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WASHINGTON —
Michelle Obama will promote educating girls around the world during a mid-March visit to U.S. ally Japan, and to Cambodia, a place where the government’s record on human rights gave her husband pause during a reluctant visit a few years ago.
She will visit Tokyo and Kyoto, Japan, from March 18-20 and Siem Reap in northwestern Cambodia from March 21-22, the White House said Tuesday.
The first lady said she will visit with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s wife, Akie, “who also shares our passion for girls’ education and is eager to partner with us in this work.”
Cambodia is an interesting choice for the first lady, who is making the trip on her own.
President Barack Obama became the first U.S. president to visit Cambodia in late 2012 after his re-election. White House officials insisted at the time that Obama was only going because Cambodia was the host for two annual regional summits he has made a point of attending. Obama appeared visibly unhappy during the brief visit.
The Cambodian government has been led since 1985 by Prime Minister Hun Sen, who has a reputation for ruthlessness and a low tolerance for opposition. The Southeast Asian nation also has problems with child prostitution and human trafficking.
The Obamas announced the “Let Girls Learn” education initiative at a White House event Tuesday.
The president and first lady, the parents of two teenage girls, both say their own success would not have been possible without education, and everywhere they go they encourage young people to finish school. In the U.S., Mrs Obama also leads a separate initiative encouraging young people to continue their education after high school.
More than 60 million girls around the world, half of them adolescents, do not attend school, said Tina Tchen, chief of staff to the first lady.
Lack of education limits their economic opportunities and makes them more vulnerable to such afflictions as HIV and AIDS, early and forced marriage, and gender-based violence, said Tchen, who also directs the White House Council on Women and Girls. Educated girls and their families, meanwhile, are more likely to have a better quality of life.
The administration is putting under the “Let Girls Learn” umbrella a range of programs currently operating largely across Africa and the Middle East that focus on education, empowerment and leadership, health and nutrition, gender-based violence, and early and forced marriage.
Separately, the Peace Corps and Mrs Obama’s office will work together to support community-based solutions to these issues.
The Peace Corps has thousands of volunteers working in more than 60 developing countries. Its “Let Girls Learn” program will begin in Albania, Benin, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Georgia, Ghana, Moldova, Mongolia, Mozambique, Togo and Uganda, before it is expanded to other countries.
A third aspect of the initiative is designed to help kids in the U.S. understand why they should care about the issue.
The Peace Corps and the U.S. Agency for International Development are already spending money on these programs. Obama also has asked Congress for $250 million in new and reallocated funding for the initiative, Tchen said. The administration anticipates getting additional support from the private sector, philanthropies, foundations and other donors.
WASHINGTON —
Michelle Obama will promote educating girls around the world during a mid-March visit to U.S. ally Japan, and to Cambodia, a place where the government’s record on human rights gave her husband pause during a reluctant visit a few years ago.
She will visit Tokyo and Kyoto, Japan, from March 18-20 and Siem Reap in northwestern Cambodia from March 21-22, the White House said Tuesday.
The first lady said she will visit with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s wife, Akie, “who also shares our passion for girls’ education and is eager to partner with us in this work.”
Cambodia is an interesting choice for the first lady, who is making the trip on her own.
President Barack Obama became the first U.S. president to visit Cambodia in late 2012 after his re-election. White House officials insisted at the time that Obama was only going because Cambodia was the host for two annual regional summits he has made a point of attending. Obama appeared visibly unhappy during the brief visit.
The Cambodian government has been led since 1985 by Prime Minister Hun Sen, who has a reputation for ruthlessness and a low tolerance for opposition. The Southeast Asian nation also has problems with child prostitution and human trafficking.
The Obamas announced the “Let Girls Learn” education initiative at a White House event Tuesday.
The president and first lady, the parents of two teenage girls, both say their own success would not have been possible without education, and everywhere they go they encourage young people to finish school. In the U.S., Mrs Obama also leads a separate initiative encouraging young people to continue their education after high school.
More than 60 million girls around the world, half of them adolescents, do not attend school, said Tina Tchen, chief of staff to the first lady.
Lack of education limits their economic opportunities and makes them more vulnerable to such afflictions as HIV and AIDS, early and forced marriage, and gender-based violence, said Tchen, who also directs the White House Council on Women and Girls. Educated girls and their families, meanwhile, are more likely to have a better quality of life.
The administration is putting under the “Let Girls Learn” umbrella a range of programs currently operating largely across Africa and the Middle East that focus on education, empowerment and leadership, health and nutrition, gender-based violence, and early and forced marriage.
Separately, the Peace Corps and Mrs Obama’s office will work together to support community-based solutions to these issues.
The Peace Corps has thousands of volunteers working in more than 60 developing countries. Its “Let Girls Learn” program will begin in Albania, Benin, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Georgia, Ghana, Moldova, Mongolia, Mozambique, Togo and Uganda, before it is expanded to other countries.
A third aspect of the initiative is designed to help kids in the U.S. understand why they should care about the issue.
The Peace Corps and the U.S. Agency for International Development are already spending money on these programs. Obama also has asked Congress for $250 million in new and reallocated funding for the initiative, Tchen said. The administration anticipates getting additional support from the private sector, philanthropies, foundations and other donors.
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