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Malala urges world leaders to seize 2015 to “do better” for children

11 Dec 2014, 09:17 am Print

Malala urges world leaders to seize 2015 to “do better” for children
New Delhi, Dec 10 (JEN) Pakistan's Malala Youssafzai who along with India's Kailash Satyarthi will receive this year's Peace Prize at a ceremony in Oslo on Wednesday, has in an open letter urged the world to seize the opportunity of 2015 to do better.

In India, the campaigners will send this letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The letter is being issued on the day she accepts her Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo.
 
The letter and the speech she’ll give later are a call to action and a demand that leaders raise their game. She calls on world leaders to make 2015 the year in which they, and the rest of the world “commit to seeing the last child out of school, the last child forced into slavery and the last child forced to flee their home because of the danger of climate change”
 
 Shireen Vakil Miller from Save the Children said: “Malala’s letter should serve as a reminder to us all that 2015 is an historic opportunity to secure change that will benefit not
only the young people of today but the young people of tomorrow. We have in our grasp the opportunity to achieve historic agreements which could put us on a path to ending
poverty and inequality and making huge strides in the fight against climate change."
 
The letter: 
 
Dear World Leaders,
 
This year’s Nobel Peace Prize shows that generations and nations can stand side-by-side to demand a better world for children. But it also puts in stark relief the injustice of a world where education can be classed a crime, a 15-year old girl is shot simply for wanting to learn, and boys and girls are forced to spend their childhoods working in a factory. So whilst it must be a moment for celebration, it must also serve as a rallying cry to the world to do more to ensure every child can be certain of a better future.
 
Tremendous progress has been made. More girls are attending school than ever before, the number of children under-5 dying of preventable diseases has halved and fewer young
people are living in poverty. But it is not enough. Too many girls have their education cut short and are forced into marriages they do not want, too many children grow up without
enough food to eat or water to drink and too many of them live in communities whose very existence is threatened by changes to the climate.
 
It doesn’t have to be this way. 2015 can be a pivotal point for the world. It can be the year in which the world commits to a better future for boys and girls, men and women. It can be the year in which we all commit to seeing the last child out of school, the last child forced into slavery and the last child forced to flee their home because of the danger of climate change.
 
In 2015 two United Nations summits give us a unique opportunity to begin a journey towards a better future for all. Both present an opportunity to think bigger and to do better – for ourselves, our children and all those that follow. The first, in September, will see the agreement of new Development Goals which have the potential to transform the lives of
millions. Two months later, in December, world leaders will meet again to agree new climate change targets.
 
This is our chance to commit to do better. That is why I am issuing a call today to urge you to raise your ambition. If the right decisions are made and kept we could see the beginnings of a better future in 2015. A future of ‘lasts’, rather than half measures.
 
I am not the only one raising my voice and calling for a greater ambition. A global movement – action/2015 – made up of citizens around the world and with young people at
its forefront is forming. They will soon be launching their call for action demanding you commit to ambitious action in 2015 and deliver on your promises. I stand side by side with
them.
 
2015 must be the year the world wakes up and delivers a safer, more just future for children and young people. We all must play our part in ensuring this is the case. Do not let this opportunity go to waste.
 
Yours sincerely,
Malala Yousafzai