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New
plan to get girls back to schools
IRIN
News
November 01, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56145
HARARE - A joint initiative is being launched by the United Nations,
Zimbabwean government and civil society to address the legacy of
girls being sidelined from education in the wake of last year's
mass forced removals.
The ruling ZANU-PF
government said Operation
Murambatsvina, a Shona word meaning 'drive out the trash', was
aimed at clearing slums and flushing out criminals, but it left
more than 700,000 people homeless or without a livelihood in the
winter of 2005.
Research published
on the operation's first anniversary by the advocacy group, Women
and Aids Support Network, found that parents in the country's
harsh economic environment were prioritising their son's education
at the expense of their daughter's.
Cecilia Baldeh,
the head of education at Unicef, the UN children's agency in Zimbabwe
said, during last week's launch of the National
Girls Education Strategic Plan scheduled to run until 2010 and
which will also assist orphans and vulnerable children, that "girls
education, especially up to secondary level yields significant benefits
for households and the nation in general.
"Educated girls
can protect themselves from HIV and AIDS, they can contribute to
reduce infant and maternal mortality rates and they can foster economic
growth. As the World Bank has noted, educating girls yields a higher
rate of return than almost any other investment available in the
developing world."
According to a survey
conducted by Unicef and several other non-governmental organisations,
Zimbabwe has unacceptably high gender disparities, which has seen
a greater percentage of girls dropping out of school at the primary
level. Disparity was as high as 25 percent in two districts in the
western province of Matabeleland North. Only one district, Mazowe
in Mashonaland Central in the north has more girls in primary school
because, the survey found, the majority of boys chose to work on
the districts orange plantations.
"The National
Girls Education Strategic Plan seeks to ensure that every child
is able to enrol, complete and realise their full potential in education.
The plan also aims to address emerging HIV/AIDS related and cultural
challenges such as forced early marriages, abuse and economic exploitation,
which
particularly harm girls," a Unicef statement said.
Since
last year, Unicef has spent US$2 million supporting girls education
through the review of basic education policies, establishing girl
empowerment clubs and providing gender, life skills and counselling
training programme for teachers.
The education
ministry will, among other things, develop flexible school timetables
to assist children heading households to attend school, crackdown
on organisations engaged in child labour and plans to ensure that
there will be a primary school within three kilometres of every
community.
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