Global
Business Coalition for Education (GBC-Education) has announced that it will
mobilise $100m (£67.96mn, €89.41m) in financial aid and relevant contributions
for a new fund called the Education Cannot Wait, to educate children in
emergency situations.
The new
fund by Unicef was announced on 23 May at the World Humanitarian Summit, a
two-day conference held in Istanbul, Turkey.
"In
emergency situations, education is the last priority, leaving millions of
children and youth on the streets and impacting growth, stability, innovation
and opportunity. The negative long term implications of children not getting a
quality education are huge. The business community finds it unacceptable to
stand by and lose generations of young people," said Sarah Brown,
executive chair of GBC-Education.
Started
in 2012, GBC-Education is a business-led, action-oriented federation of over
100+ businesses worldwide. It engages the business community in strategic
partnerships to accelerate progress in delivering quality education for
children and youth in crisis.
"We
believe that education is the birthright of every child, the key to expanded
opportunity, future employment and the cornerstone of greater economic
development and social prosperity," the institution said in a press
release.
GBC-Education
will work with Education Cannot Wait to spot top-challenges in delivering
education in crises and tap the capabilities of private sector business leaders
and companies to develop new solutions.
To start
with, GBC-Education has committed to developing the first-ever database of
potential corporate in-kind support for education in crisis.
"The
vision is to create a database that can be activated when crisis or emergency
strikes, making it possible to identify partners willing to provide expertise,
products or services necessary to restore hope and opportunity to
children," the statement read.
In
February 2016, GBC-Education mobilised $75 million from the private sector to
support education initiatives targeting one million Syrian refugees.
Also in
2014, following the kidnapping of the Chibok girls in Nigeria, the organisation
along with business leaders came forward for action and created Safe Schools
Initiative, which led to the creation of a $30m multi-donor trust fund
dedicated to creating safe learning opportunities in Nigeria.
Since
then, GBC-Education has expanded this initiative to include work in Pakistan,
Ebola-affected countries, Latin-America and in war-torn Middle Eastern
countries.
Although,
the institution faces several challenges – like reintroducing affected children
to the school or to help accelerate students who have fallen behind so that
they re-join their apt grade levels – it aims to continue its work in crisis
area.
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