Malala Yousafzai,
the Pakistani schoolgirl activist who has become a world champion of
girls’ rights, called Friday for the World Bank to make education its
top priority.
Seated on a stage with World Bank President
Jim Yong Kim in a one-on-one presentation in Washington, the 16-year-old
Malala delivered a poised, articulate and impassioned plea for
children’s education.
Asked by Kim for her advice to the World
Bank, Malala noted that organizations spend much of their money on
health, AIDS and other programs.
“But
I think all those organizations must make education their top
priority,” she said. That focus would fight child labor, child
trafficking, poverty and AIDS.
Kim announced the World Bank was
donating $200 million to the Malala Fund, a foundation she has launched
to help girls around the world go to school and promote universal access
to education.
Malala said that she decided to launch the fund
because she needed to do “work on the ground” to promote education, in
addition to speaking out about the issues.
Malala was shot in the
head by the Pakistani Taliban on October 9, 2012, for speaking out
against their ideology and has gone on to become a global ambassador for
the right of all children to go to school.
Asked by a girl in the
audience how she lives a normal teenage life, Malala replied: “I have
accepted this busy life for a reason… the education of every child.”
Earlier
Friday, Malala, who had been nominated to win the Nobel Peace Prize,
congratulated the winners, the Organization for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons.
“The OPCW is an important organization working
on the ground to help rid the world of chemical weapons. I would like to
congratulate them on this much-deserved global recognition,” she said.
On
Thursday she won the European Union’s prestigious Sakharov human rights
prize, drawing a fresh murder threat from the Taliban.
That same
day the World Bank’s Kim called Malala “a powerful symbol of hope” at a
news conference as World Bank and International Monetary Fund annual
meetings got underway.
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