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Friday, 22 February 2013
Killing Africa's Future: Mali's Crisis Disrupts Schooling of 700,000 Children - Unicef
The education of some 700,000 children in Mali has been disrupted due to the violence in the country according to the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). The organisation added that there is an urgent need to rebuild schools, train teachers and provide learning supplies.
Since the violence began over a year ago, at least 115 schools in the north were closed, destroyed, looted and sometimes contaminated with unexploded ordnance. Of the 700,000 children affected, 200,000 still have no access to school, UNICEF said in a news release.
Many teachers were among those displaced and have not returned to the northern part of the country. Instead, they are working in the already overcrowded schools in the south, which cannot cope with the amount of displaced students from the north.
"When a teacher is afraid to teach and when a student is afraid to go to school, the whole education is at risk," said UNICEF's Representative in Mali, Françoise Ackermans.
In the north, only one in three schools is now functioning. In some towns, all schools remain closed, as is the case in Kidal, while in others a few have opened. Five per cent of schools have now reopened in Timbuktu.
UNICEF noted that the violence has also had a significant psychological impact on children, who have reported hearing gunshots at school and at home.
The agency said it is working with the Malian educational authorities to accelerate the return of children to school. Since December, UNICEF has trained 1,190 Malian teachers to provide psychological support and mine-risk education to children. In addition, more than 16,000 children have received educational materials across the country.
Other UN agencies have continued to work in Mali to assist the estimated 1.2 million people that have been affected by armed operations.
This was a war that was started covertly by the West and now they claim to be the 'rescuer.' Mali was a country that enjoying relative peace and flourishing democracy till the United States started pumping cash into her military on the one hand and France started bribing rebels on the other hand.
Those who ignited the fire are now the firefighters; appearing in deceitful robes like saviours.
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