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Commissioner-General’s Statement
Alumni Ceremony for Japan Scholarship
Programme
Grand Hyatt Hotel, Amman, 7 April 2009 |
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Your Excellencies, distinguished guests, alumni of
the Japan Scholarship Program:
I am delighted to be here today to honour the alumni
of the Japan Scholarship programme. This is a joyful occasion, on which
we recognize and celebrate the hard work and achievement of our alumni.
It is an opportunity to express UNRWA’s gratitude to the government and
people of Japan for their generous funding and consistent support over
the years. From 1989 to 1998, the year in which a lack of funds forced
UNRWA to suspend its scholarship programme, the Government of Japan
awarded 844 higher education scholarships for Palestine refugee
students. Today the Japan Scholarship Program makes it possible for 65
refugee scholars to pursue 23 specializations across UNRWA’s five fields
of operation. UNRWA and Palestine refugees are thankful for this help.
We must also express our appreciation to the
governments and people of Jordan, Syria and Lebanon and to the
Palestinian Authority for ensuring the placement of Palestinian students
in institutions of higher learning and for providing them the space in
which to pursue their aspirations. On a day such as this, all of us
share a sense of satisfaction because we have before us living proof of
the fruits of international cooperation in support of Palestine
refugees.
Education has been central to UNRWA’s human
development agenda throughout its sixty-year history. Today, more than
half of our budget is devoted to the primary education of refugee
children, with equal opportunity given to boys and girls. This is
because we believe that a sound foundation in learning offers refugee
children the most powerful asset for acquiring the skills and knowledge
necessary for leading self-reliant and constructive lives. By providing
a nurturing environment and curricula enriched with courses on human
rights and conflict resolution, UNRWA schools help to promote positive
social attitudes that embrace the shared values of our globalized world
and are conducive to tolerance and peace. UNRWA’s emphasis on education
also reflects a hallmark of Palestinian culture, namely the esteem
Palestinians accord to knowledge and professional skills.
The rationales of the Japan Scholarship Programme
converge with these underpinnings of UNRWA’s approach to education. The
scholarship scheme gives priority to Palestine refugees most affected by
poverty - those we refer to as families living in special hardship. And
I am particularly pleased to note that nearly 70 percent of the scholars
we honour today are women. Ensuring that women and economically
vulnerable refugees have maximum access to tertiary education is an
effective way to translate scholarship programmes into lasting social
and economic change.
Your Excellencies, distinguished guests:
The Japan Scholarship Programme is an excellent
illustration of the attainments that are possible when we combine our
strengths – refugees, donors, host countries and authorities and UNRWA –
to cultivate the huge economic and social potential that exists in
Palestinian society. To fully realize that potential, however, much more
needs to be done.
The shortfall in UNRWA’s General Fund hampers our
plans to strengthen the quality of education and other programmes across
the board. With respect to scholarships in particular, the places
currently available are too few compared to the thousands of qualified
refugees eager to take advantage of academic opportunities. It would be
a welcome development if our Japanese partners and other donors would
join forces to expand the scope of the current programme and to help
raise tertiary education scholarships to a position of prominence among
the services offered by UNRWA. I assure you, personally and on behalf of
UNRWA, that doing so would be an excellent investment in a better future
for Palestinians and Palestine refugees.
I take this opportunity to call attention to the need
for a re-doubling of international efforts to address the conflict in
our region, which for more than sixty years has so severely constricted
the horizons of Palestinians and Palestine refugees. UNRWA, with the
support of its donors and partners will continue vigorously to pursue
its humanitarian and human development goals through education and other
programmes. Yet we are not - and cannot be - blind to the formidable
challenges posed to the achievement of those goals in the current
context of the occupation of the Palestinian territory and recurrent
armed conflict.
I appeal to the international community to renew its
efforts to address these challenges and to help remove such impediments
as the blockade of Gaza and the closure regime in the West Bank. I ask
for an acceleration of negotiations to end the conflict, to achieve a
just and lasting solution to the plight of Palestine refugees and to
establish a viable Palestinian State.
These are imperative requirements if education is to
accomplish its role fully as an instrument for human security, human
development and prosperity for Palestinian society and the region. For
the sake of the alumni we honour today, their families and the
Palestinian community we hope the day will soon come when these
aspirations are fulfilled.
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