David Beckham, Malala Yousafzai Ask World Leaders to Focus on Children Not War
David Beckham and Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai underlined the fact that the dreams of a child from the first world and a child from an underdeveloped nation are same.
- Reuters
- Updated: September 25, 2015 12:49 pm IST
Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai will ask world leaders on Friday to ensure that every child in the world gets a quality 12-year education for free, while football star David Beckham made a plea at the United Nations for children to be put first. (Read more sports stories here)
Beckham, who has been a goodwill ambassador for U.N. children agency UNICEF since 2004, on Thursday launched an installation created by Google in the lobby of U.N. headquarters that sends personal messages from children to world leaders.
"Join me in asking the world leaders to put children, especially the most disadvantaged, at the heart of the new global goals," the Briton said. "Children all share the same hope, for a better future. With the world focussed on the new global goals there is a real opportunity to make that hope a reality."
Malala, who was shot on a school bus in Pakistan in 2012 by the Taliban for advocating girls' rights to education, will open a summit of world leaders at the United Nations that will adopt a global sustainable development agenda for the next 15 years.
"The dreams (the world leaders) have for their own children, I'm hopeful they will have the same dreams for the rest of the world's children. ... The rest of the world's children also deserve the right to go to school," Malala said in a phone interview on Thursday.
"If you want our future to be more powerful, to be enlightened, to be bright, we need to invest in education, which does not require as much money as we think - just $39 billion, which we spend just in eight days on (the) military."
Malala, who celebrated her 18th birthday in July in Lebanon by opening a school for Syrian refugee girls, said she would also highlight the plight of refugee children as Europe faces the largest wave of refugees and migrants since World War Two.
"It really makes me sad; so I'm hopeful that world leaders will really think about finding a solution to all these problems and ensuring that people go back to their homes," she said.
Malala will speak at the United Nations after an address by Pope Francis. She said she hoped to be able to meet him because she believed his words could "bring people together to work for the betterment of humanity."