Terrorism strikes education in the African Sahel region
Terrorist groups in Africa’s Sahel region have targeted
schools and threatened the educational process, especially with the continuing
demolitions of schools and the killing of many students and teachers.
UN Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict Virginia
Gamba has warned that attacks on schools appear to be a method of warfare,
especially in the conflict-torn Sahel region.
She said in a statement to the UN Security Council on
Thursday, September 10, “It seems that there is an emerging war tactic,
especially in the Sahel region, where schools are specifically targeted for
meeting the needs of girls.”
Gamba noted that 2,500 schools closed in Burkina Faso since
last year after the increase in attacks, kidnapping of teachers, and burning of
schools. In Mali, 1,260 schools were closed during the past two years after
teachers were threatened and a number of them killed, as well as books being
burned.
She said that the closed schools and collapsing economies
generate factors that facilitate the recruitment of children, their sexual
exploitation and their marriage, urging all warring parties to respect the
civilian character of schools.
Education of 400,000 students disrupted
A report by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) on
February 28, 2019 confirmed that the education of more than 400,000 children
has been disrupted in various regions of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, while
10,050 teachers have been prevented from working or have been displaced by the
violence.
UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore said that the
direct attacks on schools and teachers, and even on schoolchildren, in addition
to the military occupation of places of learning, are serious violations of
children's rights.
She stressed that when children miss the opportunity to go
to school in times of conflict, they not only become unable to learn the skills
they need to build peaceful and prosperous societies, but they also become
vulnerable to appalling forms of exploitation, including sexual assault and
forced recruitment into terrorist groups.
Training camps
Mohamed Ezz El-Din, a researcher specializing in African
affairs, told the Reference that terrorist groups target schools for multiple
reasons, the most important of which is that they use these schools as training
camps for terrorist elements. They also know that schools are the only outlet
for students to empty their energy, so when they are prevented from education
and getting rid of energy, they will be easy prey for terrorists and easy to
recruit.
Ezz El-Din confirmed that the Sahel region has been
subjected to hundreds of attacks since 2017, as nearly a thousand terrorist
operations have been carried out targeting schools, students and teachers.



