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25% kids in Pakistan will be uneducated in 2030: UNESCO

Pakistan is only halfway to meeting its 12-year target of education for all

A schoolgirl in Pakistan | UNESCO Pakistan

One in four Pakistani children will not be completing primary education by the 2030 deadline of the world's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), according to new projections by UNESCO.

The new projections of UNESCO show that Pakistan will only be halfway to the target of 12 years of education for all, with 50 per cent of youth still not completing upper secondary education at the current rates, the Dawn newspaper reported on Wednesday.

“Countries need to face up to their commitments. What's the point in setting targets if we can't track them? Better finance and coordination are needed to fix this data gap before we get any closer to the deadline,” Silvia Montoya, director of the UNESCO Institute for Statistics, said.

The new UNESCO projections prepared for the UN High-level Political Forum show that the world will fail its education commitments without a rapid acceleration of progress.

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development emphasises leaving no one behind; yet, only 4 per cent of the poorest 20 per cent complete upper secondary school in the poorest countries, compared with 36 per cent of the richest. The gap is even wider in lower-middle-income countries.

In 2030, when all children should be in school, one in six aged 6-17 will still be excluded. Many children are still dropping out: by 2030, 40 per cent will still not be completing secondary education at current rates, the media report said.

The new global education goal, SDG-4, calls on countries to ensure that children are not only going to school but also learning; yet the proportion of trained teachers in sub-Saharan Africa has been falling since 2000.

At the current trends, learning rates are expected to stagnate in middle-income countries and Latin America and drop by almost a third in Francophone African countries by 2030. Without rapid acceleration, globally, 20 per cent of young people and 30 per cent of adults will still be unable to read by the deadline.

“Countries have interpreted the meaning of the targets in the global education goal very differently. This seems correct given that countries set off from such different starting points. But they must not deviate too much from the promises they made back in 2015," Manos Antoninis, director of the Global Education Monitoring Report, said.