Gulf Today

UN warns education becoming ‘great divider’

- Agencefran­ce-presse

UNITED NATIONS: UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres warned that unequal education was quickly dividing the planet as he sought to keep developmen­t on the agenda ahead of a week of diplomacy focused on global crises.

The UN chief called a special summit on education a day before world leaders meet for the annual General Assembly, although a number of key officials including US President Joe Biden delayed their arrivals in New York due to Queen Elizabeth II’S funeral.

“Education is in a deep crisis. Instead of being the great enabler, education is fast becoming the great divide,” Guterres told the summit.

He warned that the Covid-19 pandemic has had a devastatin­g impact on learning, with poor students lacking technology at a particular disadvanta­ge, and conflicts further disrupting schools.

Guterres appealed to all countries to prioritise increasing spending per student even amid question marks over the global economy.

In a report earlier this month, the UN Developmen­t Programme said Covid has set back humanity’s progress by five years.

Guterres also called out Afghanista­n’s Taliban, who have deprived more than one million teenage girls of education since the hardliner militants returned to power in August 2021.

“I appeal to the authoritie­s in Afghanista­n: Lit all restrictio­ns on girls’ access to secondary education immediatel­y,” he said.

Addressing the summit, Somaya Faruqi, who was part of Afghanista­n’s celebrated girl’s robotics team, said the Taliban are “slowly erasing our existence in society.”

“Thousands of girls may never return back to school. Many have been married off. The promises of reopening schools came and went,” she said.

Appealing to world leaders, she said, “You must not forget those who are let behind, those not lucky enough to be at school.” “Show your solidarity with me and millions of Afghan girls.”

The UN General Assembly - with its epic traffic and demonstrat­ions jamming Midtown Manhatan - is back in person ater two years of the pandemic, with leaders required to show up if they wish to speak. The General Assembly voted to make just one exception - for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who is leading resistance to a Russian invasion.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov headed to New York for the summit, where he heard an appeal on Monday from his French counterpar­t, Catherine Colonna, to allow a security zone outside the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear plant, whose occupation by Moscow has raised mounting concerns.

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A girl browses for second hand books at a shop in Adjame, Abidjan, recently.
Agence France-presse ± A girl browses for second hand books at a shop in Adjame, Abidjan, recently.

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