Pupils sampling tablets
NAIROBI, KENYA:
The government has distributed over one million tablets
to children in primary schools, President Uhuru Kenyatta has disclosed.
Speaking during a virtual high-level meeting of the United Nations
Generation Unlimited, he said the initiative was part of strategies in
addressing barriers inhibiting Kenyan youth from succeeding in the
digital space.
"Through the Digi School programme, we have provided over one million tablets to children in primary schools," he said.
In 2017 JKUAT and Moi University led two consortia in scooping the Sh17
billion tender to produce, supply and install digital learning hardware
and software for all public primary schools.
President Kenyatta spoke on the role of the youth as change-makers at
the conference that was addressed by several world leaders among them
President Paul Kagame of Rwanda, President of the World Bank David
Malpass, and IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva.
The President told the meeting, also attended by ICT, Innovation and
Youth Cabinet Secretary Joe Mucheru, that social institution, the
environment especially the education system and lack of self-drive were
among the major setbacks impeding the youth from reaching their
potential as change-makers.
He said the African education system was structured to support agrarian
production systems and not the innovations needed in the 21st century.
Uhuru urged the global community to start viewing and engaging young
people as an asset with the current value and not as a future promise.
He noted that if properly nurtured and provided with the right
opportunities, the youth have unlimited potential to become
change-makers.
He said his decision to appoint young people into top Government
positions is a deliberate intervention meant to provide the youth with
an opportunity to be mentored and be prepared for more senior positions.
"And this is why in Kenya, I have deliberately appointed young people to
the senior rank of “Chief Administrative Secretary”, second only to
Cabinet Secretary Position.
"The aim is to provide them with the opportunity to be properly mentored
and prepared for even more senior positions," the President said.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guteress called on countries to utilise digital connectivity to create opportunities for the youth.
The UN boss decried the widening global digital divide during the
current Covid-19 pandemic terming it, "a crisis within a crisis".
Mr Guteress challenged young people to step up and lead the struggle for
equality in access to global resources including internet connectivity.
On his part, Rwandan President Paul Kagame who is the Co-Chair of the
Generation Unlimited Leaders called for the coming together of all
stakeholders to generate new ideas for investing in the youth.
Former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown called on the G7 and G20
group of countries to commit USD 10 billion for the expansion of digital
technologies while Mr. David Malpass said the World Bank was working
with stakeholders to address the varied digital needs of individual
countries.
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