Nigeria has 10.5million out-of-school children, Boko Haram is forcing out more in the restive North
Education remains under attack most especially in the Northern region of Nigeria.
The 12-year-old Bintu from a household of five children, hawks groundnuts along major roads in the Maiduguri city centre, capital of Borno State in northeastern Nigeria and also the epicentre for the conflict being masterminded by the Islamist sect Boko Haram.
Her
trade takes her around motorparks, bus stations and busy shops to
market her wares. Has there been any incidence of physical and sexual
harassment?
Exactly four years ago, Bintu, was schooling in Gamborou Ngala local government but the “conflict, and abduction of school girls scared me - I don’t want to be killed”.
She says, as she grips firmly to her tray. Bintu’s parents like other
families lost their livelihood and fled, her school shut as a result of
the frequent attacks on schools by the insurgents.
“Boko Haram doesn't like western education, if you go they bomb you or slaughter you”, she says. Bintu is still very frightened. “The idea of schooling reminds me of them”, and she says referring to Boko Haram sect without calling out their names.
Long
before the infamous kidnapping of 276 Chibok schoolgirls that led to
the launch of a social media campaign around the globe, including
high-profile figures and celebrities, calling for the girls' rescue by
via the #BringBackOurGirls advocacy campaign, schoolgirls were being
kidnapped and forced into marriages.
Her
friend, Grace, aged 14 who left school and has since never been seen by
her parents. She just simply disappeared. Her and Bintu left for school
together one day but never made it back home; it is assumed she had been
abducted by Boko Haram, a case similar to most households with missing
person’s accounts in the region.
Missing persons' reports in Borno state are now a common phenomenon since the beginning of the insurgency.
Over
2,295 teachers have been killed and 19,000 displaced, and almost 1,400
schools destroyed since the beginning of the Boko Haram crisis in 2009.
Three million children in the northeast are in need of support to keep
learning, according to a 2017 UNICEF report.
Beyond
the Boko Haram crisis in the northeast, Nigeria already has the largest
number of children out of school in the world – over 10.5 million .
“Among
primary school-aged children not in school, only five per cent are
dropouts: three-quarters of them will never step foot in a classroom,
and the majority are girls”, reads the same report.
Kole Shettima, director of the MacArthur Foundation laments about the situation. “In
Borno State, for instance, more than half of the children of school age
are roaming the streets while about 60% of the schools have been closed.”
Millions
of Nigerian children suffer some form of physical, emotional or sexual
violence – and in most cases the girls are kidnapped, sold out or forced
into marriages and the boys are killed or recruited to join the sect.
“If you send your children to school, Boko Haram will kill them”, 35 – year- old, Hajia Fatima, Bintu’s mum, says. “I’d rather my kids survive than watch them being killed because of education.”
Fatima,
a mother of four, has no education. She had hoped her kids will go to
school but the fear of losing them to Boko Haram discouraged her. Her
children are also scared and currently hate school.
“Going to school is still not safe,” she says in her native Kanuri language. The attacks are minimal now as compared to what it was four years back but the after-effects still linger on.
It is a similar story in Yobe state. Long before the Federal Government shutdown some unity schools in Yobe
and other Northeastern states, parents had been withdrawing their
children from those schools for safety reasons. This was because many
pupils have become targets of the deadly Islamic sect.
33-year old Usman Bawa, an alumnus of Federal Government College (FGC), Buni Yadi lost
his brother on February 25, 2014. It was the day the sect killed no
fewer than 59 pupils when it attacked the school. It's been three years
since the attack but parents are still traumatised to send their kids
back to school.
Bawa explains that apart
from the unaccounted number of missing students, the carnage carried out
by Boko Haram for 4–5 hours through the night, saw the terrorists
slitting the throats of schoolboys in their sleep.
“The
insurgents moved around identifying those with pubic hair and knifing
them to death. They burnt every existing structure - there were 28
buildings in all – that was my school, my alma-mater”, he sobbed.
Now a civil servant, Bawa reiterates that the prevailing attitude in the
area is that low-income earning parents aw the need to educate their
wards, having come from an educationally disadvantaged region in
Nigeria, before that night's attack.
“Sending
children to Potiskum boys for most families was like insuring the
future of those kids – that school for parents was likened to pension
and gratuity for them, as the hope is that their lives will be better
when the kids are schooled”.
The
Yobe state government and the Joint Task Force (JTF) had assured parents
of their children’s safety before the Buni Yadi attack. The attacks on
neighboring schools by the insurgents had led to repeatedly warnings by
parents’ who feared for their wards and wanted them out of the schools.
But some parents took solace in the government’s assurance and left
their children in school. Some withdrew theirs but when the terrorists
invaded, they moved the girls to the mosque and slaughtered the boys one
after the other.
As a result, parents
are wary of sending their children to school in the community. The
insurgency has increased the number of out of school children in
Northern Nigeria, regardless of gender and could eventually culminate in
sustaining the existing poverty levels of the people”.
“Nigeria is the richest country in Africa, but has more girls out of school than any country in the world,” said Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai during her recent visit to Maiduguri.
“Studies
are clear — educating girls grows economies, reduces conflict and
improves public health. For these girls and for their country’s future,
Nigeria’s leaders must immediately prioritise education.”
When
people are forced from their homes, schools and communities by
conflict, AYAHAY Foundation, an Abuja based non-governmental
organization, keeps them closer to learning facilities by providing
make-shift structures to accommodate as many as 50 children in one
class. The foundation builds learning facilities in the various IDP
camps, from Borno to Adamawa and Abuja – teaching women and children
basics so they are not out of touch of the academic calendar during
their time in the camps.
Executive Director, Maryam Augie-Jibrin explains why her organization targets children between age 3 – 6 years.
“Our
curriculum has a strong focus on ensuring that the children are
learning the basics while taking into account the difficulties that
exist as survivors in displaced camps, we’ve provided counselors and
school feeding program to serve incentives for the kids to attend
classes”.
"Some of the parents cannot afford to pay fees and their children have never been in school before", Mrs Augie-Jibrin further adds, “But with the classes put in place by the foundation, the children of the poor in these camps are being taught the basics”.
But
the numbers are staggering. UNICEF estimates that nearly one million
school-aged children like Bintu, have been forced to leave their homes
and communities as a result of the ongoing violence. Will help from
AYAHAY and other nonprofits reach them or all, or will Boko Haram's goal
to keep these children away from access to Western education be
actualized? The jury is still out on that.
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