Dubai lends caring hand to youth in Tajikistan
Dubai Cares’ $1.5m vocational training programme, being implemented in partnership with Mercy Corps, is set to tackle widespread youth unemployment in Tajikistan over a period of 3 years
Dubai Cares, part of Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum Global Initiatives, has expanded its geographical outreach with the launch of its first educational programme in broader Central Asia.
The Dhs5,510,250 ($1.5 million) programme, being implemented in partnership with Mercy Corps, is set to tackle widespread youth unemployment in Tajikistan over a period of three years.
The programme focuses on improving access to economic opportunities for 7,800 vulnerable young people in selected districts across the Khatlon Province and Districts of Republican Subordination, through Technical and Vocational Educational Training (TVET).
The programme titled “Making Youth Future Ready: Introducing New Vocational Educational Skills Training, INVEST, in Tajikistan,” is set to provide life and work readiness skills, vocational training as well as business development support. Moreover, it will engage the private sector, national government and non-government stakeholders in order to encourage local sustainable practices in the long term; 6,300 children, 1,500 young men and women, as well as 231 teachers and trainers are expected to directly benefit from this programme, while 45,000 community members are also set to benefit indirectly from it.
Highlighting the importance of the programme,
Dr Tariq Al Gurg, Chief Executive Officer at Dubai Cares, said, “We are excited to expand our presence in Central Asia with this programme in Tajikistan through a programme that will help create an environment that is conducive to economic development. Investing in Technical and Vocational Education Training is an essential component of sustainable development. Its value is clearly evident, as it is particularly adapted for out of school youth and adults and it is a flexible mechanism to provide the skills and knowledge required by employers. Through this programme, we are directly responding to priorities identified by the government of Tajikistan, to equip young people with relevant skills and knowledge to effectively participate in the social and economic progress of their nation.”
Elena Buryan, Mercy Corps Country Director, Tajikistan, said, “In Tajikistan, young people between 14 and 30 years old make up over a third of the population, with 40,000 young
Tajiks looking for jobs every year. Mercy Corps is working with thousands of young people in vulnerable communities to provide them with skills and employability training to prepare them for work.
“Together with the support of Dubai Cares, our efforts will help improve the prospects of young people who are essential to the future prosperity of their country.”
Last month, Dubai Cares announced the launch of three innovative educational programmes in Jordan, aimed to empower Syrian refugees and Jordanian children, along with educators and government representatives.
The launch of the programmes was witnessed by a Dubai Cares delegation, led by the organisation’s Chief Executive Officer Dr Tariq Al Gurg, at the Um Farwah Primary School in Jordan’s Bayader Wadi Al Seer.
Over $7 million (Dhs26 million) were committed towards the three programmes which will cover an entire spectrum of educational needs across pre-primary, primary and secondary levels among refugees and host communities in Jordan.
The delegation also headed to Al Ara’ek, a community-based organisation in East Amman’s Hay Nazzal, where a tour of the facility took place before a meeting with teachers, children and their parents, as well as the local community committee.
One of the programmes — launched in partnership with Plan International Jordan, Plan International Canada, Lamsa World and Ustad Mobile — will see over $1.5 million (Dhs5.5 million) invested in the pre-primary education field. The programme will provide early childhood care and development, ECCD, services for Syrian refugee children, as well as children from host communities.
A UNHCR report shows that only 69 per cent of children in Jordan under the age of six – and even lower among Syrian refugees – have access to pre-primary care, and access to private KG is considered a luxury, and public provision of pre-primary services is very low.
Spanning across two years, the programme will seek to ensure that 4,000 boys and girls, aged between five and six years, are adequately prepared to enter first grade education. The programme will reach out to children across three governorates in Jordan, including the Azraq Refugee Camp. It also seeks mobilise and encourage 2,000 parents to enroll their children, increasing access to kindergartens through expansion plans.