To help educate Syrian children: Malala campaigning for $1.46 donations

Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai addresses delegates the donors conference for Syria in London.
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai addresses delegates the donors conference for Syria in London.
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AFP, London :
World leaders pledged billions of dollars on Thursday to help conflict-hit Syrians, at a London conference overshadowed by the collapse of peace talks in Geneva.
The European Union, Germany, Britain and the United States were among those making major donations to areas including food aid, education and allowing Syrians displaced from their homeland to find work.
But hopes that the package could make a major difference inside Syria were weighed down by the suspension Wednesday of peace talks in Geneva until February 25.
The decision came as Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s forces, supported by Russian air strikes, stepped up their offensive near the major northern city of Aleppo, forcing nearly 40,000 civilians to flee.
Neighbouring countries including Jordan and Lebanon told the conference of their struggle to deal with the influx of millions of Syrians and urged nations at the conference to do more to help them.
The mood among many leaders was bleak, reflecting frustration at the halt
Wednesday of the so-called proximity talks in Geneva which were seen as the best hope for peace since the conflict erupted in March 2011.
“After five years of fighting, it’s pretty incredible that as we come here in London, the situation on the ground is actually worse, not better,” US Secretary of State John Kerry said.
“If people are reduced to eating grass and leaves and killing stray animals in order to survive, that’s something that should tear at the conscience of all civilised people,” he added. Among the biggest donors were the EU and its member states, which pledged more than three billion euros this year.
Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose open-door policy for refugees has proved deeply controversial in Germany, offered 2.3 billion euros ($2.6 billion) by 2018.
Britain announced #1.2 billion (1.6 million euros, $1.74 billion) and the United States $890 million. British Prime Minister David Cameron, who is co-hosting the conference, said a “new approach” was needed to address “one of the worst humanitarian crises of our time”. His government, which has agreed to take 20,000 Syrian refugees by 2020, argues that those displaced are best helped close to home and wants to support neighbouring countries in doing so.
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