Schoolkid stipends to mark Malala Day
THE families of more than 3 million poor children in Pakistan will receive cash stipends if their children go to school, the government said as officials prepared to mark "Malala Day" yesterday in support of a schoolgirl shot by the Taliban.
UN officials declared Malala Day one month after 15-year-old Malala Yousufzai and two of her classmates were shot by the Pakistan Taliban. She had been targeted for speaking out against the insurgency.
In the days following the shooting, Yousufzai became an international icon and world leaders pledged to support her campaign for girls' education. She is now recovering in a British hospital.
On Friday, Pakistani President Asif Zardari added his signature to petitions signed by more than a million people urging Pakistan to pay stipends to families who put their girls in school in honor of Malala.
"Malala's dreams represent what is best about Pakistan," said former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown as he presented the petitions to President Zardari.
Tens of thousands of Britons have called on the government to nominate Malala Yousufzai for a Nobel Peace Prize.
On Friday, the government announced that poor families will now receive US$2 a month per child in primary school.
The program will be funded by the World Bank and Britain and distributed through the government's Benazir Income Support Programme. Families in the programme already receive US$10 a month.
Less than 0.57 percent of Pakistan's 180 million citizens pay income tax.
Instead, the Pakistani government relies on foreign donors to fund many social programs. Britain is due to spend US$1 billion on helping Pakistan educate poor children by 2015.
UN officials declared Malala Day one month after 15-year-old Malala Yousufzai and two of her classmates were shot by the Pakistan Taliban. She had been targeted for speaking out against the insurgency.
In the days following the shooting, Yousufzai became an international icon and world leaders pledged to support her campaign for girls' education. She is now recovering in a British hospital.
On Friday, Pakistani President Asif Zardari added his signature to petitions signed by more than a million people urging Pakistan to pay stipends to families who put their girls in school in honor of Malala.
"Malala's dreams represent what is best about Pakistan," said former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown as he presented the petitions to President Zardari.
Tens of thousands of Britons have called on the government to nominate Malala Yousufzai for a Nobel Peace Prize.
On Friday, the government announced that poor families will now receive US$2 a month per child in primary school.
The program will be funded by the World Bank and Britain and distributed through the government's Benazir Income Support Programme. Families in the programme already receive US$10 a month.
Less than 0.57 percent of Pakistan's 180 million citizens pay income tax.
Instead, the Pakistani government relies on foreign donors to fund many social programs. Britain is due to spend US$1 billion on helping Pakistan educate poor children by 2015.
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