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Out-of-school children: Pakistan ranks second in the world.

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Out-of-school children: Pakistan ranks second in the world.
HASAN MANSOOR

KARACHI, June 27: Pakistan ranks the second with the most out-of-school children in the world with only Nigeria ahead of it, said a child rights body on Thursday.

In its annual report titled ‘The state of Pakistan’s children 2012’, the Society for the Protection of the Rights of the Child (Sparc) said about one fourth of the 19.75 million children in Pakistan aged five to nine were out of school and factoring in adolescents increased the number to 25 million. Of them, seven million children (aged three to five) had yet to receive primary schooling.

“The country reduced its spending on education from 2.6 per cent to 2.3pc of the GNP (gross national product) over the decade and ranks 113th of the 120 countries on the Education Development Index,” said the Sparc report launched in a hotel here on Thursday.

At the provincial level, Punjab has the highest NER (net enrolment rate) for children in primary schools at 61pc followed by Sindh with 53pc, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa with 51pc and Balochistan with the lowest at 47pc. Pakistan has an NER of 74.lpc for all age groups enrolled either in primary, secondary or higher education.

Pakistan has the lowest youth literacy rate with 70.7pc. Only 61pc of girls are literate as compared to 79pc boys in the age group of 15-24 years.

Progress has been slowest in low-income countries, especially Pakistan, where only 15pc children received pre-primary education in 2010. It quoted a recent report saying 63pc of children aged three to five years were not receiving any education related to early childhood development.

The country ranks 129th among the 135 countries on the Gender Gap Index 2012 according to the Global Gender Gap Report. Data shows that gender parity for primary schools in Azad Kashmir is close to 1 (0.97). The GPI for Punjab stands at 0.98, in Balochistan it is 0.83 and in Sindh 0.81.

The report said 43pc children born in Pakistan were afflicted with stunting. It was estimated that 21.7pc children were severely and 21.3pc were moderately stunted.

It quoted the United Nations Children's Fund as saying that under five years mortality rate had declined from 122 per 1,000 births in 1990 to 72 per 1,000 births in 2011; far from reaching the assigned target of 52 per 1,000 births as per the millennium development goal.

More than 423,000 children die before reaching their fifth birthday, and almost one in five of these deaths are due to pneumonia.

Pakistan accounted for nearly 30pc of all polio cases recorded worldwide. A total of 142 cases were reported in 2010; 198 cases in 2011. In 2012, the official reports show, 58 cases were recorded, excluding cases in the North and South Waziristan agencies.

It is estimated that 2.1 million cases of measles are reported annually in Pakistan and 21,000 of the reported cases die of complications from the disease. Pneumonia and diarrhoea account for 29pc of deaths among children under five worldwide or more than two million a year; with Pakistan ranking fourth among the countries with the highest prevalence of the disease.

A total of 55 of 96,000 infants, children and adolescents had been identified as HIV positive in Pakistan In 2012, around 5,659 cases of violence against children were reported across Pakistan from January to October 2012. These included 943 murders, 1,170 cases of injuries, 302 of sodomy; 204 of child trafficking, 410 of forced marriages and 164 of Karo-kari (honour killing) incidents, and 260 cases of missing children. Other incidents of violence included 407 cases of sexual assault, 547 torture cases, 323 child suicides, 530 kidnappings and 176 Vani cases.A total of 3,861 cases of child sexual abuse were reported in different parts of the country last year. Most of the cases were reported in Punjab (68pc), followed by Sindh (19pc), Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (5pc), Balochistan (3pc) and FATA (3pc).

The report said 197 of the 3,581 victims of drone strikes since 2004 were children.

The participants said children in Pakistan had to cope with a lack of educational opportunities, poor health conditions, a near absence of protection for poor and vulnerable children, miserable conditions in juvenile jails and continued employment of children in hazardous occupations.

Violence against children remains culturally entrenched as children in Pakistan have to cope with physical violence, sexual abuse, trafficking, recruitment in armed conflicts and acid attacks. In the absence of a national database on violence against children, the report relied on secondary sources to give the prevalence of various forms of violence against children.

From the Dawn.com
 
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The PPP Era has been particularly tough for us with perhaps every positive movement made during the Musharraf Era reversed & reversed manifold !
 
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when i saw the title i was almost sure that india wud be first and that a mudslinging match wud be going on here.... but this is a pleasant surprise :pop:
 
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Pakistan's biggest problem, further quality of education !
 
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South Asian nation should work like war like emergency situation to evacuate people from illeteracy-poverty cycle instead of arm race.
 
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when i saw the title i was almost sure that india wud be first and that a mudslinging match wud be going on here.... but this is a pleasant surprise :pop:

sparc is a local NGOs with origin in Peshawar :) it works on child rights but you can doubt its data wrg to other countries.

NOT a big organisation neither that reputed (skills/abilitywise).
 
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Pakistan's biggest problem, further quality of education !

Pakistan on it's way by leaps and bound to become a labor exporting country of the world.

UAE has now a population of around 1 million and has attained 100% literacy in 20-30 years. I would put a number of 95%+ UAE nationals who immediately enroll for university education after finishing higher secondary.

How long does Pakistan require to gain 70% literacy let alone 100% literacy or 70%+ of the population being university graduates?

Governments which want to see their countries as a developed and advanced country invest in the most important resource it's citizens. And our politicians have invested in the most important resource their personal interests.

No natural resources are required for a nation to be a developed and advanced nation if the government invests in it's citizens who are the resource to stay till the day of judgment unlike other resources which will be completely used up after a certain time.
 
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Jun 26, 2013

Emiratis are the UAE's most valuable resource, says Sheikh Khalifa

Oil is not the country's greatest asset. Emiratis are.

That was the message from the President Sheikh Khalifa, as he outlined the country's successes in developing the Emirati workforce and paid tribute to the increasingly prominent role nationals are playing in the growth of the country.

"Human capital is the real wealth of this country, before and after oil," Sheikh Khalifa said.

"Serving the interests of citizens is the goal that we strive for every day. Building human resources is central to comprehensive social and economic development."

The President's words were quoted by Wam, the state news agency, yesterday alongside a famous quote from his father, the founding President Sheikh Zayed: "The individual human forms the basis for any process of civilisation and the pivot of real progress."


The UAE leads the Arab World in human development, according to the UN. In 2011 the Human Development World Report ranked it 30th among 187 countries - two places higher than in 2010.

"Although the UAE has achieved the highest per capita income in the world, it has also achieved unprecedented leaps in human development, particularly health care and education, by virtue of its successful strategies and vision of investing its income in these two fields," said Amatul Sowsawa, assistant secretary general for the UN Development Programme in the Arab region.

Speaking in Abu Dhabi, Ms Sowsawa said the launch of the report was "an opportunity to highlight the challenges and opportunities facing human development in the Arab region, and to highlight the UAE's admirable march of human development in the recent years".

Sultan Al Mansouri, Minister of Economy, said the Government used oil revenues to promote human development through education and by building infrastructure.

Mr Al Mansouri emphasised the important role Emirati women were playing in this process.

At the forefront of human development is the Absher Initiative, conceived by Sheikh Khalifa to improve Emirati participation in the labour market.

The initiative has prompted several national companies to announce plans to recruit more national graduates.

The Emirates Group has agreed to hire 2,000 more Emiratis over the next five years, while DP World has agreed to recruit 345 men and women over the same period.

Thanks to the initiative, Etihad Airways added more than 260 Emiratis to its workforce, and now has more than 1,250 in its seven divisions.

It plans to add another 1,500 over the next five years.

Sixteen other companies have recently joined up, creating 3,768 jobs for Emiratis with another 20,000 planned for the next five years.

Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Presidential Affairs, introduced the programme in November last year.

"The initiative is built on four strategic pillars: creating job opportunities for UAE citizens, training and development, vocational guidance, and encouraging UAE citizens to work in the private sector," Sheikh Mansour said.

Last year, Absher provided jobs for more than 1,186 Emirati male and female job-seekers.

On April 2 this year, the Absher Initiative began its second programme, focusing on training and development towards the Emiratisation of the workforce.

Emiratis are the UAE's most valuable resource, says Sheikh Khalifa - The National

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The late Shaikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan said in early 80s "Wealth is not money. Wealth lies in men. This is where true power lies, the power we value. This is what has convinced us to direct all our resources to building the individual, and to using the wealth which God has provided us in the service of the nation.”

He also said that developing men (citizens) is more difficult than making factories and advanced countries are measured or categorized with the number of literate people in the country. Below is the original Arabic text as my translation is not very good.

"إن بناء الرجال أصعب من بناء المصانع وإن الدول المتقدمة تقاس بعدد أبنائها المتعلمين"


Mr. Jinnah where has your Pakistan reached in 60+ years.

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@Mosamania @BLACKEAGLE @Arabian Legend if anyone could please translate this video for the readers as my translation is not very good
 
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We south asians need to do a lot to improve in our children's health care and education.... Every problem gives opportunity....and we have huge opportunity here.... Hope the authorities work seriously on children.... they are tomorrow's generation.... We need to provide them the best......
 
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Entire southasia is illiterate need to work together to defeat this monster.
 
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it wont happen, simply because of the south asian mindset, south asians are among the most self hating people I have seen, they will never help their societies or countries to develop. we dont even help our neighbors in need, let alone a society or the whole country. Shameless people we are
 
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