered from war, I had few school supplies and studied in the open air. People today often ask about my country’s transformation from poverty to prosperity. Without hesitation, I answer that education was the key.
In almost all my visits to areas ravaged by war and disaster, the plea of survivors is the same: “Education first.” Education helps to re-establish normalcy for traumatized children and sets the stage for lasting stability.
Despite the urgent need for investments in education and their clear returns, progress on this front has stalled in recent years. The cost of leaving millions of children and young people on the margins of society is far greater than the funds required to jump-start efforts to reach international goals for education, which had shown considerable promise.
Education is a priority for people around the world, and it is my priority, too. My new Education First initiative aims to give a “big push” to the global movement for education -- by 2015 and beyond.
The Initiative focuses on three priorities:
First, putting every child in school. The global community pledged to achieve universal primary education by 2015. We need to make all the necessary investments to ensure that every child has equal access to schooling.
- United Nations Secterary-General Ban Ki-moon, September 2012



Comments
Post a Comment