A group of 275 former world leaders, economists and educationalists have called on G20 nations and other countries to
take action to prevent the global health crisis creating a ‘COVID generation’ - tens of millions of children with no
hope of an education.
The leaders - including many presidents and prime ministers - say urgent measures are now required and as country
lockdowns come to an end, an immediate priority is the fate of 30 million children who, according to a UNESCO report,
may never return to school.
In a letter to G20 heads, national governments and global financial institutions, the former leaders also warn that the
world’s poorest children have been locked out of learning, denied internet access and, with the loss of free school
meals - once a lifeline for 300 million boys and girls - hunger is growing.
The letter states: "We cannot stand by and allow these young people to be robbed of their education and a fair chance in
life."
Inger Ashing, CEO of Save the children, said: "COVID-19 is a global public health crisis that has left the world facing
an unprecedented education emergency. That emergency threatens to rob millions of children of their right to education,
exacerbating inequalities linked to wealth and gender - and trapping entire countries in a downward spiral of slow
growth, rising poverty, and shrinking opportunity. Governments should be investing in learning, instead we’re facing
unparalleled budget cuts. The international community is sleepwalking into an avoidable education disaster that will
scar an entire generation."
Leaders are also urging the G20 to ramp up funding and ‘rebuild education better’, stating: "The World Bank now
estimates that over the next year overall education spending in low and middle-income countries could be $100-150
billion lower than previously planned."
Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland and UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Ban Ki-Moon, former UN Secretary
General, Graca Machel, Helen Clark former New Zealand Prime Minister and Gordon Brown former United Kingdom Prime
Minister and UN Global Education Envoy said: "We call on the G20, the IMF, World Bank and regional development banks and
all countries to recognise the scale of the crisis and support three emergency initiatives.