Top marks for the World's Biggest Lobby

In the biggest children's lobby the world has ever seen, in April 2004 over 100 countries rang with the sound of millions of children meeting their country's top leaders and simultaneously giving a very simple message - help get the 100 million kids missing an education into school.
In the UK, for example, Hilary Benn, Secretary of State for International Development announced Britain's contribution of £12 million to the Fast- Track Initiative which will help developing countries provide education for the world's poorest children. Together, the millions of children and adults around the world involved in the Big Lobby helped make a real difference to their lives and futures.
The World's Biggest Lobby was organised by the Global Campaign on Education. Find out more here about how you can join in with the 2005 Action Week!
What happened around the world at the 2004 Big Lobby?
IN BURKINA FASO: MINISTER AGREES TO LAUNCH EFA PLAN
More than
1000 children excluded from school went to the Place de la Nation in
order to lobby 31 Elected Representatives including ministers. A
visually impaired child was particularly inspiring when she made a
strong speech on behalf of all the children present in all three
languages of Burkina Faso, Mossi, Duyla and French, asking the elected
representatives for a law enforcing Education For All (EFA). As a
result of their efforts for Week of Action 2004 and the Big Lobby, the
Minister of Education has already agreed to meet with the national
civil society education coalition to implement an EFA plan.
SRI LANKA: STOP POLITICAL INTERFERENCE IN EDUCATION, SAY CHILDREN
In
Colombo, 300 children from all provinces addressed leading political
figures including the advisor to the PM, Hon Sunimal Fernando, the
deputy education minister and various regional education governors.
They demanded an end to political interference in teacher appointments,
peace and consistency in education. Politicians pledged to give
priority to education in their future plans and recognised the need to
re-activate progressive plans for education reforms that now lay
dormant. Schools got involved throughout the country and 200, 000
postcards with the Global Action Week message are to be sent to the
President.
SPAIN: SIMULTANEOUS CHILD PARLIAMENTS ACROSS THE COUNTRY
In
15 localities across Spain 18 simultaneous child parliaments were in
action on the 20th of April. A total of 500 children were posing
questions to their elected representatives and to date a phenomenal
60,000 Spanish children have written messages to the President.
DRC: MPs’ EYES OPENED TO SCHOOL CONDITIONS
MPs and officials
have been taken to visit extremely run down schools to highlight the
extent of DRC’s education crisis. DRC's Vice President launched the
Global Action Week at a centre for street kids with more than 1,000
people (mainly children) attending. On Tuesday again more than 1,000
kids were at the parliament to read a message for the parliamentarians,
to which the President of the parliament responded.
GAMBIA: SPOTLIGHT ON CHILDREN WITH DISABILTIES
More than 700
children met with MPs, religious leaders, and Education Ministry
officials in Gambia’s national assembly on Tuesday, including 100
children representing those missing out because of disabilities. One
child asked, ‘what is the government going to do about sexual
harassment in schools?’ another, finding it difficult get into the
building, asked ‘What is the government going to do about access to
schools for disabled people?’ Summarising the day’s debates, Hon Halifa
Sallah, the minority leader in the National Assembly, gave a strong
speech promising more resources for basic education, and pledging to
tackle cultural and social issues preventing children from attending
schools.
CAMEROON: “WHAT ARE YOU DOING FOR EDUCATION?”, MPs ASKED
500
children took part in the ‘Biggest Ever Lobby’ in Yaounde and a further
125 children lobbied in Big Mankon Bamenda, posing their questions to
town councillors, mayors and MPs. When asked what they were doing for
education, one of the MPs present answered, ‘we the female
parliamentarians are really concerned about the state of children,
especially female children. We think children have a right to education
and we are committed to making this right respected in Cameroon’ .
US: “WHY IS THE US NOT DOING ITS DUTY?” CHILDREN ASK SENATORS
Children
aged from 5 to 18 descended on the U.S. Senate on Tuesday to tell their
politicians what they needed to do to help education around the world.
Maya and Hanna, both 13, asked 'Why is the US not doing its duty? We
are the wealthiest country, yet are close to the bottom in helping poor
countries.'
Former First Lady, Senator Hillary Clinton, co-hosting
the event together with Republican Senator Arlen Specter, agreed that
the US needed to provide more help for education in developing
countries and announced an initiative to increase US aid to education
to US $2.5bn a year. She called on other legislators to help make it
happen. Asked by the young people why she thought all girls should go
to school, she replied 'because I am a girl!' Take a look at the GCE USA website here.
The events form part of the Global Campaign for Education's (GCE) annual Week of Action from 19-25 April, and take place exactly four years after 182 countries met in Dakar, Senegal in April 2000 and committed to provide education for all by 2015.
Read the Big Book of the worlds’ Biggest Lobby! The excitement and impact of the Big Lobby is captured in photos and stories from over 100 countries in the GCE’s ‘Big Book’. It is free to download from the Global Campaign for Education here!
