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Half of Afghan children not in school, U.N.
says
By Jonathon Burch
April 21, 2008 (Reuters) - Half of Afghan children are still not
going to school and the biggest group missing out on an education
are girls, the United Nations said on Monday.
The Taliban banned girls from school when they were in power from
1996 to 2001, but there are now more girls in education than there
were boys at school under the hardline Islamists.
There are also more Afghan children in school now than ever before,
but many problems remain.
"In Afghanistan, despite the progress in school enrolment over
the last two years, half of school-age children are estimated to
be out of school," Shigeru Aoyagi, country director of UNESCO
in Afghanistan, told a news conference in Kabul.
Working children, street children, children in prison and disabled
children were among those excluded, the U.N. said, but by far the
biggest group are girls.
"We still have 1.2 million girls of school age who do not have
access to school in this country," Catherine Mbengue, head
of UNICEF in Afghanistan, told the news conference.
The main reasons for girls missing out on school were that many
of them either work to support their families or marry young, Mbengue
said. There is also a lack of woman teachers.
The literacy rate for women aged 15-24 in Afghanistan is 14 percent
compared with 51 percent for men.
Nearly 150 Afghan students and teachers were killed and around 100
schools burnt down by Taliban militants in the Afghan year that
ended in March, the Education Ministry said, but a record 5.7 million
children are now in education.
But of those attending school, only 35 percent are girls and while
the number of Afghan schoolchildren is going up, the proportion
of girls in education has stayed the same, an aid group said on
Monday.
The lack of women teachers, only 28 percent of the total, meant
parents were often reluctant to send their daughters to be taught
by men. Parents were also reluctant to send their girls to schools
too far from the home, CARE International said.
Around a third of state schools were exclusively for boys, CARE
said, but the number of girls in education could be increased cost-effectively
by alterations to these existing buildings to ensure segregation
of the sexes demanded by conservative Afghan culture or by different
time-tabling for boys and girls.
Parents also need to be convinced of the value that Islam places
on the education of girls, it said.
From:http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/ISL190224.htm
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