“Malala is doing her part, governments must do theirs”
Malala Day, Friday 12 July 2013
“Malala is doing her part, governments must do theirs” – UN Special Rapporteur on education
GENEVA (12 July 2013) – The
United Nations Special Rapporteur on the right to education,
Kishore Singh, today celebrates the impact that Malala
Yousafzai has had by risking her life to get the education
which is her right. On the occasion of Malala Day, the UN
human rights expert urges governments worldwide to overcome
challenges and do their part:
“When a girl is determined to learn, and her family and community support her, she cannot be stopped by anyone.
Malala’s example inspires untold numbers of mothers and daughters to face down intimidation and fear, and to demand from their local governments what is their most basic right – an education.
Governments must now work to ensure that all children receive the message that they must be in schools, in a classroom. Governments must be clear that education is not a privilege; it is a human right.
Many challenges remain for the millions of children who are out of school. No child should fear violence for wanting to learn. Children must not have to pay for school fees, uniforms or transportation. No child should have to work to be able to eat. Vulnerable groups, including children with disabilities, minorities, migrants and refugees all require and deserve extra support.
All of these difficulties cannot be ignored; they must be overcome for the Millennium Development Goals* to be achieved by 2015.
Malala is doing her part, now governments must do theirs.”
(*) The Special Rapporteur will deliver his report on recommendations to the post-2015 education agenda to the UN General Assembly this October.
ENDS