Condemn shooting of Pakistani woman teacher

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2013-03-28

Shahnaz Nazli, a 41 year old female teacher at a girls’ school near the town of Jamrud in Peschawar, Pakistan, was shot for wanting to teach girls, on Tuesday March 26th as she walked to school. Gunmen opened fire, when Ms Nazli was just 200 metres from the school, and fled after hitting their target. The head teacher took her to the local hospital, but Shahnaz died of her gunshot wounds three hours later.

Education International and its affiliates offer their condolences to the family and colleagues of Ms Nazli, and pledge to do all that they can to ensure her death will be widely condemned and will not be in vain. EI will put pressure on the Pakistani authorities to guarantee the safety of teachers and their pupils on the way to and from school, and whilst they are in school.

EI and its affiliates condemn this murder in the strongest terms, and call on the Pakistani authorities to take immediate action to put into place new measures, and fully implement existing measures, that guarantee the safety of teachers in the exercise of their profession.

The EI Declaration ‘Schools Shall Be Safe Sanctuaries’ urges the international community to act to prevent violations of the right to education, to ensure the safety and security of learners, teachers, education personnel and academics everywhere, and to strengthen international law and to end impunity.

Shahnaz Nazli’s killing highlights, once again, the risks that teachers face every day in hostile environments.

“There must be zero tolerance for violence against teachers in general, and against women teachers and girl students in particular”, stated EI General Secretary, Fred van Leeuwen. He added: “EI and its affiliates will not rest until the Pakistan government and authorities hear and act on this message that we are sending to them: it is their responsibility to secure the safety of teachers and of students. There cannot be any kind of development or progress anywhere in our world if people, who dedicate their professional lives to nurturing the minds of our children, are not able to do their work in safety. Shahnaz Nazli’s death and the attempt on the life of Malala Yousafzai show us that we have reached a critical point in the struggle between those who would deny our children their human right to be educated, and those who would promote that right, even at the cost of their lives. It is time for the Pakistan authorities to ‘walk the talk’ and do the right thing. The future of their children, of their country and of the globalised world, depends on it”.

EI and its affiliates fully support the initiative of the UN Special Envoy for Global Education, Gordon Brown on this matter, and on promoting girls’ right to education more broadly.

Sourc: Education International