The singer attended two ceremonies in Cartagena
and her hometown of Barranquilla at the sites of the future
schools, signing her autograph in the cement cornerstones.
"When some children don't receive the same education as those
who live in better conditions we can't talk about a country in
peace, we can't talk about a country with equality, because
education is what equalizes us," Shakira told journalists,
urging the government to increase education spending and saying
that support for education should not just come from
celebrities.
The 41-year-old singer founded her Pies Descalzos charity in
1997, when she was just 18. It takes its name from her third
album - her first international success - and translates to
"bare feet."
The foundation already has four schools in Cartagena,
Barranquilla, Quibdo and Soacha.
It will spent some $4.6 million on the new Cartagena school, in
the Villa de Aranjuez neighborhood, and another $4.3 million on
the project in Barranquilla's Nuevo Bosque, in company with
several private donors.
The schools will serve areas with over-subscribed educational
facilities, said the pop star, whose full name is Shakira
Mebarak.
Colombia's previous government signed a peace deal in 2016 with
the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebels to end
more than five decades of war. Another guerrilla group, the
National Liberation Army (ELN) and myriad crime gangs remain
active.
The new right-wing government of President Ivan Duque, who took
office in August, has called off peace talks with the ELN until
the group frees all its hostages.
Shakira's 54-show El Dorado tour, which began in Hamburg in
June, will come to an end on Saturday in Bogota, Colombia's
capital.
The tour had been set to begin in November last year, but was
postponed to allow the singer to heal a hemorrhage on her right
vocal cord.
The five-time Grammy Award winner, whose 2001 song "Whenever,
Wherever" was a Spanish-to-English crossover hit, is one of
Colombia's biggest musical exports, alongside singers Juanes and
Maluma.
(Reporting by Steven Grattan; Aadditional reporting by Luis
Jaime Acosta; Writing by Julia Symmes Cobb; Editing by Leslie
Adler)
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