![]() |
Violence in northeast Nigeria and neighbouring countries targeted by
Boko Haram has forced more than one million children out of school,
leaving them prey to abuse, abduction and recruitment by armed groups,
the United Nations said on Tuesday.
More than 2,000 schools in Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger remain
closed due to the conflict and hundreds have been looted, damaged or
destroyed, said the U.N. children’s agency UNICEF.
While hundreds of schools in northeast Nigeria have reopened in
recent months, insecurity and fear of violence are preventing many
teachers from resuming classes and discouraging parents from sending
their children back to school, according to UNICEF.
Boko Haram is mostly based in northeast Nigeria but the militant
group has this year intensified its campaign, setting up camps and
launching attacks in neighbouring Cameroon, Chad and Niger in its drive
to carve out an Islamist caliphate.
“Schools have been targets of attack, so children are scared to go
back to the classroom,” UNICEF’s West and Central Africa regional
director Manuel Fontaine said in a statement.
“Yet the longer they stay out of school, the greater the risks of being abused, abducted and recruited by armed groups.”
More than 400 schools have reopened since October in Nigeria’s Borno
state, birthplace of the six-year insurgency waged by Boko Haram, more
than 18 months after education was halted in the wake of an attack on a
school in neighbouring Yobe state which killed 59 students.
Yet in Cameroon’s Far North region, which has been struck by a string
of suicide bombings in recent months, blamed on Boko Haram and often
carried out by young women, only one school out of the 135 closed in
2014 has reopened this year, UNICEF said.
While the majority of schools in northeast Nigeria have been able to
resume classes, many classrooms are severely overcrowded as some schools
are still being used to house people who have been displaced and are
seeking shelter from the conflict.
Displaced teachers have volunteered to teach, and several schools
have doubled the number of classes to provide education for those
uprooted by conflict as well as local children.
Hassan Modu, principal of a recently reopened school in the
northeastern Nigerian city of Maiduguri, said the pupils were calm, and
happy to be back despite the “traumatic situation”.
“It is important to provide education for these vulnerable children –
the future generation of our country – who would be targets for Boko
Haram if they were not in school,” he told the Thomson Reuters
Foundation by phone from Maiduguri.
Even before the conflict, Nigeria had the highest number of
out-of-school children globally, more than 10 million, said the U.N.
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

No comments:
Post a Comment