UN says 670,000 children
affected by IS group school closures
An
estimated 670,000 children in Syria are being deprived of education after
Islamic State forces ordered schools closed while the curriculum is made to
conform with religious rules, the U.N. Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said on
Tuesday.
Islamic State, an
offshoot of al Qaeda which has recruited foreign fighters, has seized land in
Syria and Iraq, imposing its strict reading of Islamic law.
In November it shut schools in areas it
controls in eastern Syria pending a religious revision of the curriculum. The
group stands accused of massacres, sexually enslaving women and girls and
recruiting children as fighters.
“In
December there was a decree of the Islamic State ordering the stoppage of
education in areas under its control,” UNICEF spokesman Christophe Boulierac told a news
briefing.
The militant group decreed that schools be
closed until the school curriculum had been made “compliant with the religious
rules”, he told Reuters.
Children enrolled in primary and secondary
schools in Raqqa, and rural areas of Deir al-Zor and Aleppo provinces are
affected by the closures, he said. Teachers must undergo retraining.
In all, 4.3 million Syrian children are
enrolled nationwide this school year, according to the education ministry, but
between 2.1 million and 2.4 million are currently either out of school or
attending classes irregularly, UNICEF said.
UNICEF also said that at least 160 children
were killed and 343 wounded in attacks on schools across Syria last year. The
toll was probably an under-estimate due to difficulties of access and obtaining
data, Boulierac said.
“In addition to lack of school access,
attacks on schools, teachers and students are further horrific reminders of the
terrible price Syria’s children are paying in a crisis approaching its fifth
year,” Hanaa Singer, UNICEF representative in Syria, said in a statement.
Islamic
State has been the target of U.S.-led air strikes in
both Syria and Iraq since September.
(REUTERS)
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