Sec. 2. Findings
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Congress makes the following findings: On October 9, 2012, 15-year-old Malala Yousafzai was shot in the head by Taliban gunmen in Pakistan on her way home from school. When Malala was 11 years old, she bravely stood up to the Taliban and wrote a secret blog documenting their crackdown on women’s rights and education in 2009. Malala’s advocacy for women’s education made her a target of the Taliban. The Taliban called Malala’s efforts to highlight the need for women’s education an obscenity .
On July 12, 2013, Malala celebrated her 16th birthday by delivering a speech before the United Nations General Assembly in which she said, So let us wage a glorious struggle against illiteracy, poverty, and terrorism. Let us pick up our books and our pens. They are the most powerful weapons. One child, one teacher, one book, and one pen can change the world. Education is the only solution. . According to the United Nation’s 2012 Education for All Global Monitoring Report, Pakistan has the second largest number of children out of school [in the world] and nearly half of rural females have never been to school. .
According to a Council on Foreign Relations report titled What Works in Girls’ Education , A 100-country study by the World Bank shows that increasing the share of women with a secondary education by 1 percent boosts annual per capita income growth by 0.3 percentage points. . According to the World Bank, The benefits of women’s education go beyond higher productivity for 50 percent of the population. More educated women also tend to be healthier, participate more in the formal labor market, earn more income, have fewer children, and provide better health care and education to their children, all of which eventually improve the well-being of all individuals and lift households out of poverty.
These benefits also transmit across generations, as well as to their communities at large. . According to United Nation’s 2012 Education For All Global Monitoring Report, education can make a big difference to women’s earnings. In Pakistan, women with a high level of literacy earned 95 percent more than women with no literacy skills. . In January 2010, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton stated, We will open the doors of education to all citizens, but especially to girls and women … We are doing all of these things because we have seen that when women and girls have the tools to stay healthy and the opportunity to contribute to their families’ well-being, they flourish and so do the people around them. .
The United States provides critical foreign assistance to Pakistan’s education sector to improve access to and the quality of basic and higher education. The Merit and Needs-Based Scholarship Program administered by the United States Agency for International Development awards scholarships to academically talented, financially needy Pakistani students from remote regions of the country to pursue bachelor’s or master’s degrees at participating Pakistani universities. Fifty percent of the 974 Merit and Needs-Based Scholarships awarded during fiscal year 2013 were awarded to Pakistani women.
Historically, only 25 percent of such scholarships have been awarded to women. The United Nations declared July 12 as Malala Day —a global day of support for and recognition of Malala’s bravery and courage in promoting women’s education. On December 10, 2012, the United Nations and the Government of Pakistan launched the Malala Fund for Girls' Education to improve girls' access to education worldwide, with Pakistan donating the first $10,000,000 to the Fund. More than 1,000,000 people around the world have signed the United Nations Special Envoy for Global Education petition calling on the Government of Pakistan to enroll every boy and girl in primary school.
Pakistani civil society organizations collected almost 2,000,000 signatures from Pakistanis on a petition dedicated to Malala’s cause of education for all.