Africa schools an ‘easy target’ for terror groups
As the world celebrated
Children's Day on Tuesday, dozens of school students in Cameroon were kidnapped
by gunmen, along with their principal and a teacher.
This was not the first time such
incident takes place in Cameroon, this school year, five children and a school
principle lost their lives after they got shot inside the class in one of the
schools near Bamenda, capital of the Northwest Region.
Moreover, in Nov. 2018, 80
students were kidnapped from a school in northwest Cameroon; they were later
freed, which indicates that a ransom might had been paid for their release.
It is pertinent to mention that
all of these areas have active separatist movements. In 2016, citizens of the
northwestern and southwestern areas decided to separate from the central
government in Yaoundé, not for ethnic or
historical reasons but for linguistic reasons.
Cameroon’s government, education,
and legal systems are dominated by the larger French-speaking region. In recent
years, tensions have mounted as people from the Anglophone regions have
complained about being marginalized by the Francophone-led establishment.
Therefore, rebel groups in the
country spread under that cover, and they are not that much different from
radical terrorist groups.
Worse still, Boko Haram deem
schools and educational institutions an easy hunt for hostages and ransoms.
The predominance in the region of
the cash economy, without controls, is conducive to terrorist groups funded by
extortion, charitable donations, smuggling, remittances and kidnapping.
In Nigeria, 111 schoolgirls from
the town of Dapchi were kidnapped on 18 February 2018 and released by ISWAP on
March 21, 2018 in exchange for a large ransom payment.
Militants from Nigeria’s Boko
Haram group has abducted more than 1,000 children in Nigeria since 2013, the
United Nations children’s agency (UNICEF) reported.
Nearly 80 countries, including
Cameroon, France and the UK, have signed the Safe Schools Declaration, a global
campaign to insulate schools and students from the ravages of war and armed
conflicts.
With Boko Haram still attacking
schools in Nigeria, UNICEF donations that are dedicated to developing education
in this area get affected. One of the UNICEF programs is to provide training
for 150,000 primary school students on safe evacuation and lockdown procedures.