Thursday, 3 March 2011

Actress Jolie visits Afghanistan


jolieUS film star Angelina Jolie has made a surprise two-day visit to Afghanistanto meet refugees in the war-torn country, the UN’s refugee agency said Wednesday. Jolie, star of films such as “Mr & Mrs Smith” and also a UNHCR goodwill ambassador, spent two days meeting refugees, afterwards calling for more to be done to reintegrate former exiles into Afghan society. Over 5.5 million people have returned to Afghanistan since 2002, the year after the Taliban were ousted by a US-led invasion, according to the UNHCR.
Most of them had fled to Pakistan and Iran and their return has increased the country’s population by over 20 per cent, it says.
There are currently some 140,000 international troops in Afghanistan fighting a Taliban-led insurgency.
“The focus needs to be put now on reintegration and that means not just putting up shelter but making sure there is water, job opportunities, a school for the children and medical clinics,” Jolie said in a statement released by UNHCR at the end of the visit.
Jolie, married to fellow actor Brad Pitt, is noted for her humanitarian work. This was her second visit to Afghanistan, where she arrived Monday.

Civil rights organisation slams anti-Islam group


civil_rightsAn anti-Islamic group’s opposition to a weekly Muslim prayer session being held in Melbourne’s inner suburbs has been condemned by a civil liberties organisation, Liberty Victoria. Q Society opposes what it calls the “Islamisation of Australia”, saying accommodating Islamic custom and law threatens Australia’s basic freedoms. It has started a petition against a planning amendment at Melbourne’s Port Phillip Council that would formalise an existing weekly hour-long prayer session at a St Kilda community house. Muslims have been praying at the weekly Friday session for years.Liberty Victoria president Spencer Zifcak said Q Society’s campaign “bears all the hallmarks of a deliberate attempt to deny to one religion the freedom of religious belief accorded to every other religion”.
With a large Jewish community living in the St Kilda area, Professor Zifcak said Jewish groups in the area had welcomed the planning application but Q Society was arguing that allowing more Muslims to pray in the community house “would be contrary to social cohesion in the area where people of the Christian and Jewish faiths are in a majority”.

Prof Zifcak said the Islamic prayer group had been meeting without incident or concern for years.

A spokesperson for the Q Society has described it as “a group of individuals from varying backgrounds, of different cultural and religious persuasions who are committed to safeguard and promote Australia’s free, open and democratic society”.

Pakistan spends 7 times more on arms than on schools


weapons-543Pakistan, with one of the world`s largest out-of-school population, about 7.3 million, spends over seven times as much on arms as on primary schools, says a report of the UN Educational, Scientific and CulturalOrganisation (Unesco).The discrepancy between primary education and military expenditure is so large that just one-fifth of Pakistan`s military spending would be sufficient to finance the universal primary education, asserts the `Education for All (EFA) Global Monitoring Report 2011` published on Tuesday.
It said that diversion of national resources to the military and loss of government revenue meant that armed conflict shifted the responsibility for education financing from government to households. The report called on national governments and donors to urgently review the potential for converting unproductive spending on weapons into productive investment in schools.

The 1999-2008 period which was marked by high economic growth, real growth in education spending was higher than the rates of economic growth. The total public expenditure on education as percentage of GNP was 2.9 per cent in 2008, compared to 2.6 per cent in 1999.

The report says that the impact of armed conflict on education has been widely neglected. This hidden crisis is reinforcing poverty, undermining economic growth and holding back the progress of nations. In Pakistan, some 600,000 children in three districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa were reported in 2009 to have missed one year or more of school because of conflict and displacement.

Insurgent groups in KPK and Fata have attacked girls` primary and secondary schools. The report says that motives for attacking education infrastructure vary. Schools may be seen as embodying state authority and, therefore, a legitimate target, especially when insurgent groups oppose, as in Afghanistan, the type of education promoted by governments. The use of schools by armed forces can lead to their being targeted by anti-state groups and abandoned by communities.

In recent years, the country`s madressahs have been viewed as a recruiting ground for potential terrorists. However, there is little credible evidence to support this conclusion, the report says.

Most parents send their children to the madressah to receive the Quran education, or to escape a failing state system. The real challenge for Pakistan is to strengthen the failing state education and to build bridges between that system and madressah schools.

“Yet the generalised international climate of hostility towards madressahs, fuelled by donors, is not conducive to bridge-building,” the report says.

In Pakistan, the post-independence government adopted Urdu as the national language and the language of instructions in schools. This became a source of alienation in a country which is home to six major linguistic groups and 58 smaller ones.

The report says that Pakistan has one of the world`s largest youth bulges, with 37 per cent of the population under 15. Unemployed educated youths figure prominently in some armed conflict in Pakistan.

The report said that 49 per cent of the poorest children aged 7 to 16 were out of school in 2007, compared with 5 per cent of children from the wealthiest households. Location and gender reinforce the disparities – poor rural girls were 21 times less likely to be in school than wealthy urban boys.

The number of children out of school in the country may fall by one-fifth to 5.8 million by 2015.