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Angelina Jolie promotes education for Iraqi kids
Ayesha Rascoe
WASHINGTON—Actress and human rights activist Angelina Jolie urged the
international community on Tuesday to make educating Iraqi children a
greater priority. “The best way to heal children of conflict from trauma
is to have them focus on their future,” Jolie told the Council on
Foreign Relations.
Jolie, who visited Iraq in August, and other humanitarian workers
discussed how to help displaced Iraqi children regain some sense of
normalcy and stability through education. The schooling of refugee
children is a frequent casualty of violence and political unrest, said
Gene Sperling, an economic adviser to former President Bill Clinton who
co-chairs the Education Partnership for Children of Conflict with Jolie.
“Every child has a right to education and conflict is not a reason to
ignore that,” Jolie said. The Hollywood actress has visited more than 20
humanitarian hot spots, including Iraq and Sudan’s Darfur region, since
becoming a good will U.N. ambassador in 2001.
The Iraq war has produced 4.5 million refugees and internally displaced
people. Of those who have fled the country, about 1.5 million are now in
neighbouring Syria, while hundreds of thousands have relocated to Jordan
and Lebanon.
Speakers at the event recommended building more schools and providing
textbooks inside Iraq and urged more support for governments hosting
Iraqi refugees.
Syria and Jordan have stretched their limited budgets to educate some
Iraqi children, but they need help to accommodate the massive influx of
students, said George Rupp, president and chief executive officer of the
International Rescue Committee. |