"In cultures that value obedience above all, women are usually required to be the most obedient of all. But human progress, innovation and development do not come from societies that impose submission.
"They spring from self-expression, free exchanges of ideas, the flash of criticism and the clang of argument," said Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein at a panel discussion on 'realising the equal enjoyment of the right to education by every girl' at the 29th session of the UNHRC.
"One-third of girls in developing countries are married before they are 18, and millions give birth while they are still in their teens; most of these young women are prevented from continuing their education," he added.
A recent paper by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) on attacks against girls seeking to access education, between 2009 and 2014, shows that thousands of such attacks took place on schools in at least 70 countries-many aimed at girls and teachers for advocating girls' education.
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Barbara Bailey, Chair, CEDAW Working Group on the Rights of Girls and Women to Education said "education is not very transformative as it is offered now" - there is a need for re-socialisation of both the sexes.