Aga
Khan to Build Uganda's First Aga Khan Academy
Economic
development must be matched by human development
Kampala,
Uganda, August 22nd 2007 – His Highness
the Aga Khan today said “people power” was
vital for economic growth in developing countries.
He was speaking at the foundation stone-laying ceremony
of the new Aga Khan Academy in Kampala, which joins
a network of high-quality schools that will provide
world-class education to exceptional students from
across the developing world.
The ceremony was attended by His Excellency the
Vice President of Uganda, Professor Gilbert Bukenya,
as well as other dignitaries, including the Minister
of Education and Sports and heads of Uganda’s
preeminent universities and secondary schools. The
Director General of the International Baccalaureate
Organisation, Jeffrey Beard, was also present at
the event.
Reflecting on yesterday’s ceremony marking
the beginning of construction of Uganda’s new
hydroelectric power plant, the Aga Khan said that
the potential power of both forms of energy -- physical
and human – must be harnessed to drive future
development. He stressed that investment in physical
development has to be accompanied by an effort to
educate leaders. “If economic growth propels
us down a road for which future leaders are not prepared,
then we will never sustain our advances,” he
said.
The Aga Khan Academy, Kampala is the third Academy
that will be established in the East Africa region
and the first in Uganda. The school is located on
a 44 acre plot on the shores of Lake Victoria, some
18 km from the centre of Kampala.
The Aga Khan’s emphasis on education is in
keeping with the long standing tradition established
by his late grandfather, Sir Sultan Mahomed Shah
Aga Khan, who began just a century ago, to build
a network of 300 schools in this part of the world.
The Aga Khan Academies education is built on the
framework of the internationally recognised International
Baccalaureate Organisation (IBO) programmes. The
IB is renowned for preparing students for admission
to the best universities in their own countries and
abroad. Enhanced by academic, co-curricular and international
exchange elements unique to the network of Academies,
this educational programme will play an important
part in nurturing students who can adapt and thrive
in a world of rapid change, as well as make informed
judgments on life’s daily challenges.
The leader of the Shia Ismaili Muslims said the
Kampala Academy represents an effort to prepare the
most talented for future leadership positions. “As
students seek to enter the Academies programme, they
will be judged on merit, not by their financial resources.
As students leave this programme, they will move
on to quality universities – and then to positions
of social leadership,” he said.
“We expect many of our Kampala graduates to
become pillars of Ugandan public and private institutions,
a homegrown cadre of leadership,” he added.
The first Aga Khan Academy opened in the Kenyan
city of Mombasa in 2003, and produced its first cohort
of IB Diploma graduates in June. The overall average
of the Mombasa students was nearly two points above
the global average for the exams. Two of the 22 students
who took the exams scored in the top 3 percent of
the 180,000 exam takers globally, and 4 of them were
in the top 10 percent.
The Aga Khan Academies are committed to providing
the highest quality education and to providing relevant
and rewarding professional development programmes
for Academy teachers and teachers from government
and other schools. A Professional Development Centre
(PDC) for teachers will be an integral component
of the school and will be established even before
students enroll. “We will put the horse before
the cart, where it should be, confident that good
teachers and best practices will radiate out from
this Centre into the wider world of education,” stated
the Aga Khan.
The Aga Khan is ending his 12-day visit to East
Africa tomorrow. The visit is the first of his Golden
Jubilee visits around the world during which he will
announce and inaugurate various social development
and economic projects. Throughout his East African
visit, the Aga Khan has placed emphasis on the importance
of establishing health and educational institutions
of world-class standards.
Last week, as part of his continued efforts towards
excellence in healthcare and education, he announced
a US $ 700 million project to build a new Faculty
of Health Sciences of the Aga Khan University (AKU),
as well a new East African campus in the Tanzanian
city of Arusha over the next 15 years. The Arusha
campus will serve students from all over the region,
becoming the East African Community’s first
regional university campus.
For more information please contact:
Craig Bradley
Aga Khan Academies
Craig.Bradley@aiglemont.org
Semin Abdulla
Information Officer
Secretariat of His Highness the Aga Khan
information@aiglemont.org
Tel: + 254 733 530 053
NOTES
The Aga Khan Development Network
His Highness the Aga Khan is founder and Chairman
of the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN), a group
of private, non-denominational development agencies
working to empower communities and individuals
to improve living conditions and opportunities,
especially in sub-Saharan Africa, Central and South
Asia, and the Middle East. The Network’s
nine development agencies focus on social, cultural
and economic development for all citizens, regardless
of gender, origin or religion. The AKDN’s
underlying ethic is compassion for the vulnerable
in society. Its annual budget for social development
is in excess of US$ 300 million.
Golden Jubilee of His Highness the Aga Khan
His Highness the Aga Khan completed his 50th year
as the 49th hereditary Imam of the Shia Ismaili
Muslims on 11th July 2007, succeeding his grandfather,
Sir Sultan Mahomed Shah. The Aga Khan leads a community
of 15 million Ismaili Muslims living in some 25
countries around the world and is a direct descendant
of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him and
his family). In the Ismaili tradition, the Imam’s
Jubilee celebrations offer occasions to launch
new social, cultural and economic development projects.
In keeping with the ethics of the faith, these
projects aspire to improve the quality of life
for the most vulnerable in society. During the
Jubilee year, the Aga Khan is expected to travel
to a number of countries to meet with members of
the Ismaili community and visit projects of the
AKDN. He is also likely to announce the creation
of new development institutions and projects and
the significant expansion of existing ones.
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