AS the world geared up to mark the Global Action Day for Malala
Yousufzai, the Pakistan government launched on Friday a literacy
programme to provide free education to children, primarily girls. The
fouryear Waseela-i-Taleem initiative, undertaken under the umbrella of
the Benazir Income Support Programme, aims to educate three million poor
children, with President Zardari noting during its launch that `no
country can make any progress without investing in its human capital`.
We hope the state remains committed enough to achieve its goals. There
is no doubt that, as report after report has pointed out, Pakistan faces
an education emergency with the young not being able to attend school
due to a wide variety of reasons ranging from convention or poverty to
security as the injuries suffered by Malala so horrifyingly
demonstrated. Not only are there not enough schools in the country,
Pakistan`s dropout rates are much higher andenrolment figures woefully
lower than they should be.
The grim picture of the fate of the
next generation, particularly its female members, is drawn in clear
lines by the recently released Education for All Global Monitoring
Report.
Pakistan is among the bottom 10 countries in terms of
education for females in straitened financial circumstances. It was also
amongst the last 10 for the amount of time girls spend in schools in
their lifetimes, with almost two-thirds of the poorest girls never going
to school at all. These figures are cause for serious concern, for
coupled with population growth and demographic figures, they point
towards a future where growing numbers of people are not just poor but
illiterate as well, thus further decreasing opportunities for uplift.
Only if the government takes strides towards achieving the
Waseela-i-Taleem initiative`s goal can it be considered to have
demonstrated its commitment to this crucial sector.
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