Friday, April 19, 2024

UNICEF protests govt shutting 77 million children out of school

UNICEF says the world faces an education crisis due to the COVID-19 pandemic that has left nearly 77 million children shut out of the classroom for the past 18 months.

• September 17, 2021

The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) says the world faces an education crisis due to the COVID-19 pandemic that has left nearly 77 million children shut out of the classroom for the past 18 months.

UNICEF is closing down its social media channels on Thursday for the next 18 hours to send one message to the world: #ReopenSchools for in-person learning as soon as possible.

The UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) is joining UNICEF, the World Bank, the European External Action Service (EEAS), the European Commission for Humanitarian Aid operation, the LEGO Foundation, and the WEF Global Shapers community of world youth.

For UNICEF, the right to go to school is central to every child’s development, safety, and well-being. Yet, in too many countries, classrooms remain closed, while social gatherings continue to hold in restaurants, salons, and gyms.

The agency believed “this generation of children and youth, cannot afford any more disruptions to their education.”

New numbers from UNESCO, released on Thursday, showed that schools are now fully open in 117 countries, with 539 million students back in class, ranging from pre-primary to secondary levels.

This represents 35 per cent of the total student population across the world, compared to 16 per cent who returned to school in September 2020, when schools were only open, or partially open, in 94 countries.

Around 117 million students, representing 7.5 per cent of the total, are still affected by complete school closures in 18 countries. The number of countries with partly opened schools has declined from 52 to 41 over the same period.

In all countries that had prolonged full school closures, education was provided through a combination of online classes, printed modules, as well as tuition through TV and radio networks.

UNESCO and its Global Education Coalition partners have been advocating for the safe reopening of schools, urging full closures to be used as a measure of last resort.

Since the onset of the pandemic, schools have been completely closed for an average of 18 weeks (4.5 months) worldwide.

If partial closures are accounted for, the average duration of closures represents 34 weeks (8.5 months) worldwide, or nearly a full academic year.

(NAN)

We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.

More from Peoples Gazette

Katsina State

Politics

Katsina youths pledge to deliver over 2 million votes to Atiku

“Katsina State is Atiku’s political base because it is his second home.”

Yahaya Bello

Anti-Corruption

N80 Billion Fraud: Nigerian immigration issues nationwide red alert for officers to nab Yahaya Bello

He refused to surrender himself for arrest on Wednesday when anti-graft operatives besieged his Abuja residence.

NCDC

Health

Mysterious illness claims eight lives in Sokoto

The incident occurred at Sabon Birni and Isa Local Government Areas of the state.

Mohamed Salah and Jeremie Frimpong

Hot news Home top

Liverpool knocked out of Europa League by Atalanta; Bayer Leverkusen tango Roma in semifinals

Atalanta’s wonderful performance over the two legs ensured the Italian side reached the semifinals of the Europa League on a 3-1 aggregate scoreline.

A COMPOSITE PHOTO OF EEDC, Gov Mbah and NERC

Heading 5

Enugu govt. cautions NERC, EEDC against overcharging electricity consumers

I urge NERC not to derail on the steady and quality power supply according to the band classifications.”

Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC)

Uncategorized

N3.2 trillion subsidy needed to reverse electricity tariff hike: FG

He added that as a result of the non-payment of subsidy, gas supply and power generation had continued to dip.

Heading 4

Google sacks 28 employees for protesting consulting contract with Israel

The company further noted that the demonstrations were staged “by a group of organisations and people who largely don’t work at Google.”