Broadcast: April 14,
2003
By Jill Moss
This is the VOA Special English Development
Report.
The United Nations has launched a
new ten-year campaign to increase
literacy around the world. People
with literacy skills can read and
write. People who are not able to
read and write are considered illiterate.
There are currently about eight-hundred-sixty-million
illiterate people around the world.
That is one out of every five adults
over age fifteen. Two-thirds of them
are women. In addition, more than
one-hundred-thirteen-million children
do not attend school and are failing
to learn to read and write.
The main message of the U-N campaign
is "Literacy as Freedom."
Deputy U-N Secretary General Louise
Frechette launched the campaign in
February during a special ceremony
at U-N headquarters in New York City.
She said that literacy is needed for
a healthy, fair and successful world.
She also noted the importance of education
for girls and women to improve conditions
in developing countries. That is why
the first two years of the campaign
will be aimed at improving the literacy
of females.
The U-N Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization will supervise
the campaign. UNESCO head Koichiro
Matsuura says the push for worldwide
literacy is linked to human rights.
He believes that literacy can help
improve development and economic growth
in poor countries.
The wife of President Bush, Laura
Bush, was also present to launch the
campaign. She said the United States
plans to invest more than three-hundred-million
dollars to support education in schools
around the world. An estimated2 one-hundred-million
dollars of that money will be spent
in Africa. About seventy percent of
the world’s illiterate adults live
in South and West Asia, Africa, and
the Middle East.
The United Nations hopes the new campaign
will help increase world literacy
by fifty percent by the year two-thousand-fifteen.
This is just one of six goals set
during a world education meeting in
Dakar, Senegal in two-thousand. However,
officials say seventy-nine countries
are currently at risk of not meeting
the literacy goal.
The U-N says the literacy campaign
will be a huge test. But it will also
be an important chance to improve
the lives of millions of people around
the world.
This VOA Special English Development
Report was written by Jill Moss.
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