LG Electronics has opened the LG Hope School in Nairobi, Kenya, to
provide the local children with a better learning environment, according
to a company statement.
This is the first time the electronics maker has built a school in Africa.
More
than 100 people attended the opening ceremony on Aug. 12, including
Kenyan Education Ministry director Richard Belio Kipsang, the United
Nations World Food Program’s Kenyan office vice head Paul Turnbull and
LG Electronics’ Kenyan office branch head Kim Jung-jin.
LG
initiated the project in Kibera, Africa’s biggest urban slum, in
partnership with the U.N. WFP and the Kenyan government last February.
Its aim is to provide a better learning environment for local students
who were studying in poor conditions in a building with a collapsed roof
and no lighting.
The school will accommodate 480 students with
diverse amenities including computer labs, water storage and a kitchen.
Learning materials such as computers and monitors were also provided by
the company.
“We will continue our corporate social
responsibility activities to give hope to local children, and to help
youths’ dreams come true,” said LG’s Kim Jung-jin.
“LG Hope
School is a program to improve children’s education and health, a main
policy goal of the Kenyan government,” said Kipsang. “It is meaningful
in that this does not simply provide funds but gives real help to
children.”
LG Electronics has carried out diverse CSR activities
in Kenya including free artificial limbs surgeries for 150 children,
building playgrounds and wells at 29 schools, and financing surgeries
for eyesight recovery for 30 children.
Source: http://tinyurl.com/mxz9bln
Post a Comment