Berlin (Brussels Morning Newspaper) – Germany pledged 60 million euros in aid to Syria, focusing on education and women’s rights following Assad’s collapse.
Germany stated on 30 Dec 2024 that it would support 60 million euros worth of projects in Syria to promote education, women’s rights and other domains in the aftermath of the collapse of President Bashar al-Assad.
German Development Minister Svenja Schulze expressed that a “historic window” had extended since insurgents seized control of Damascus on Dec. 8, pushing Assad to exit after more than 13 years of civil war and finishing his family’s decades-long rule. “What will occur next has not yet been determined. But the opportunity for favourable development is there and we should now do everything we can to sustain it,” she stated in a statement.
“We have developed our expectations: an education design free of ideology, prejudice and exclusion,”
Schulze expressed in the statement. Around 19 million euros will go to the United Nations development agency UNDP, Syrian NGOs will acquire 7 million euros, and 3 million euros will proceed to a special U.N. fund backing Syrian women’s groups, the statement stated. All schemes would be executed through non-governmental organisations and U.N. aid agencies, not Syria’s new management, the ministry said.
What are the challenges to education and women after the fall of Assad?
The situation today in the realm of education and women’s rights in Syria is reflective of tremendous challenges and work still needed in order to achieve reforms. The Syrian Transitional Government has adopted a plan of reform to overhaul the education sector to guarantee equal quality education for both sexes and different social strata. Education Minister Nazir Mohammad al-Qadri further says that education is the future for the country of Syria, and “education, rather than food and water, is a red line for the Syrian people.”
The new education minister has assured that girls’ rights to education will remain unrestricted. There are indications that female enrollment may actually surpass that of boys in some areas 18. This commitment is crucial as many women and girls have faced barriers to education due to cultural attitudes and the impacts of conflict.