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Ex-UK PM Brown made UN education envoy
The role will see Gordon Brown trying to get 61 million more children enrolled in education across the world by 2015 to meet a UN MDG.
London: Former UK prime minister Gordon Brown has been appointed as the United Nations` Special Envoy for Global education.
"It is a great privilege to be invited by the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to serve as his Special Envoy for Global Education," he said in a statement issued by the UN last night. The role will see Brown trying to get 61 million more children enrolled in education across the world by 2015 to meet a UN Millennium Development goal.
"Enrolling an additional 61 million children and ensuring a quality education for all by the end of 2015 will not be easy. But it is a goal which, working together, we can achieve," Brown asserted.
He will accompany Ban on a tour of Asia next month.
"Ensuring that every child in the world has the opportunity to go to school and to learn is a long-standing passion of mine," he said.
Brown said he hoped to emulate the successes of Kofi Annan, the former UN secretary general and former US president Bill Clinton, as special UN envoys for Syria and Haiti respectively. As Special Envoy, Brown will devote himself to working closely with all key partners to help galvanise support for the Secretary-General`s Global Initiative on Education (Education First), which aims to achieve quality, relevant, and inclusive education for every child.
Focus will be on countries with the highest number of children out of school, of which nearly half are in countries affected by conflict.
A UN spokesman added: "The appointment builds upon Mr Brown`s impressive commitment to education as a fundamental right of every child.”
“The Secretary-General is confident Mr Brown will be a genuine champion for the world`s most poor and that his passion and conviction will re-energise international action for everyone`s right to opportunity through education."
He succeeded Tony Blair as Labour prime minister in 2007 and stood down in 2010 after the party lost a parliamentary majority in general elections, to be replaced by current Conservative Premier David Cameron.
PTI
"It is a great privilege to be invited by the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to serve as his Special Envoy for Global Education," he said in a statement issued by the UN last night. The role will see Brown trying to get 61 million more children enrolled in education across the world by 2015 to meet a UN Millennium Development goal.
"Enrolling an additional 61 million children and ensuring a quality education for all by the end of 2015 will not be easy. But it is a goal which, working together, we can achieve," Brown asserted.
He will accompany Ban on a tour of Asia next month.
"Ensuring that every child in the world has the opportunity to go to school and to learn is a long-standing passion of mine," he said.
Brown said he hoped to emulate the successes of Kofi Annan, the former UN secretary general and former US president Bill Clinton, as special UN envoys for Syria and Haiti respectively. As Special Envoy, Brown will devote himself to working closely with all key partners to help galvanise support for the Secretary-General`s Global Initiative on Education (Education First), which aims to achieve quality, relevant, and inclusive education for every child.
Focus will be on countries with the highest number of children out of school, of which nearly half are in countries affected by conflict.
A UN spokesman added: "The appointment builds upon Mr Brown`s impressive commitment to education as a fundamental right of every child.”
“The Secretary-General is confident Mr Brown will be a genuine champion for the world`s most poor and that his passion and conviction will re-energise international action for everyone`s right to opportunity through education."
He succeeded Tony Blair as Labour prime minister in 2007 and stood down in 2010 after the party lost a parliamentary majority in general elections, to be replaced by current Conservative Premier David Cameron.
PTI