NGOS MEET TO GIVE THEIR VIEWS ON
EDUCATION FOR ALL
Paris, March 2 (No.2001-32)
- UNESCO Director-General Koïchiro Matsuura today highlighted the role of
non-governmental organizations in achieving the target of providing quality
basic education for all (EFA) by the year 2015, set at the World Education Forum
(Dakar, April 2000), as he opened an NGO Consultation on the Global Initiative
to implement this goal.
The meeting, attended by some
40 representatives of leading international NGOs working in education, was also
attended by members of the international donor community, representing
governments of the richest countries, and international organizations such as
the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. It is being held in the wake
of a two-day donors’ meeting on the strategy for international and
inter-agency co-operation in EFA.
Speaking of efforts to improve
the existing partnership mechanisms, Mr Matsuura declared: “UNESCO wishes to
create a collective dialogue among all partners of the EFA movement and to
co-ordinate the EFA movement as a collective responsibility. NGOs are a very
important stakeholder in that movement and our partnership mechanisms are
important channels of communication and joint action. They [the NGOs] represent
vigour and innovation. They are people-centred, working at grass-roots level.
[...] They bring an essential, dynamic force to UNESCO, as an inter-governmental
organization, and to other multinational and bilateral agencies that work at the
policy level, through intricate and lengthy procedures.”
Referring to criticism of
UNESCO’s leadership of the EFA movement, the Director-General said: “I do
not share the opinion of those who criticize UNESCO for moving too slowly. I
believe in deliberate and carefully thought-out action and need first to listen
to all stakeholders. Communication and information about what we are each doing
are important in this regard.”
“We all know what a difficult
task we have ahead of us. As partners, we have to be realistic about what we can
do, when and how. UNESCO seeks to strengthen its collaboration with the NGO
community and would appreciate proposals from the NGO community on how best to
do this,” Mr Matsuura said, adding: “I value the critical voice of NGOs and
its watchdog role vis-à-vis governments and agencies. I firmly believe that
NGOs have an important advocacy role to fulfil and that they strengthen the EFA
movement through their rich, innovative experiences at the micro level and their
strong relations with wider civil society. I also hope, therefore, that this
first, broad consultation can be the foundation for the best possible
co-operation between NGOs and other EFA partners, generally, and in particular
UNESCO.”
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