The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Cambodian girls urged to hold leaders accountabl­e

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SIEM REAP, Cambodia: Michelle Obama called on schoolgirl­s to stay in school to push for equality and hold their leaders accountabl­e yesterday during the first trip by a sitting US president’s wife to Cambodia.

The First Lady is visiting Cambodia – ruled by strongman Prime Minister Hun Sen for the last thirty years – to highlight what she has described as a “crisis” in women’s education with 62 million girls around the world denied schooling, primarily for economic or cultural reasons.

“When girls get educated, when they learn to read and write and t hink, t hat gives them the tools to speak up and talk about injustice and demand equal treatment,” she said in a speech to Peace Corps volunteers in Siem Reap.

“It helps t hem participat­e in the political li fe of their country and hold their leaders accountabl­e,” she added.

Earlier i n the day Obama – herself a Harvard-educated lawyer from a modest background – visited a school with the Cambodian premier’s wife Bun Rany to hear first hand from schoolgirl­s about the problems they face accessing education.

The pair were greeted by students dressed in crisp black and white uniforms who waved Cambodian and US flags, greeting the First Lady i n carefully practised English.

Some of the students described the difficulti­es they had staying in school, faced with long journeys to class and pressure from their families to find work or complete household chores.

“Everyday, I get up at 4:00 am to cook rice to bring to school,” one girl called Sohang told Obama. “It takes me one hour to ride a bicycle to school.”

Cambodia’s education system was ravaged in the 1970s during the Khmer Rouge’s brutal rule.

Huge numbers of intellectu­als and teachers were killed as Pol Pot’s regime dismantled modern society in their quest for an agrarian Marxist utopia.

The traumatic period left the country impoverish­ed and with an acute shortage of teachers, something that still haunts its education system to this day.

According to Cambodian government statistics 68 percent of children are enrolled in primary education, but this drops off to 17.7 percent by lower secondary and just 8.8 percent by upper secondary.

Room to Read, a charity involved in children’s education in Cambodia, says there are three times more boys than girls in school.

The US government has launched the “Let Girls Learn” initiative, which Obama is promoting during her trip. The programme will be run by Peace Corps volunteers in 11 countries and promote girls’ education.

Before flying to Cambodia, the First Lady visited Japan, a major donor to the initiative.

Alongside Cambodia, the initial recipient countries are Albania, Benin, Burkina Faso, Georgia, Ghana, Moldova, Mongolia, Mozambique, Togo and Uganda.

The trip comes at a time when

When girls get educated, when they learn to read and write and think, that gives them the tools to speak up and talk about injustice and demand equal treatment. It helps them participat­e in the political life of their country and hold their leaders accountabl­e. — Michelle Obama, US First Lady

the White House is pursuing its foreign policy “pivot” towards Asia, seen by many as an attempt by Washington to counter China’s meteoric rise and increasing influence in the area.

Southeast Asia is a key component of that pivot and the Americans are keen to woo the region.

During President Obama’s last two trips to Asia, southeast Asia has featured prominentl­y, including a 2012 visit to Cambodia – a country that was once secretly carpet bombed by the US.

White House officials said his wife’s trip is “meant to underscore the breadth of our interactio­ns” within the region.

Hun Sen marked three decades in power in January and is regularly criticised by campaigner­s for ignoring human rights and stamping out dissent.

While it is unlikely Michelle Obama will bring up rights abuses, the White House has said she would “share American perspectiv­es about education and good governance”. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Michelle Obama (right) hugs students during her visit to a school in Siem Reap province. — AFP photo
Michelle Obama (right) hugs students during her visit to a school in Siem Reap province. — AFP photo

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