Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

A beacon of hope for girls

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It’s been 44 years since she fled Uganda and sought asylum in Canada, but Farah Mohamed says she never forgets she was once a refugee. This is what drives her work for girls’ education around the world as chief executive officer of the Malala Fund.

Appointed to her latest assignment this February, Mohamed is a leading advocate for the rights of girls and women around the world. As founder and CEO of G(irls)20, she worked for girls’ education and the participat­ion of women in the labour force. Before that, she served in key positions at The Belinda Stronach Foundation and the Victorian Order of Nurses, which is Canada’s largest not-forprofit charitable home and community care organisati­on. The Malala Fund, named after Pakistan’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning education activist Malala Yusufzai, has invested nearly $9 million since 2014 in girls’ education programmes in India, Pakistan, Afghanista­n, Kenya, Nigeria, Sierra Leone and countries hosting Syrian refugees.

She says the Malala Fund will place special emphasis on refugee girls as part of the mission to secure 12 years of free, safe and quality education. Mohamed sees refugee girls not as statistics, but the “faces of our future”. “The internatio­nal community needs to recognise that the world’s most pressing problems can be solved not by bullets and bombs, but by investing in education for every child,” she said.

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