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| "First
let me say to the Prime Minister how delighted I am to be here in Bangladesh, and how much
I have enjoyed meeting today with all the people from Joypura. I thank you, Asia, for your
teaching. I thank Hasan Abed and the other people who are involved in the BRAC Movement. I
thank my long time friend, Muhammad Yunus, for bringing his people here today who are
associated with the Grameen Bank. And I'd also like to thank the people who came with the
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| Asrayon Project that the Prime Minister has founded. Thank
you all for making me feel welcome today.
Bangladesh is a country that, by
traditional economic measurement, is still poor. But as I saw today, in terms of the
spirit and the ability of the people, it is full of riches. And the challenge we all face
is how to unlock the ability -- the brains, the heart, the spirit of the people of
Bangladesh -- beginning with the wonderful children that I have seen, but also including
the people that I met with the Asrayon Project and the people who have participated
in the Grameen Bank.
I want my fellow Americans and
people throughout the world to know that the people of Bangladesh are a good investment in
the future. If you look only at the Grameen Bank, it has 2.4 million borrowers in 39,000
villages. Ninety-four percent of the borrowers are women, 98 percent of the loans are
repaid. And now, with loans for people to buy cell phones, entire villages are being
brought into the Information Age. I want people throughout the world to know this story.
I want to thank the Prime
Minister and the people involved in the Asrayon movement for setting a goal that no
person in this country should be homeless. That should be every nation's goal. And I want
to thank the teachers and the supporters of the BRAC school for showing us that all our
children can learn and they all deserve the chance to learn.
I also want to thank your
government and industry for working with the International Labor Organization and the
United States to take some 9,000 children out of garment factories and put them in
classrooms. There are children here today, including a group from a special ILO-supported
school that our United States Senator Tom Harkin told me about, that he visited two years
ago. I thank you for doing that, as well.
I want to continue to
support all these projects. I am pleased to announce today that the United States will
commit several million dollars to help another 30,000 Bangladeshi children move from work
in hazardous industries into schools that will give them safer, better futures.
We will work with the ILO
and Grameen to help 3 million women in rural areas gain access to micro health insurance.
And we will commit several million dollars to help women get new skills, improve working
conditions, and secure fair representation in trade organizations.
We will also provide
several million dollars to support another Grameen program, a solar cell program to use
the clean energy of the sun to generate power in villages throughout Bangladesh -- cheap
power, clean power, power that will empower all kinds of people to raise their incomes in
different ways in the next few years.
I would like to make just
two points in closing. First of all, I want to bring greetings from my wife who preceded
me to Bangladesh. She and our daughter came here a few years ago. And she told me of all
the good things that were going on here, and she urged me to have the United States do
more to support the Grameen Bank, to support your government, to support efforts to
unleash the ability of your children and your families to build a better future.
And, finally, I would like
to thank all of you who shared your stories with me today. Many of you have overcome great
obstacles in your lives. Many of you still face great challenges. But you convinced me
again that no one -- no one -- should believe that poverty is destiny, that people have to
remain poor, that their children cannot learn and do better. You have made me believe more
strongly than ever that every child in this world should be given the chance to dream and
to live those dreams.
Because I
have been privileged to be President of the United States, I have traveled all over the
world. I have met with the wealthiest and most powerful people in the world. I have been
in the most successful communities in the world. I have also been in the poorest villages
of Africa, of Asia, of Latin America. And I believe, more strongly today than ever, that
intelligence and ability and a human spirit are evenly distributed across the rich and the
poor, in every continent on Earth. And everyone must have a chance. I will do what I can
to be a good partner and a good friend in that endeavor in Bangladesh."
Statement made by the US President
at a meeting with the villagers of Joypura, Manikgonj district, in Bangladesh, on March
20, 2000. |
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