Technology initiative to help make 1000 schools safer in Pakistan

Children in conflicts, Gordon Brown, Safe schools

Students have bags searched entering a government school

As the world remembers millions of children trying to get an education against a backdrop of war and terrorism, a new innovative partnership – which will deliver state-of-the-art technology to promote Safe Schools in Pakistan – has been announced today

The announcement, at UN headquarters in New York, comes just three months after the school massacre in Peshawar in December and follows an agreement with Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to support a national safe schools campaign.

With more than 10,000 attacks on schools over the past five years, the Pakistan project is part of a larger Safe Schools effort championed by United Nations Special Envoy for Global Education Gordon Brown covering programmes in northern Nigeria, as well as in Lebanon for Syrian refugees.

Spearheaded by a pro-bono technology contribution from Predictify.Me, a US-based data sciences and predictive analytics firm, the Pakistan Safe Schools initiative will introduce the use of simulation software to assess the level of risk preparedness of schools and generate recommendations for school and community safety plans.

A call between Gordon Brown and President Nawaz Sharif 

Each participating school will receive a report providing a designation on the degree of risk, specific recommendations for improving the school’s set-up to become safer and recommendations for community preparedness measures and ongoing risk forecasts. UNICEF will join in the initiative and integrate the work with disaster risk reduction programming for child friendly and safe school schools in Pakistan.

In the past five years, more than 1000 schools have been destroyed in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, which includes Peshawar, where more than 130 students were killed at the Army Public School by Pakistani Taliban terrorists.

If successful, the programme has ambitions to be scaled up to cover all 200,000 schools in Pakistan through the national Safe Schools Initiative. Safe Schools is expanding rapidly. In Nigeria, the initiative, catalysed by an initial investment by the Global Business Coalition for Education corporate leaders, has mobilised more than $30 million for the protection of schools. International support has come from the United States, the United Kingdom, Norway, Germany and the African Development Bank.

In Lebanon efforts are underway to support a Safe Schools plan for education for nearly 500,000 Syrian refugees now living in the region through partnership efforts between the government of Lebanon, UN agencies and the international community.

Students walk to school in Peshawar after schools reopened

Earlier this year A World at School launched a 15-point plan for the Pakistan Safe Schools Initiative backed fully by Prime Minister Sharif and Mr Brown.  The effort aims to attract multimillion-dollar investments from the global community for girls’ and boys’ education.  The plan is accompanied by an appeal to donor governments, foundations and the business sector to finance the initiative. Prime Minister Sharif said at the time: “I am personally committed to making this initiative a success.”

Speaking in Islamabad today, Prime Minister Sharif said: “The Government of Pakistan is committed to rooting out terrorism and extremism from the country. Security of the educational institutions is at the core of the national agenda of the Government. We appreciate technological assistance from friends as terrorism has no boundaries and terrorists have no religion.

“Pakistan has been at the forefront of international efforts to counter terrorism and has rendered great sacrifices in this regard. We value the support and co-operation extended by Rt Hon Gordon Brown and all other partner organisations to make the Pakistani schools safe and secure and to improve the standard of education in the country.”

The technologies – SecureSim and Soothsayer – are based on seven years of research and development and are designed to simulate the impact of an explosion and develop safety recommendations in a school. The software technology establishes ideal security protocols to minimise the impact and is further used to appropriate local emergency response planning and provide ongoing security forecasts.

Former UK Prime Minister Mr Brown said: “I am thankful to the Global Business Coalition for Education and the team at Predictify.Me for agreeing to support our efforts to ensure safe schools for every child in Pakistan. In my discussion with the Prime Minister we have agreed to do everything we can to ensure every girl and boy in Pakistan is able to go to school and learn. This initiative is a vital part of these efforts.”

The technology that will be used in the new program was developed by Dr Zeeshan-ul-hassan Usmani, Co-Founder and Chief Data Scientist at Predictify.Me. Dr Usmani is a Pakistani Fulbright Scholar and Eisenhower Fellow and a scientist with expertise in simulation and modeling of blast waves in open and confined spaces.

As the youngest of 14 brother and sisters, from humble beginnings in the small town of Sukkur, Dr Usmani said: “I know firsthand the benefit of education and I am very pleased to work with the United Nations, the Prime Minister and our other partners to ensure every child in Pakistan has the right to go to school safely.”

The CEO of the company and Eisenhower Fellow, Rob Burns, said: “We are thrilled to use our core assets of data sciences and predictive analytics to support the Safe Schools Initiative in Pakistan.  We have joined the Global Business Coalition for Education and agreed to donate this technology worth several million dollars because we believe we should do all we can to ensure the safety of children who want to learn.”

As part of ongoing advocacy efforts, an appeal will be made to the international community to support the Safe Schools Initiative in Pakistan.

Gordon Brown demands international community takes urgent action on safe schools.


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