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Help 'can't come soon enough' for thousands of children out of school in northern Mali - UNICEF

Help 'can't come soon enough' for thousands of children out of school in northern Mali - UNICEF

| | 19 Dec 2015, 09:58 am
New York, Dec 19 (Just Earth News/IBNS) Despite the immense needs in conflict-affected areas of northern Mali, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) is hampered by constrained access and limited funding, and is thus calling for "action now" to help the more than 380,000 children who remain out of school in the region.

According to the agency, these children – aged seven to 15 – remain out of school in insecure regions in northern Mali three months into the new school year and almost four years since the security situation worsened in that part of the country.

“Children in northern Mali know too well the impact of conflict, poverty and deprivation,”said Fran Equiza, UNICEF Representative in Mali. “Education is their best hope for the future,” he added.

More than 280 schools, or one in six, in the conflict-affected areas in northern Mali are closed, many of them for the third year in a row, after they were damaged, destroyed, looted or occupied by the warring parties, said UNICEF.

In Kidal, one of the worst hit areas, the agency noted that 79 per cent of schools remain closed. The journey to and from school remains unsafe, and fear of unexploded mines and other remnants of war have forced parents to keep their children away from the classrooms.

Violence has also led to a shortage of teachers, and according to UNICEF, nearly 600 teachers have fled the conflict areas or are no longer reporting to work because of insecurity.

In light of all this, UNICEF is helping to give children back their right to education. Through a two-year campaign called 'Every Child Counts,' the agency provides: training opportunities and learning materials for 2,000 teachers; individual kits for students and school kits to reach 100,000 children; peacebuilding activities for 100,000 children; and 10,000 booklets promoting peace and non-discrimination for students and their communities.

The campaign will also provide alternative and accelerated learning programmes, including lessons via radio, for out-of-school children. Further, schools will be rehabilitated and children will be educated about the danger of unexploded ordnance.

Despite the immense needs, UNICEF’s programmes in the country are hindered by constrained access and limited funding. The UN children’s agency has received less than a third of the $37 million it needs for its education, protection, health, nutrition and water, sanitation and hygiene initiatives.

“The dream of building a better future for Mali’s children depends on action now,” Equiza said, stressing that: “Better humanitarian access and more resources can’t come soon enough for those who have been deprived for so long. Education is their best hope for the future.”

Photo: UNICEF/UNI203065/Dicko
 

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