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Petition for safe schools for girls

Petition for safe schools for girls

Target:
Amnesty International
Sponsored by: 




International Women's Day is a time to celebrate women's achievements and look ahead to the exciting opportunities that await women. The key to a bright future is choice. Women must be free to choose the path that is right for them, a path that is out of harm%u2019s way and allows them to move forward and realize their potential.

Safe Schools are every girl's right!Education is a crucial step in this journey. It is crucial to breaking cycles of poverty, violence and disease. Education is a human right, and therefore every girl's right.

As the 100 year anniversary of International Women's Day draws close, and 60 years after human rights were enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, girls across the world find a range of barriers to education:
  • Girls are assaulted on the way to school, attacked in schools grounds and teased by their classmates. Some are threatened with sexual assault by other students, coerced into sex by teachers, even raped in the staff room.
  • In countries wracked by war, girls are at risk from armed groups and from attacks on their schools. Sexual abuse and exploitation are problems for girls living in refugee camps or displaced people's camps.
  • Certain girls face an increased risk of violence at school. Certain aspects of girls' identities, including their sexuality, status as migrants, orphans or refugees, caste, ethnicity and race, can increase their risk of abuse.
  • Although free primary education should be available to all children, schools around the world commonly charge user fees. Girls are more likely to be excluded than boys when there isn't enough money to go round.
Violence leads to countless girls being kept out of school, dropping out, or not fully participating in school life. Effects range from pain and fear, to lowered self-esteem, sexually transmitted infections, unwanted pregnancies and depression. In many cases, abuses go unreported.

The problem is exacerbated by the fact that girls often choose not to report what continues to be a taboo issue in some societies, or for fear of retaliation. That leaves such acts under-reported and allows their perpetrators to go unpunished.

There is no justification for the lack of action. The issue is not about resources but political will. Governments, teachers and school authorities must work to prevent violence against girls in schools, must promptly investigate reports of abuse, impose appropriate punishments on offenders, support those who have suffered from violence to recover and ensure that such abuses do not recur.Take Action

Join Amnesty International's campaign to protect girls' rights to safety, equality and education. Make schools safe for girls.





International Women's Day is a time to celebrate women's achievements and look ahead to the exciting opportunities that await women. The key to a bright future is choice. Women must be free to choose the path that is right for them, a path that is out of harm%u2019s way and allows them to move forward and realize their potential.

Safe Schools are every girl's right!Education is a crucial step in this journey. It is crucial to breaking cycles of poverty, violence and disease. Education is a human right, and therefore every girl's right.

As the 100 year anniversary of International Women's Day draws close, and 60 years after human rights were enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, girls across the world find a range of barriers to education:
  • Girls are assaulted on the way to school, attacked in schools grounds and teased by their classmates. Some are threatened with sexual assault by other students, coerced into sex by teachers, even raped in the staff room.
  • In countries wracked by war, girls are at risk from armed groups and from attacks on their schools. Sexual abuse and exploitation are problems for girls living in refugee camps or displaced people's camps.
  • Certain girls face an increased risk of violence at school. Certain aspects of girls' identities, including their sexuality, status as migrants, orphans or refugees, caste, ethnicity and race, can increase their risk of abuse.
  • Although free primary education should be available to all children, schools around the world commonly charge user fees. Girls are more likely to be excluded than boys when there isn't enough money to go round.
Violence leads to countless girls being kept out of school, dropping out, or not fully participating in school life. Effects range from pain and fear, to lowered self-esteem, sexually transmitted infections, unwanted pregnancies and depression. In many cases, abuses go unreported.

The problem is exacerbated by the fact that girls often choose not to report what continues to be a taboo issue in some societies, or for fear of retaliation. That leaves such acts under-reported and allows their perpetrators to go unpunished.

There is no justification for the lack of action. The issue is not about resources but political will. Governments, teachers and school authorities must work to prevent violence against girls in schools, must promptly investigate reports of abuse, impose appropriate punishments on offenders, support those who have suffered from violence to recover and ensure that such abuses do not recur.Take Action

Join Amnesty International's campaign to protect girls' rights to safety, equality and education. Make schools safe for girls.

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We signed the "Petition for safe schools for girls" petition!
# 61:
9:55 pm PDT, Sep 7, Name not displayed, Pennsylvania
# 60:
1:11 pm PDT, Jul 15, Greta Malkotzoglou, Greece
# 59:
9:45 pm PDT, Jun 10, Sophie Szeferowicz, France
# 58:
3:06 am PDT, Jun 7, Katie Mosier, Pennsylvania
# 57:
9:13 am PDT, May 6, Anita Kofta, Wisconsin
# 56:
7:21 pm PDT, May 5, Morgan Griffith, California
# 55:
10:51 am PDT, May 5, James Herald, Indiana
# 54:
10:38 pm PDT, May 4, Marena Chen, Malaysia
# 53:
7:24 pm PDT, May 4, Jaclin O'Sullivan, New Zealand
Children must feel safe at school and schools must make it their main priority to see to this!!! It is a place of learning and educating young minds - not a place to fear!!!
# 52:
7:20 pm PDT, May 4, Kathy Whitaker, Michigan
# 51:
4:27 pm PDT, May 4, Holly Swint, Florida
# 50:
3:16 pm PDT, May 4, Sue Harris, United Kingdom
# 49:
3:10 pm PDT, May 4, Michele Santos, Puerto Rico
# 48:
2:40 pm PDT, May 4, Dana Hoffman, Minnesota
# 47:
2:31 pm PDT, May 4, Tj Harris, United Kingdom
# 46:
4:34 pm PDT, May 3, Elisa Manne, Canada
# 45:
3:52 pm PDT, Apr 26, Stuart Griffin, Connecticut
# 44:
8:11 pm PDT, Apr 24, Silky Wyld, Wisconsin
# 43:
8:05 am PDT, Apr 23, BiLL Fowlie, Maine
# 42:
7:41 pm PDT, Apr 21, Roxie Schliesman, Wisconsin
# 41:
9:15 am PDT, Apr 20, Justyna Makola, Poland
# 40:
3:20 pm PDT, Apr 11, Cyndi Pachino, Maryland
# 39:
10:30 am PDT, Apr 9, Gina Nichols, California
# 38:
12:50 pm PDT, Apr 6, Dannielle Philipson, Canada
# 37:
6:20 am PDT, Apr 5, Ines Seidel, Germany
# 36:
11:46 am PDT, Apr 3, Name not displayed, California
# 35:
12:03 pm PDT, Apr 1, Shivonne Willcocks, New Zealand
# 34:
5:31 pm PDT, Mar 31, Charles Mclachlan, United Kingdom
# 33:
3:57 am PDT, Mar 31, Jocelyn Koopmann, Australia
Education means so much. To be able to help the young to get it is very important.
# 32:
8:23 pm PDT, Mar 30, Melissa Dawson Chapman, Michigan
# 31:
7:56 pm PDT, Mar 30, Jeff Pearson, Arizona
Education is the key to the future--for men and for women. Women especially need to be given the same opportunities to education as men. They need to be encouraged and protected in this pursuit. Ignorance, discrimination, fear, and intimidation are hallmarks of a failed society. Do the right thing, protect women in their pursuit of an education, and give them the opportunity to succeed!
# 30:
6:07 pm PDT, Mar 30, Kathleen A.H., Arizona
Although my daughter graduated with a degree in Women's Studies, if I had it to do over again, I'd send her to an all-girls school. We need to work harder at fostering self-esteem in our young girls....from both inside and out of their bodies, and I actually feel there would be even MORE women leaders in the world if our women were educated in all-female classrooms. There, they are safe to recognize their full potential.
# 29:
5:34 pm PDT, Mar 30, Bobbie Straley, New Mexico
# 28:
3:37 pm PDT, Mar 30, Chum Richardson, Canada
# 27:
8:45 am PDT, Mar 29, Jillyanne Michelle Cape, Missouri
# 26:
2:23 am PDT, Mar 29, Mojo Nixon, California
Yeah, women rock. In fact we all came from one. In honor of them bitches, let's all celebrate by signing this petition! Go women!
# 25:
10:36 pm PDT, Mar 28, Sandra Smith, Tennessee
# 24:
12:34 pm PDT, Mar 28, Nicky Elizabeth, Maine
# 23:
11:37 am PDT, Mar 28, Diana Martz - Animalspirit, Indiana
# 22:
9:14 am PDT, Mar 28, Ginger Geronimo, Alabama
# 21:
8:49 am PDT, Mar 28, Pam Boland, Georgia
# 20:
11:49 pm PDT, Mar 27, Art Deco, Maine
# 19:
6:57 pm PDT, Mar 27, Name not displayed, New Jersey
# 18:
4:56 am PDT, Mar 27, Karen VDay, Indiana
# 17:
9:12 pm PDT, Mar 26, Victoria Thomas, Wyoming
# 16:
9:09 pm PDT, Mar 26, Kaci Bussell, South Carolina
# 15:
8:41 pm PDT, Mar 26, Name not displayed, New York
# 14:
10:12 am PDT, Mar 26, Cara Gubrud, Minnesota
# 13:
8:44 am PDT, Mar 26, Kelly Garbato, Missouri
# 12:
8:41 am PDT, Mar 26, Tania Naim, Lebanon
# 11:
8:15 am PDT, Mar 26, Anne Seidel, Germany
# 10:
8:03 am PDT, Mar 26, Steven Pfaffenberger, Ohio
# 9:
7:26 am PDT, Mar 26, Catherine Smalley, United Kingdom
# 8:
6:11 am PDT, Mar 26, Franziska Eber, Germany
# 7:
6:08 am PDT, Mar 26, Dora Kassis, Greece
# 6:
5:13 am PDT, Mar 26, Marcin Golczyk, Poland
# 5:
4:09 am PDT, Mar 26, David Dunkleberger, Pennsylvania
# 4:
3:18 am PDT, Mar 26, Thomas Pirovano, Switzerland
Yes!
# 3:
2:39 am PDT, Mar 26, Steve Klein, Canada
# 2:
12:11 am PDT, Mar 26, William Harper, Georgia
# 1:
11:22 pm PDT, Mar 25, Christine Pearson, Arizona
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