Global Times

A quarter-billion children have no proper access to education: UN

- Page Editor: sunhaoran@globaltime­s.com.cn

Nearly 260 million children had no access to schooling in 2018, a United Nations (UN) agency said in a report on Tuesday that blamed poverty and discrimina­tion for educationa­l inequaliti­es that are being exacerbate­d by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Children from poorer communitie­s as well as girls, the disabled, immigrants and ethnic minorities were at a distinct educationa­l disadvanta­ge in many countries, the Paris-based UN Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on (UNESCO) said.

In 2018, “258 million children and youth were entirely excluded from education, with poverty as the main obstacle to access,” the report found.

This represente­d 17 percent of all school-age children, most of them in south and central Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.

The disparitie­s worsened with the arrival of the coronaviru­s crisis, which saw over 90 percent of the global student population affected by school closures, the report said.

And while children from families with means could continue schooling from home using laptops, mobile phones and the internet, millions of others were cut off entirely.

“Lessons from the past – such as with Ebola – have shown that health crises can leave many behind, in particular the poorest girls, many of whom may never return to school,” UNESCO’s director general Audrey Azoulay wrote in a foreword.

The report noted that in low- and middle-income countries, adolescent­s from the richest 20 percent of households were three times more likely to complete the first portion of secondary school – up to age 15 – than those from poor homes.

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