Dubai
Cares yesterday participated in the Oslo Summit on Education for Development in
Norway with the aim od discussing issues critical to achieving universal access
to quality education.
The
summit, convened by the Government of Norway in collaboration with UN Special
Envoy for Global Education, Gordon Brown, brought together heads of states and
governments from developing and developed countries, ministers, heads of UN
agencies and regional organisations, members of the business community and
civil society.
The
Dubai Cares delegation, led by Tariq Al Gurg, Chief Executive Officer of Dubai
Cares also attended a high-level meeting that took place on the sidelines of
the Summit, co-organised by UN Special Envoy for Global Education, the Global
Partnership for Education, GPE, and United Nations Children's Fund, UNICEF, in
coordination with the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
During
this meeting, attendees discussed the creation of a Global Humanitarian Fund
for Education in Emergencies, which aims to protect the most vulnerable
children and get them back in school. The fund also aims to strengthen existing
mechanisms, rapidly coordinate and deliver education in emergencies, and
leverage new finance.
More
than 20 million children are currently being denied an education because they
live in conflict and disaster zones and despite the growing numbers of children
caught up in tragedy, in 2014, only 1% of overall humanitarian aid and 2% of
humanitarian appeals was spent on education.
Speaking
during the summit, Tariq Al Gurg, Chief Executive Officer of Dubai Cares, said,
"We are inspired by Vice President and Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai,
His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum's firm belief that education
is the most effective tool to break the cycle of poverty. To achieve this, a
greater focus needs to be placed on the fragile and conflict affected states
and situations".
He
noted that according to the World Bank, people in fragile and
conflicted-affected situations are more than twice as likely to be
under-nourished as those in other developing countries, more than three times
as likely to be unable to send their children to school, twice as likely to see
their children die before age five, and more than twice as likely to lack clean
water.
"This
makes the needs of children living in fragile states an urgent priority for us.
Our presence at the summit has enabled us to contribute our technical know-how
on this and other matters as well as to engage with like-minded organisations
for potential collaboration, building on our guiding principle of working
through partnerships," he added.
The
summit, which was also attended by the United Nations Secretary-General, Ban
Ki-Moon, focused on issues that needed to be resolved urgently in order to
reach the 58 million children still being denied their right to education.
The
main topics under discussion spanned four key issues; education in emergencies,
investment in education, quality of education and girls’ education. Experts
assembled discussed solutions aimed at mobilising strong and renewed political
commitment to universal education, strengthening learning outcomes, reversing the
negative trend in international support for education and enhancing domestic
resource mobilisation.
Over
the past seven years, Dubai Cares, with the support of the UAE community, has
been facilitating change and development in children's education in developing
communities around the globe. Dubai Cares programmes are currently reaching
more than 13 million beneficiaries in 39 developing countries. –End-
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by: MENAFN.COM
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