Vicky Ford (Chelmsford) (Con) I beg to move, That this House has
considered the International Day of Education. It is a pleasure to
serve under your chairmanship, Mr Sharma. It is a huge honour to
open this debate to recognise the importance of the International
Day of Education, a day that is dedicated to raising the importance
of education for all. As the UN Secretary-General said this week,
“education is a fundamental human right and the bedrock of...Request free trial
(Chelmsford) (Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the International Day of
Education.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Sharma. It
is a huge honour to open this debate to recognise the importance
of the International Day of Education, a day that is dedicated to
raising the importance of education for all. As the UN
Secretary-General said this week,
“education is a fundamental human right and the bedrock of
societies”.
In my Chelmsford constituency, the vast majority of children and
young people can access excellent education. In fact, in the
Chelmsford district, 94% of our schools are graded good or
outstanding by Ofsted. That is well above the England average,
which is also high at 89%. Essex children outperform the national
average in key areas such as early reading. Enriching
out-of-school activities can also enhance educational attainment.
During the school holidays, I am delighted that Chelmsford
children from more disadvantaged backgrounds can also access
enriching activities through the holiday activities and food
programme, which I am deeply proud to have set up during my time
as Children’s Minister.
However, during the pandemic, we saw so starkly in our country
that when children cannot access school, their education suffers,
as does their mental wellbeing. It is therefore good news that,
on the whole, education for the children of Chelmsford and
elsewhere across the country has now returned to what we consider
normal, but that is not the case for so many children in other
parts of the world. Currently, an estimated 222 million children
are in need of urgent educational support across regions affected
by emergencies and protracted crises. Some 78 million children
are not in school or receiving any form of education. That figure
of 222 million is an increase from 75 million in 2016.
The educational gulf is greatest in the world’s poorest
countries. World Bank research from back in 2019 showed that
pre-pandemic, 90% of children in low-income countries could not
read proficiently. Education Cannot Wait’s report from last June
reminds us that pre-covid, only 9% of crisis-affected early grade
children achieved minimum proficiency in maths, and only 15% in
reading, yet maths and reading are the vital building blocks on
which all education is founded.
The covid pandemic further widened educational disparities, and
girls are disproportionately affected. Nearly two thirds of the
figure for global illiteracy is made up of women. The Malala Fund
estimates that 130 million girls are out of school today.
However, when girls are educated, it strengthens economies and
creates jobs. World Bank research shows that, on average, women
with secondary school education earn almost twice as much as
those with no education at all.
Educated girls tend to be healthier citizens who raise healthier
families. A girl who has been educated is much more likely to
ensure that her children are vaccinated, she is less likely to
marry young or contract HIV, and she is more likely to have
healthy, educated children. Each additional year of school that a
girl completes cuts infant mortality and child marriage rates.
Furthermore, when girls are educated, communities are more stable
and can recover faster from conflict.
Investing in girls’ education is good for our planet. The
Brookings Institution calls secondary schooling for girls the
most cost-effective and best investment against climate change.
Research also suggests that girls’ education reduces a country’s
vulnerability to natural disasters. Save the Children estimates
that universal secondary education for girls could avert 50
million child marriages by 2030.
This year, on the International Day of Education, we have been
thinking particularly of the 3 million girls in Afghanistan who
were previously in education but are now out of school, because
the Taliban will not allow girls to attend secondary school or
university. The recent ban on female aid workers will mean that
even more Afghan girls are denied their right to education, as
the Taliban insist that girls can be taught only by female
teachers. That will mean that yet more Afghan girls face forced
marriages and poverty. I am therefore concerned to hear from Save
the Children that the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development
Office is considering ending its “Supporting Afghanistan’s Basic
Services” programme, which provides health, education,
WASH—water, sanitation and hygiene—and nutrition to around
300,000 people. We must not pull the rug out from under the women
and girls of Afghanistan.
We know that in many developing countries, girls face extra
barriers in accessing education. During my year as an FCDO
Minister, I travelled to 15 African countries. So many girls told
me at first hand about the challenges that they face: the fear of
violence, including sexual violence, on long walks to school; the
lack of water and sanitation, which can make it impossible for
girls to attend school when they have their period; and the
constraints on family finances, which so often mean that any
money that can be scraped together for school fees is reserved
for sons.
However, I also heard from these girls their determination to
learn. I met girls who dreamt of becoming doctors, teachers and
even pilots. I also saw the many projects that the UK has
invested in to help girls to overcome these barriers. Girls told
me about the mentoring project in Malawi, where young women who
have completed their secondary education give advice to other
girls and help them through their own school experience. I saw
the joy on girls’ faces when I opened a clean water well and
lavatories in Lesotho. I remember the seriousness of the young
woman in Sierra Leone who explained how our project to reduce
violence had completely changed the culture of her school,
ensuring that girls could learn without fear. And the whole
community—thousands of people—came together to celebrate the
launch of the Shule Bora programme in Tanzania. That programme
has a special emphasis on girls, children living with
disabilities and those living in the most deprived areas. They
came to celebrate because they knew what we know: when one
focuses on helping the most marginalised girl to access
education, every child is helped.
We should all be very proud of the UK’s track record in
supporting education in developing countries, and especially, in
supporting girls’ education. We have championed the campaign for
12 years of education for every girl. Each year, we host the
Education World Forum, with delegates coming to London from
across the world to discuss how to learn from one another and how
to improve education standards in their countries.
During the pandemic, the UK co-hosted the Global Partnership for
Education summit, raising $4 billion for education in some of the
world’s poorest countries; our pledge was £430 million. During
our leadership of the G7, the world’s richest countries committed
to getting 40 million more girls into school and 20 million more
girls reading by the age of 10, with all that to be done by
2026.
Girls who are not in school do not have a voice of their own, so
it is vital that the UK continues to lead from the front on
girls’ education and to use our voice for them. I urge the
Minister to make sure that all FCDO Ministers—including the
Minister with responsibility for development, my right hon.
Friend the Member for Sutton Coldfield (Mr Mitchell)—continue to
champion that cause. We need to champion it at the World Bank
development meetings this spring, at the meetings of the UN’s
Commission on the Status of Women in New York in March and at
other international fora. I also urge the Minister to work with
other FCDO Ministers to publish, with urgency, the long-awaited
FCDO women and girls strategy.
The UK is also a co-founding member of Education Cannot Wait. Its
recent analysis indicates that 84% of out-of-school
crisis-impacted children live in areas with protracted crises.
The vast majority of those are in countries specifically targeted
through ECW’s investments, including Afghanistan, the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Mali, Nigeria, Pakistan,
Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan and Yemen. The war in Ukraine is
pushing even more children out of school, with recent
estimates—according to UNICEF’s report of 17 January—indicating
that the conflict has impacted more than 5 million school-age
children.
The FCDO tells me that ECW is already delivering quality
education to over 7 million children across more than 30
crisis-affected countries. We will not reach the target that we
have committed to of getting 40 million more girls into school
without the work of ECW. All across the world, funding needs are
growing due to conflict, climate change and the pandemic. Across
UN-led humanitarian appeals, the education sector was funded at
just 22% of what it needed in 2021—that is half what was achieved
in 2018.
Next month, ECW will hold its high-level financing conference. If
we are to help the 222 million children and young people to
receive the education that they deserve—to unlock the potential
of the world’s children —we must unlock the financial resources
to make it happen. Governments, the private sector, philanthropic
foundations and individual donors need to work together to find
the resources. I know that our official development assistance
budgets are tight—very tight—but UK leadership is key. If we step
away from the promises that we have made to the children of the
world, to the girls of the world, other donors may also step back
and reduce or delay their investments.
Children across the world get just one chance at their education;
they cannot wait. I therefore urge the Minister and the FCDO to
dig deep into our pockets at the pledging conference next month
and to make sure that Education Cannot Wait has the resources
that it needs to deliver for our children.
1.41pm
(Harrow West) (Lab/Co-op)
It is a real pleasure to follow the right hon. Member for
Chelmsford (). Much to my surprise, I found
nothing in her speech to disagree with, but I promise not to make
that a habit—just to reassure her and my hon. Friends. Two of the
most significant points of substance that she raised were the
importance of girls’ education, and investment in that, and
continuing to build a global alliance for more investment in
girls’ education.
I remember that in my time as a Minister in the Department for
International Development, we began the process of putting
substantial investment into girls’ education. I remember how
proud I was—as I am sure other Members were at the time—that
Britain was willing to show global leadership on that issue. I
pay tribute to who, since stepping down as
Prime Minister and being appointed as the UN special envoy for
global education, has continued to do everything he can to build
support for that.
The right hon. Member for Chelmsford also made an important point
about Afghanistan and the international community’s continuing
outrage about the way in which women and, in particular, young
girls are being treated there. She spoke of the need for her
colleagues in the Foreign Office, if at all possible, to maintain
funding for girls’ education, however difficult that is going
forward.
There is one thing that the right hon. Member for Chelmsford did
not mention—I think I understand why, but she will understand why
I raise it. I think it would be an even better statement on
education to have a separate, dedicated Department for
International Development, able to champion the case for
investment in education globally, free of some of the constraints
that the FCDO is under.
I hope that the House will forgive me if I make some parochial
points now about the importance of more education investment in
Harrow, where we are blessed with remarkable headteachers and
teachers, as well as impressive students. One of the great
privileges for me as the Member for Harrow West is to have the
opportunity to go into schools and see that the future of the
community in which I have lived all my life and that I love very
much is in the safe hands of such impressive young people.
Nevertheless, it is clear that many of the schools still face
real financial difficulties and that the governing bodies face
challenges in recruiting headteachers and teachers, not least in
maths and science, and also, increasingly, in other subjects,
including humanities and English. I am struck by the comments of
the executive heads of some of the academies that operate in
Harrow about how difficult it has been on occasion to get a field
of sufficiently talented applicants for the position of
headteacher. As I say, they do a remarkable job none the less,
but it would be good to hear from the Minister—if not today,
perhaps in a letter—the Government’s plan to address the
recruitment crisis in education.
Local authorities also need more funding for special needs
education, and that is certainly the case in Harrow. Mr Sharma,
you may recognise that there is a continuing difficulty with the
fact that teachers who are appointed to jobs in inner London get
a significant pay increase compared with teachers working in
outer London schools. There is little difference in the cost of
living in inner London as opposed to in outer London. It seems to
me that the discrepancy in pay between teachers in outer London
and their compatriots in inner London, which has been around for
a long time, needs addressing urgently.
My last substantive point is that I want to encourage the
Government to take a fresh look at investment in supplementary
schools. We are lucky to have the Foreign Office Minister
present, because she knows a lot about the Asia-Pacific tilt to
which the Government are committed. I am struck by the need for
us to invest in teaching the languages of Asia and the Pacific.
Given the global significance of the Indian economy in years to
come, it seems even sadder that we are seeing a decline in the
teaching of the languages of modern India, including Gujarati,
Bengali, Persian, Punjabi and Urdu. Among GCSE students in this
country between 2015 and 2021, we saw a very steep decline: there
was a 77% drop in the number studying GCSE Gujarati, a 66% drop
in the number studying GCSE Bengali, and a 37% drop in the number
studying GCSE Urdu. If we as a country want the full benefit of
the trade deal that we hope to sign with India, having people who
can speak the languages of that great country is essential. Too
much of the teaching of those languages is left to very dedicated
people in temples, mosques and Saturday schools across local
communities.
To be fair, the Government have invested in teaching modern
languages. They have recently invested some £14 million in
teaching Mandarin and some £5 million in teaching Latin. Why not
have a similar amount of investment in teaching the languages of
modern Asia? We need dedicated funding, and we need specialist
training available for teachers in those subjects. Why not have a
flagship school programme to back teaching in that area? Why not
offer a bit of funding to support the Saturday schools that do so
much to keep up the level of GCSE studies? Where is the academic
research programme to support such a programme of investment in
these vital community languages?
With that, I apologise to the Front Benchers and to other Members
of the House: due to childcare reasons, I cannot stay for the
full debate, but I will certainly read the contributions of my
hon. Friend the Member for Enfield, Southgate (), the Minister and
others.
1.49pm
(West Worcestershire)
(Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Sharma. I
congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for Chelmsford
() on securing the debate. I
thank her for making it possible for hon. Members who are
passionate about this issue to make the case for every child in
the world to have 12 years of quality education. Nothing could be
more important, and nothing is less politically controversial,
but because we all agree how important it is, it does not get
enough debate in this place. That is why I am so sincere in my
congratulations to my right hon. Friend.
Over the last few years, I have had the privilege of chairing the
all-party parliamentary group on global education—more recently,
I have been co-chairing it— and I was also a co-founding chair of
the International Parliamentary Network for Education.
Regrettably, I had to hand on those responsibilities when I was
given the honour of chairing the Treasury Committee. I am
delighted that my right hon. Friend has embraced the opportunity
that those marvellous groups offer to champion this important
cause.
In my right hon. Friend’s powerful opening speech, we heard about
the important ways in which enabling every child in the world to
get a quality education could make our future so much brighter.
Growing the world’s economies, making sure we are all healthier,
and helping to tackle climate change are all powerful and
provable implications of ensuring that every child gets a good
education.
I will focus on those—particularly refugee children—whose
education suffers because they have to flee conflict. I thank all
the families in Worcestershire who have been so good about
welcoming refugees from Ukraine into their homes. We are proud to
have welcomed 1,000 Ukrainians into Worcestershire, and half of
them are children who are being educated in our local schools. I
thank the families, but I also thank the schools and teachers for
welcoming those children into our educational settings.
I have a point for the Minister to take back to her colleagues at
the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities. There
is rightly a payment to the school when it takes in a Ukrainian
refugee child. If the child moves to another school after a short
period of weeks, that payment does not follow them, and that has
led to a few problems. The up-front lump sum gets paid to the
school that receives the child, but if they are there for only a
little while, the money does not go any further. The Minister
will probably not be able to respond today, but will she commit
to write to me about how that could be better tackled in the
system?
I endorse the points that were made about those poor girls in
Afghanistan. There is not a day when I do not think about how
terribly they are suffering from not being allowed to go to
school. The medieval cruelty of the Taliban regime in preventing
their daughters from being educated is appalling. We must speak
out about it whenever we can, because it is only by keeping that
focus that we can ever hope for the situation to change.
It is not just girls in Afghanistan, but millions of children in
countries all around the world—including our own—who are missing
out on education. It is particularly difficult to educate
children in refugee settings, which is why I commend the work I
saw at first hand when I was the Minister responsible for that
budget in the international sphere.
The work done to help children get an education is often
delivered very rapidly by Education Cannot Wait, and I want to
highlight the opportunity for the UK to continue to show its
global leadership in this area with the upcoming replenishment of
the Education Cannot Wait budget. I am sure the Minister and her
officials will be carefully studying the results that Education
Cannot Wait has delivered in settings around the world. I hope
that the data still show the good impact and powerful value for
money that that funding produces, and that the UK can therefore
lead on that important work and crowd in other countries to
contribute to it.
To conclude my brief remarks on this incredibly important
subject, I again thank my right hon. Friend for securing the
debate. On behalf of my constituents, I also thank the Minister
for the work the UK does to make the world a safer, healthier and
more prosperous place by investing in education—not just in this
country, but in countries that cannot afford to educate all their
children. I urge the Minister to look particularly favourably on
the work that is done for children in refugee situations by
Education Cannot Wait.
1.56pm
(Maidstone and The Weald)
(Con)
I, too, congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for
Chelmsford () on securing this important
debate in recognition of the International Day of Education.
I am hugely honoured to be the Prime Minister’s special envoy for
girls’ education. My role is to globally champion his message
that providing 12 years of quality education for every single
girl on the planet is one of the best ways of tackling many of
the major issues facing the world today, such as poverty, climate
change and inequality. Investing in girls’ education is an
absolute game changer: if we want to change the world for the
better, girls’ education is a great place to start. The child of
a mother who can read is 50% more likely to live beyond the age
of five, twice as likely to attend school themselves, and 50%
more likely to be immunised. Girls who are educated are more able
to choose if and when to have children, and how many children
they have.
Girls’ education is, of course, vital for women and girls, but it
is also extremely important in levelling up society, boosting
incomes and developing economies and nations. Tragically, the
pandemic has been one of the biggest educational disruptors in
our history, affecting 1.6 billion learners at its peak in 2020.
It also created a global education funding gap of $200 billion
per annum. In poorer countries now, over 70% of children cannot
read a simple text by the age of 10.
Many of those children are girls, many of whom will never return
to school, or even start school, lowering their chances of future
employment and decent livelihoods. Out of school, girls are at
greater risk of violence, sexual violence, forced marriage, early
marriage, female genital mutilation and human trafficking. All
those factors are creating the very real risk of a lost
generation of girls, and we must work hard and together to stop
that happening.
We also need to work better and differently. The UK has played a
leading role in education policy and financing: we put girls’
education at the very heart of the 2021 G7 summit in Cornwall,
giving it the priority and profile—as well as the financial and
political commitments—that it needs and deserves. We also agreed
two new, ambitious global targets: getting 20 million more girls
reading by the age of 10, and getting 40 million more girls in
primary and secondary school in low and low-to-middle income
countries by 2026.
At the global education summit in London, also in 2021, we raised
a landmark $4 billion for global education with our international
partners, which will help another 175 million children to learn.
At COP26 in Glasgow that year, we made the important connection
between girls’ education and climate change, showing how girls’
education can be very much part of the solution. That is because
girls who are educated are much more able to participate in
decisions, actions and leadership in relation to climate
resilience, adaptation and mitigation.
We know that education interventions must provide more than just
learning, and the UK will continue to be a gender equality
leader, tackling the issues that prevent girls from getting to
school and staying in school. No girl should have her hopes and
dreams dashed because she has had to marry too early or become a
mother due to a lack of family planning advice.
In my role as the Prime Minister’s special envoy, I have been
able to travel extensively to see for myself some of our
education programmes and how they are changing lives for the
better. In Ghana, in the hills of Aburi, I sat in on non-formal
community classes where young mothers brought their babies to
school. In Sierra Leone, I saw programmes that focused on
improved learning, but also on special measures to address
violence in and out of school and other safeguarding issues. In
Nigeria, I saw how our teams on the ground have adapted
programmes to respond to covid school closures. They achieved
that through community-based learning programmes, the recording
of radio and TV lessons, and accelerated learning programmes to
help children catch up. I had the opportunity to meet virtually
with schoolgirls and teachers affected by the conflict in Syria.
I heard how education was providing a real lifeline and a space
for children to see their friends, rebuild their self-confidence
and self-esteem and develop the skills they need to break the
cycle of poverty, while also providing them with a sense of hope
and optimism for the future. I was inspired by the dreams of one
young girl who hoped to become an architect to rebuild Syria for
the future, and another who wanted to be a social worker to
protect children from violence. These girls are our future, and
ensuring their right to safe, quality education is essential.
The weight of the challenge on girls’ education is significant,
but our ability to make a change in the world —if we work
together—should never be underestimated. We all must raise our
game and rally the world behind the global targets that have been
set and agreed. Achieving global targets requires a global
response. Governments must prioritise education reforms, listen
to civil society and not be afraid to partner with technical
experts so that they can design their reforms around real
evidence of what actually works. We need to urgently recover
those learning losses caused by covid by focusing on foundational
learning skills. Basic numeracy and literacy are essential for
children to be able to stay in school and progress to higher
levels.
We must listen carefully to our girls and hear what they say they
want and need from their leaders—be it safer roads for walking to
school, free sanitary products to help with confidence and school
attendance, or separate toilets for privacy. Last but certainly
not least, our global leaders need to speak out much more about
the importance of educating our girls and to explain all the
advantages for girls and women and for their children, their
families, their communities and, of course, their nations.
2.04pm
(North Ayrshire and Arran)
(SNP)
I am very happy to participate in this debate, as an English
teacher of 23 years before I was elected to this House. The
International Day of Education is an important date in our
calendar, and the theme this year is:
“To invest in people, prioritise education”.
I pay tribute to the hard work of the teachers in my
constituency. I am currently undertaking my annual visit to my
local schools, and I am always impressed by our young people’s
political engagement, which is both impressive and refreshing. I
pay tribute to them and the staff, who work hard to deliver
education in my constituency.
The United Nations General Assembly proclaimed 24 January as the
International Day of Education in celebration of the role of
education in peace and development. I thank the right hon. Member
for Chelmsford () for securing the debate.
Education is a human right, a public good and a public
responsibility. The right hon. Lady reminded us that illiteracy
across the globe disproportionately affects women and girls, and
that educating women and girls provides huge and lasting benefits
to their communities and children, and helps to avert child
marriage, which is important for the future and prosperity of
developing countries.
I agree with the point the hon. Member for Harrow West () made about the FCDO doing
international development work of such importance in this and
many other fields. We really should be looking to restore the
Department for International Development; everybody in this
Chamber agrees that the FCDO does important international
development work, but that merits a Department for itself.
The hon. Member for Maidstone and The Weald (Mrs Grant) reminded
us of the huge benefits of educating women and girls and of the
vast scale—some might say the daunting scale—of the challenge. It
is important that the international community works together to
address it, if for no other reason—although there are many
reasons—than the risk of violence to women and girls, which goes
alongside being deprived of and facing barriers to education.
It is indisputable that inclusive and equitable quality education
and lifelong opportunities for all are inextricably linked to a
country’s success in achieving gender equality and breaking the
cycle of poverty that leaves millions of children, youth and
adults behind. Today, 244 million children and youth are out of
school, and 771 million adults are illiterate. Their rights to
education and so much more are being violated. That is
unacceptable.
UNESCO is dedicating this year’s International Day of Education
to girls and women in Afghanistan who have been deprived of their
right to education, and is calling for the immediate lifting of
the ban restricting access to education. The hon. Member for West
Worcestershire () said that global
education commands agreement and support across the House—it is
one of the rare occasions when we see that happening. I note her
comments that children are being deprived of their education in
far too many circumstances, both refugees and in a more general,
global sense. The international community must continue to work
to change that.
I want to focus on the situation in Afghanistan, which is
alarming and bewildering to many of us looking on in the west.
The Taliban regime is denying its daughters, wives and sisters
access to any form of schooling whatever. Today marks 493 days
since the Taliban banned teenage girls from school, and 32 days
since it banned women from going to university and working in
national and international non-governmental organisations.
Currently, there are 2.5 million Afghan girls and young women out
of school, 1.2 million of whom were denied access to secondary
schools and university places following the regime’s diktat about
women in education. Despite international condemnation, the
Taliban regime justified that step on the basis that some women
had not adhered to its interpretation of Islamic dress code, and
that conservative traditions must be protected. It is an
interesting conundrum that repressing, diminishing and
controlling women in that way is such a priority for the Taliban
regime, despite the fact that 28 million Afghans require aid,
with some 6 million on the brink of famine—some 93% of Afghans do
not have enough food, according to the UN. Winter temperatures
are plunging as low as -17°C, and even lower in mountainous
areas, so making it a priority to deprive women of their
education seems bizarre to anybody looking on.
Amid all that, Save the Children had no choice but to pause its
aid efforts in areas where it could not operate without its
female staff, because women are essential to the safe and
effective delivery of its services. Can it really be true—I
cannot believe that I am asking this question—that the Taliban
would rather its people died of starvation than women be seen to
undertake useful work to assist Afghan civilians?
Being a girl or woman in Afghanistan under the Taliban must
surely be a frightening, marginalising and desperate experience.
In essence, Afghan women are back to being invisible in public
life, imprisoned in their home and, where applicable, ordered to
cover their ground and first-floor windows so that women inside
cannot be seen from the street. Women can have the end of their
thumbs cut off for wearing nail varnish. In such a regime, where
women are viewed as chattels and the possession of male
relatives, of no value as human beings, robbed of their dignity
and their identity reduced to the clothes that they must wear,
how can we be surprised that such a regime explicitly forbids the
education of its women?
It is heartbreaking to consider that in the 20th century, until
the conflicts of the 1970s, Afghanistan was seen as a progressive
country. Afghan women were first eligible for the right to vote
in 1919, only a year after women in the UK enjoyed that right and
a year before women in the US were allowed to vote. As part of
that, how women’s rights to education in Afghanistan have been
rolled back is remarkable and frightening.
No society can truly prosper socially, economically or culturally
unless there is access to education for all on an equal basis.
Until the Taliban in Afghanistan understands that, the
international community must continue to stress it and to engage
on the issue when possible. I hope that the UK Government will
play a leading global role in that international effort. Access
to education is such a basic universal human right that denying
it to women in Afghanistan or anywhere based on gender is
incompatible with all that is right and decent.
As we commemorate the International Day of Education, it is right
and fitting that we dedicate this day in 2023 to girls and women
in Afghanistan who have been deprived of their right to
education. Only a regime that seeks to control and tyrannise
would fail to recognise that access to education for all its
people has no downside for that society. We see that depriving
Afghan women and girls of education goes hand in hand with the
loss of so many other rights.
I know that all right hon. and hon. Members will seek to show
solidarity with Afghan women and seek to restore their access to
education. That should be a fundamental red line in all
international engagement with the Taliban regime. Without access
to education, the lives of Afghan women will be poorer, their
children will be poorer, their communities will be poorer, the
once great country of Afghanistan will be poorer, the climate
will be poorer and the world will be poorer—poorer in ways that
are beyond measure. We must stand up for Afghan women and girls
and for the access to education that they need and deserve, with
all the opportunities and fulfilment that go alongside securing
that education. That applies to women and girls not just in
Afghanistan, but across the world.
2.14pm
(Enfield, Southgate)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Sharma. I
refer the House to my entry on the Register of Members’ Financial
Interests—I am the co-chair of the APPG on global education. I
thank my friend, the right hon. Member for Chelmsford (), for securing this timely and
important debate to mark the International Day of Education and
for her excellent speech. As co-chairs of the APPG, we both care
deeply about this topic and are working closely together to shine
a light on the importance of inclusive and quality education for
all.
As we mark the International Day of Education this week, it is
staggering to note that 222 million children around the world are
affected by emergency and protracted crises and in need of urgent
educational support. This has grown from an estimated 75 million
in 2016, as more children around the world are missing out on
essential education time. We find these children facing some of
the world’s foremost challenges, from the war in Ukraine and the
repression of women and girls in Afghanistan to the impact of
food insecurity in the horn of Africa and climate-related
disaster in the Sahel.
Education is every child’s right. It is fundamental to creating a
peaceful and prosperous world. My hon. Friend the Member for
Harrow West () emphasised the value of
education for all. Labour recognises the importance of quality,
safe, inclusive and free public education as the cornerstone of
the UN sustainable development goals. Education saves lives;
improves nutrition and health; reduces child, early and forced
marriage; and leads to more equal, respectful and open
societies.
On visits abroad, I have seen the scale of the challenges we face
in global education, in particular for women and girls. As the
hon. Member for Maidstone and The Weald (Mrs Grant) succinctly
put it, girls’ education is an absolute game-changer. She is
absolutely right to make that point. Every day, girls face
barriers to education caused by poverty, child marriage and
gender-based violence, poor infrastructure, cultural norms and
practices and fragility. Around the world, 129 million girls are
out of school, including 32 million of primary school age, 30
million of lower secondary school age and 67 million of upper
secondary school age. As eloquently pointed out by the hon.
Member for West Worcestershire (), in countries affected by
conflict, girls are more than twice as likely to be out of school
than girls living in non-affected areas.
This year, UNESCO has dedicated the International Day of
Education to the women and girls of Afghanistan. What is
happening there is an absolute tragedy: the Taliban’s barbaric
ban on the participation of women in public life means schools
and universities have been closed to Afghan women and girls, in
violation of their fundamental rights and freedoms. Since the
fall of Kabul, the Taliban has stopped 850,000 secondary age
girls from attending school; as we have heard throughout today’s
excellent debate, the impact of that ban is devastating. At the
same time, the world has watched in awe as brave girls and women
in Afghanistan have protested and demanded the right to go to
school in the face of repression by the Taliban. Afghanistan can
never flourish while half its population is relegated from public
life.
We must pay tribute to all those fighting for their right to
education, but they need more than warm words and solidarity. The
UK must act by working internationally to hold the Taliban to
account for its escalating crackdown on women’s rights and doing
everything possible to support education for all in Afghanistan,
including through the Global Partnership for Education, which is
making up to $300 million available in support of education for
Afghan women and girls. Can the Minister say what steps the UK
Government are taking with the international community to support
women and girls’ education in Afghanistan? More specifically,
will she rule out reductions in UK funding to Afghanistan while
negotiations between the de facto authorities and the diplomatic
and humanitarian communities are ongoing?
The UK is, and continues to be, a vocal supporter of girls’
education. But it is fair to say that the Government need to
translate that rhetoric into results. According to analysis by
the ONE Campaign, an estimated 7.1 million children, including
3.7 million girls, lost their education due to recent cuts to the
UK’s aid budget. Alongside cuts, we also have delays—most
recently to the international women and girls strategy, which the
Government confirmed last week has been delayed once again. We
cannot allow ourselves to fail a generation of young people, and
that is why Labour urges the Government to announce a strong and
early pledge for the Geneva Education Cannot Wait conference next
month.
Since its establishment in 2016, Education Cannot Wait has
reached 7 million children and adolescents with quality education
in some of the toughest crisis zones globally. UK funding has
supported an estimated 1.5 million of those children, but the
challenge has grown since then. Civil society, members of the
public and many parliamentarians have called for the UK to pledge
£170 million over the 2023-26 period: a 13% share of Education
Cannot Wait’s fundraising target. That would directly provide 2.6
million children in an emergency or protracted crisis with
quality education, 60% of whom would be girls. Can the Minister
confirm whether the UK Government will commit to make such a
pledge ahead of next month’s conference? If so, when can we
expect the announcement?
It is imperative that the Government meet their own targets on
providing quality foundational learning to the most marginalised,
including girls and children with disabilities. Girls and boys in
conflict zones, climate shocks and natural disasters, and refugee
settlements deserve to learn to read and write, do maths and
prosper as much as any other child, yet just one in 10 of the 222
million children affected by crises are meeting required minimum
levels for literacy and numeracy. Such extreme levels of
illiteracy and innumeracy are an early warning sign that global
educational goals, and related sustainable development goals, are
in jeopardy. At the current rate of progress, it will take at
least 40 years to achieve the sustainable development goal 4
target on learning.
In 2019, over half of children in low and middle-income countries
were living in learning poverty, meaning that they were unable to
read and understand a simple text by age 10. In sub-Saharan
Africa, that figure is closer to 90%. Behind those numbers,
millions of vulnerable girls and boys around the world await our
collective action. From inside makeshift refugee settlements, the
damaged walls of classrooms, and communities torn apart by war
and disaster, those children are holding on to the hope that
education will allow them to realise their dreams of becoming
doctors, engineers, scientists, teachers or whatever other
profession they seek to achieve.
As we mark International Day Of Education, I want to end by
sharing the thoughts of young people campaigning for their
generation’s future. This week, I had the pleasure of meeting
with the Global Partnership for Education youth leaders in
Parliament as part of their youth action tour. The youth leaders
are young people with lived experience from partner countries,
and it was incredibly moving to hear directly from them about why
we need to protect and increase education funding worldwide.
Another group of young people that I would like to highlight are
Send My Friend to School youth campaigners. Each year, around
250,000 young people from across the UK take part in the
campaign, meeting dozens of MPs. I have met their excellent
campaign champions on a number of occasions. I am always inspired
by the passion and commitment that they have for other children
around the world, who are not fortunate enough to receive the
kind of education that we do here in the UK.
I end with the following words from Jenson, aged 10, speaking on
behalf of his classmates at Colne Engaine Primary School in
Braintree:
“We think every child has the right to have an education. Reasons
that stop children from going to school like natural disasters
and disease, war and famine are not chosen by the children.”
Let that ring true in all our ears and urge us to act now as we
celebrate International Day of Education.
2.24pm
The Minister of State, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development
Office ()
I am grateful to my right hon. Friend the Member for Chelmsford
() for securing this debate to
mark International Day of Education. I pay tribute to her work to
drive progress on education around the world, both in her
previous ministerial role and through her continued efforts as
the new co-chair of the APPG on global education.
My colleague, the Minister of State, Foreign, Commonwealth and
Development Office, my right hon. Friend the Member for Sutton
Coldfield (Mr Mitchell), would have been delighted to take part
in this debate, but he is travelling on ministerial duties.
However, it is a pleasure to be able to respond on behalf on the
Government. I am grateful to all hon. Members for their
contributions. The strength of feeling about the importance of
global education is clear and unequivocal, as it should be.
Colleagues will be aware of my commitment to this cause, as the
former Secretary of State in the Department for International
Development who published our first strategy on 12 years of
girls’ education back in 2020.
Education, especially for girls, is a top priority for this
Government. Over five years from 2015, UK aid supported more than
15 million children, including 8 million girls, to benefit from a
decent education. We continue to stand up for the right of every
girl, everywhere, to access 12 years of quality learning. We know
that that is the key to unlocking individual potential, as well
as advancing prosperous, thriving societies and economies. In
short, and as all hon. Members have said, it is one of the very
best investments we can make. That is because not only do
educated girls’ earnings increase significantly, but they are
less likely to be subjected to child marriage and domestic
violence, and more likely to have smaller, healthier and better
educated families.
Too many children around the world lack these opportunities and
face many barriers: poverty; a lack of safe and accessible
schools; and the twin threats of conflict and climate change. As
my hon. Friend the Member for West Worcestershire () has said, this is seen
most shockingly right now for girls in Afghanistan. I reiterate
the Government’s condemnation of the Taliban’s decision to
prevent girls from returning to secondary school and women to
universities. Through our joint G7 Foreign Ministers’ statement
and the UK national statement, we have repeatedly made that
clear, and we continue to lobby the Taliban to reverse those
destructive decrees.
As my right hon. Friend the Member for Chelmsford has set out,
about 244 million children are out of school around the world and
more than half are girls. About seven in 10 children in low and
middle-income countries are unable to read by the age of 10, and
that generation could lose $21 trillion in earnings over their
lifetimes as a result. Put simply, we face the real risk of a
lost generation, and we cannot let that happen. That is why the
UK is driving international action to tackle the education
crisis.
In 2021, we hosted in London the global education summit, which
raised an unprecedented $4 billion for the Global Partnership for
Education. We put girls’ education at the centre of our G7
presidency that year and secured G7 endorsement of the two global
objectives mentioned by my hon. Friend the Member for Maidstone
and The Weald (Mrs Grant): to get 40 million more girls into
school and 20 million more girls reading by the age of 10 by
2026.
We support developing countries to help children to learn in a
safe, inclusive and sustainable way. Of course, that begins, just
as it does in every school in all our constituencies, with strong
foundations: basic reading, maths and social skills—the building
blocks on which all children everywhere can make progress in
school and reach their potential so that they have choices later
in life. That is why the UK launched a commitment to action on
foundational learning last year at the UN summit on transforming
education. We are calling on all Governments around the world to
prioritise those basics, especially for the most marginalised
girls.
We also support girls and young women to make their way into
higher education and training, to boost their employment
prospects. As part of that, we launched the girls’ education and
skills programme on International Women’s Day last year. That
innovative partnership between Government and major global
businesses was initiated by my hon. Friend the Member for
Maidstone and The Weald in her role as special envoy on girls’
education. I thank her for her relentless advocacy, her
enthusiasm and the globetrotting that she does on behalf of the
Prime Minister to bring these issues to light across the
globe.
We want to continue to prioritise reaching the poorest and most
marginalised girls, with a particular focus on reaching children
affected by emergencies and protracted crises. On climate change
in particular, the figures are bleak: 40 million children each
year have their schooling disrupted by its impacts. For example,
I met some children in the village of Mele in Vanuatu—a Pacific
island literally the other side of the planet from here. I met
them in December, and their school had been battered by sea
storms unprecedented in the island’s history. That was a real,
practical and destructive event for those small children, who had
not experienced that in their lives before.
Those climate threats are creating the sort of disruptions that
are absolutely destructive and will cause damage for so many more
children, so our focus on helping developing countries to adapt
and become more resilient to the climate shocks we know they will
have to face will be critical to protecting those children who
are in education and enabling them to continue their education.
We are supporting education for the poorest through UK-led
programmes in 19 countries. That is complemented by our
significant investments through the Global Partnership for
Education and Education Cannot Wait, which supports children
through emergencies.
It is of course important to leverage financing. That is why we
are a leading partner in developing the new international finance
facility for education, which is focused on lower middle income
countries to help girls into learning. Meanwhile, the UK Girls’
Education Challenge is the largest programme of its kind in the
world. More than 1 million girls who were most at risk of
dropping out are now staying in school and making progress, and
over 150,000 with disabilities are able to attend school.
Our new position paper, which we published last month, is our
road map towards addressing the climate, environment and
biodiversity crises in and through girls’ education. I reassure
colleagues that we will be publishing the new international women
and girls strategy in the coming months, which will be framed
around the three E’s of educating girls, empowering and
championing the health and rights of women and girls, and ending
violence.
Members have raised concerns about the reduction in the aid
budget and its impact on education programmes. Colleagues are all
aware that difficult decisions have been made to meet the 0.5%
commitment, and to support those fleeing the war in Ukraine and
insecurity in Afghanistan.
Will my right hon. Friend commit to writing to the Secretary of
State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities to make the point
that the money for Ukrainian refugee children in the UK, which I
believe comes from the official development assistance budget, is
not necessarily following that child if they move to a new
school?
My hon. Friend raises an important point, of which I was not
aware; it has not been brought to me in my constituency. I will
take it up with the Secretary of State and ensure that we
understand where those issues are, the size of the problem, and
how we can ensure that, whichever schools are looking after those
young people who are here from Ukraine, they can have the support
they need.
We are prioritising our 0.5% aid spending in line with the
priorities that we set out in our international development
strategy, which, of course, includes girls’ education. The UK
remains one of the most generous global donors, spending £11
billion in aid in 2021.
I reassure colleagues that, in relation to the Afghanistan
crisis, FCDO officials are in regular contact with the NGO
community to understand the impact of the Taliban ban on female
workers. Where NGO partners have had to suspend activity, the
FCDO is continuing to cover staff salaries and other critical
associated operational costs, and we are encouraging UN agencies
to do the same with their NGO counterparts.
As Members know, development is not just about aid packages. UK
support to global education includes our valuable country
partnerships, expertise, and power to convene others, such as
through the global summit.
As colleagues have already said, and championed, we are proud to
be a co-founder of, and leading donor to, Education Cannot Wait.
Members have asked for details on the UK’s future commitment to
ECW. The Minister of State, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development
Office, my right hon. Friend the Member for Sutton Coldfield,
will announce the UK’s future contributions— I am afraid that I
cannot steal his thunder—at the high- level financing conference
in February.
I will end by reaffirming the UK’s unwavering commitment to
global education, which remains at the heart of our work towards
a more prosperous, stable and equal world. I know that all
colleagues here today will continue to champion education as the
most effective investment every nation can make.
2.33pm
I would like to take a couple of minutes to thank all the Members
who have taken part in today’s debate.
It is clear from the work that my hon. Friend the Member for West
Worcestershire () did as a Minister, and
the work that she has done as a Back Bencher to keep this issue
on our agenda, how passionate she is. I thank her for reminding
us that one of the reasons we do not talk about it enough is that
we all agree about it. However, we must continue to highlight
it.
In responding to my wonderful hon. Friend the Member for
Maidstone and The Weald (Mrs Grant)—who arrived overnight, not
having had a night’s sleep, because she has been championing
girls’ education on behalf of our Prime Minister—I want to get on
the record all our congratulations for the announcement that we
saw in the new year’s honours list. Often, people say that an OBE
is about not only one’s own work, but the work of others—it is
about a cause. But in this case she has been such a champion, for
so many involved in the cause of making sure that all girls get
12 years’ quality education. I thank her for all she does; it was
wonderful to see her name recognised.
The hon. Member for Harrow West () made a really important
point about languages. We often talk about the drop in European
language learning, but he made an interesting point about the
drop in other languages. If we want to make the world a smaller
place and a better place, those languages are so important.
I thank the hon. Member for North Ayrshire and Arran () not only for giving us a
teacher’s perspective, but for using so much of her speaking time
to focus on the situation for women and girls in Afghanistan. We
absolutely need to make sure that women’s voices especially are
heard on this issue. They do not have their own voice; we need to
make sure that women’s voices are heard.
There is of course a special place in heaven for men who champion
women’s issues, so I thank the co-chair, the hon. Member for
Enfield, Southgate (), for his passion for
this work and for co-chairing the APPG, and indeed for mentioning
the work of young people in this country through the Send My
Friend to School campaign. Those intergenerational links, us to
them—but also across the younger generation—are vital.
I thank the Minister for also reminding us of her passion, which
she has had for many years. I like the phrase she used—the UK “is
driving” international action, not “has driven”. We all want to
make sure that we continue in the driving seat to press this
forward, leverage those partnerships and work internationally. We
all look forward with great hope to what the Minister of State,
my right hon. Friend the Member for Sutton Coldfield (Mr
Mitchell), will promise and pledge at the summit next month.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the International Day of
Education.
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