We cannot sit back and watch as millions of children and young people are deprived of their right to education. This will be my main message at the Global Citizen Festival in New York’s Central Park on Saturday night.
The same weekend, I will be joining other leaders at the United Nations to adopt the new global agenda for sustainable development. The main objective of the new agenda is to put an end to extreme poverty by 2030.
Education is a human right. It is something young people aspire to all over the world. In my view, it is the best way of providing young people with the tools they need to lift themselves out of poverty.
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This is why I am especially pleased with the wording of the fourth Global Goal: to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all.
Adopting this goal will commit the world to an ambitious agenda for education, built on a firm foundation of early learning. We must do all we can to deliver this vision. We must make sure that every child is able to get 12 years of free, safe, quality education, of which at least nine years are compulsory.
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Our efforts must focus on the children and young people who are poorest and hardest to reach, particularly girls. This will bring about significant progress in the fields of health, gender equality, employment, economic development and poverty eradication.
Now that we have reached the deadline for the Millennium Development Goals, 50 million more children and 40 million more teenagers are in school than was the case at the start of the millennium. It is not acceptable, however, that 250 million children in the fourth grade have not learnt basic skills. We must invest in quality, especially when it comes to educating teachers, so that every child can fulfil his or her full potential.








