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UN goals to focus on quality education for children: Unicef

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United Nations: With more than 200 million children unable to read and write globally, the UN’s new Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) will focus on access to quality education, the executive director of Unicef has said.

“There are 250 million children around the world of fourth and fifth grade age who can not read, write or do numbers,” a news agency quoted Anthony Lake as saying on Monday.

The new SDGs — a set of 17 economic, social and environmental goals expected to be adopted by world leaders here on Friday — go beyond the previous Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) — because they are about the quality of education and not just whether or not kids are in school, said Lake.

MDGs are a set of eight anti-poverty targets to be reached by the end of 2015.

“Just measuring the kids in or out of school does not measure attendance, it does not measure learning, and one of the advances in the SDGs now is quality education not simply education,” he said.

“The shocking figure is that there are 130 million kids who have reached the fourth grade around the world and still are not learning their numbers or how to read or write,” Lake said.

Another 120 million children do not even complete four years of schooling, according to Unicef figures, meaning that in total 250 million of the world’s 650 million primary school age children are not learning even basic literacy and numeracy.

Lake said health and education, as well as hope, are important for children if the world is to achieve its sustainable development aims.

“If we do not give today’s children the health and the education — and then I would emphasise — the hope, the belief that they can make the world better, then the SDGs will fail,” he said.

Unicef has plans to scale up its activities to help refugees in European countries, while continuing to provide much needed support to refugees in countries surrounding Syria, he added.

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Lockdowns in China Force Urban Communities to Defy Censorship and Vent Frustration Online

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Anyip Mobile Proxies

Shanghai’s rich middle class is leading a wave of online dissent over the strict and prolonged lockdowns imposed in various parts of the country. Chinese internet censorship is struggling as patience is wearing thin in many urban centers, coming up with creative forms of online protests.

Social Media Posts Revealing Lockdown Tension in Shanghai

Drawn-out lockdowns are nothing new in China as authorities insist with the nation’s zero-Covid policy since the start of the pandemic. Currently over This time around, however, metropolitan areas like Shanghai are increasingly difficult to keep quiet, given that its more than 25 million residents have seen weeks of total isolation along with food shortages and many other service interruptions.

Dozens of towns and reportedly over 300 million Chinese citizens have been affected by lockdowns of different severity. As expected, urban netizens have been most outspoken over their difficulties by finding creative ways to get around state censorship and bans placed on topics, news comments and spontaneous campaigns.

Shanghai residents have been using mobile proxies and hijacking seemingly unrelated hashtags to talk about healthcare issues, delivery failures and the overall severity of their situation. The “positive energy” that the Chinese government wants to transmit during the recent prolonged series of lockdowns does not come naturally to those counting food supplies and online censors are working hard to filter words, trending topics and undesired social media sharing.

WeChat groups and message threads are under constant monitoring. Posts questioning the zero-Covid approach have been quickly deleted, including by leading Chinese health experts like Dr. Zhong Nanshan. Video footage is soon censored and protests and investigations are quickly made to disappear.

Where this has not worked, officials have exposed banners with warnings and outright threats like “watch your own mouth or face punishment”, while drones have been patrolling the city skies. Yet, if anything, this has led to further tensions and unspoken confrontation with Shanghai’s educated and affluent middle class.

Creative Online Solutions Harnessing Civic Energy

Announcements by Chinese social media that they would be publishing the IP addresses of users who “spread rumors” have not helped either. Tech industry research has shown that much of Asia’s tech-savvy population has a habit of using mobile proxies and other privacy tools, quickly finding workarounds to browse the internet freely and talk to the world about the hottest topics.

The sheer volume of forbidden posts is already a challenge for the very censorship system, experts explain. Unable to track all trending hashtags, state workers overlook topics that speak about the US, Ukraine or other popular news. Linking human rights elsewhere to their situation, Chinese online dissidents establish their informal channels and “hijack” the conversation to share personal or publicly relevant information about the Covid suppression in their town.

Sarcastic and satirical posts still dominate. Others hope to evade the censors by replacing words from famous poems or the national anthem. One thing is certain – social media, when harnessed with the right creativity, has proven its ability to mount pressure on the government in even some of the most strictly controlled tech environments like China.

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