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130m youth still illiterate on planet
Foreign Desk Report
UNITED NATIONS--Today's youth are the best educated generation in
history even though 130 million are still illiterate, according to a new
U.N. report that urges greater investment to ensure universal primary
schooling.
The U.N. World Youth Report 2005, which provided a snapshot of the 1.2
billion young people aged 15 to 24, found that more than 500 million
youths live on less than $2 a day and a record 88 million are
unemployed.
The study highlighted the stark differences in the lives and
opportunities of young people in poor African and Asian nations versus
those in richer Western countries. The statistics and trends point to
one key message — investments in young people need to be scaled-up to
implement the 1995 World Program of Action for Youth and to meet the
U.N. Millennium Development Goals. They include cutting extreme poverty
by half, ensuring universal primary education, and stemming the AIDS
pandemic, all by 2015.
"Investing in young people is especially important to have a growing
economy," said Johan Scholvinck of the U.N. Department of Economic and
Social Affairs. "You cannot have successful growth if you don't have
skilled and active youth in your economy”.
The report said investments must focus on the 1.8 billion youngsters
currently under the age of 15 because they will be the 15- to
24-year-old generation in 2015, when the Millennium Development Goals
are supposed to be reached.
"Since 1995, the number of children completing primary school has
continued to increase and four out of five young people ... are now in
secondary school," the report said. Higher education is also increasing
and it's estimated that some 100 million youth are presently engaged in
university-level studies worldwide, it said. "The current generation of
youth is the best-educated so far. However, 113 million children are not
in school and 130 million young people are illiterate," the report said.
Despite improvements in education, youth unemployment is at a record
high of 88 million, with the highest rates in western Asia, north Africa
and sub-Saharan Africa, it said. "Usually youth are the last to be
employed and the first to be fired," said Johan Scholvinck of the U.N.
Department of Economic and Social Affairs.
The report portrayed a generation of young people who are increasingly
seeking the bright lights of cities and who are more influenced by the
global media than by their own families and communities. While
malnutrition strikes millions, the main killer of 15- to 24-year-olds is
AIDS. Ten million young people — mostly in Africa and Asia — are
currently living with HIV or AIDS.
"The epidemic has had a devastating impact on the sexual and
reproductive health of young people, as they are particularly vulnerable
to infection," the report said. It also found that globally, young
people are reaching adolescence earlier, marrying later, and
increasingly engaging in premarital sex, although early pregnancy has
declined in many countries.
Their health is also being affected by the "unprecedented increase in
the use of synthetic drugs worldwide, mostly in recreational settings,"
the report said. "The demand for illicit substances among youth in
developing countries has risen to levels typically found in
industrialized countries," it added.
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