Khaleej Times

Sharjah joins project to improve Guinea literacy

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conkary, guinea — Sharjah, the future World Book Capital for 2019, and Wroclaw (Poland), the World Book Capital 2016, have joined forces to fund a project aimed to reduce illiteracy in Guinea, where the capital, Conakry, was last year’s World Book Capital.

Cities designated as Unesco World Book Capital undertake to promote books and reading and to organise activities over the year.

As part of the World Book Capital programme, the distributi­on of 100,000 school textbooks began last week in public schools throughout Guinea, creating opportunit­ies for the youngest and poorest citizens in Guinea to learn to read and write. The project has the potential to change the lives of up to 500,000 children in Guinea, Unesco said.

Recognisin­g that education is a fundamenta­l right of every human being, Sharjah joined the project to support the distributi­on of the textbooks. Guinea has one of the highest illiteracy rates in the world.

The World Book Capital 2016, Wroclaw (and more than 500 Polish private and institutio­nal donors) and Sharjah, the future World Book Capital for 2019, financed the textbooks.

The distributi­on of the textbooks happened in the same week that Conakry officials travelled to Athens, Greece, to symbolical­ly hand over the title of the Unesco World Book Capital to the Greek capital, which takes up the baton for 2018. With this distributi­on, the Books for Guinea’ project, formally entrusted to the Guinean Ministry of Education and Primary Education reaches its conclusion.

Sharjah was named World Book Capital for the year 2019 because of the very innovative, comprehens­ive and inclusive nature of the applicatio­n, with a community-focused activity programme containing creative proposals to engage the very large migrant population. — Wam

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