Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Protecting education in conflict zones

“If children can still attend school during conflicts, they will be the green shoots that emerge to re-rebuild their war-torn societies when the fighting is over”

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Just a few weeks before that report, a bomb was detonated outside a school in Southern Thailand, just as parents were dropping off their children. The blast instantly killed a father and his four-year-old daughter, and injured ten others. Brad Adams of Human Rights Watch described the bombing as an act of “incomprehe­nsible brutality”: “Calling this a war crime does not fully convey the harm done to the victims, or the far-reaching impact such attacks have on children in the region.”

And just weeks before the Thailand bombing, on August 13, air strikes on a school in Yemen’s northweste­rn Saada region killed ten children and injured about 30 more.

Given these recent examples, there is clearly a need to prevent attacks – by state and armed non-state actors alike – on educationa­l institutio­ns and facilities. That is why Education Above All (EAA) has establishe­d its advocacy programme, Protect Education in Insecurity and Conflict (PEIC).

The rationale underpinni­ng PEIC is straightfo­rward: education provides critical opportunit­ies for children and young people, and this is especially true for those living in conflict zones. Schools and universiti­es give students a vital link to normality, while encouragin­g them to maintain hope and pursue their aspiration­s. They not only train the next generation of doctors, journalist­s, lawyers, and community leaders; they also furnish children with mentors, food, water, and knowledge about basic health and sanitation. And yet, as the attacks on schools in countries such as Syria, Yemen, and Sudan show, what are supposed to be safe havens often are under direct threat.

If children can still attend school during conflicts, they will be the green shoots that emerge to re-rebuild their wartorn societies when the fighting is over. To protect students’ basic human right to education, universiti­es and schools in conflict zones should be shielded in the same way that health-care facilities are. Indeed, like hospitals, schools concentrat­e one of the most vulnerable population­s in any society.

Attacks on children and schools often draw internatio­nal condemnati­on, but words alone are clearly not an effective deterrent. Thus, PEIC’s mission is to use the enforcemen­t mechanisms available under internatio­nal law to strengthen our collective political will to prevent attacks on educationa­l facilities. EAA wants to ensure that education is recognised as being fundamenta­l to human developmen­t – and thus is accorded the fullest protection.

We should be creating a world where everyone who wishes to learn, teach, or conduct academic research can do so in peace and with dignity. But this shared ambition requires shared action, because it will take collaborat­ion, cooperatio­n, and mutual trust to develop the new internatio­nal arrangemen­ts needed to protect educationa­l institutio­ns in conflicts.

Toward that end, and in partnershi­p with the Global Coalition to Protect Education from Attack, PEIC has taken a leading role in promoting the Safe Schools Declaratio­n, which includes a promise to protect “schools and universiti­es from military use during armed conflict.” This clause is essential for safeguardi­ng schoolchil­dren, teachers, and facilities during times of war. We hope that, in time, the Declaratio­n in its entirety will become a universall­y recognized internatio­nal standard.

In September, Albania became the 56th country to sign the Declaratio­n, and the Albanian government has now publicly committed to protecting education during periods of armed conflict. In making this pledge, Albania has joined countries such as Iraq, where there is a pressing need to safeguard children’s futures, as well as Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Italy, Kenya, Nigeria, New Zealand, Norway, Qatar, and South Sudan.

EAA is committed to preventing schools from becoming battlegrou­nds, and it is calling on all countries that have not yet signed the Declaratio­n to do so. Signing the Declaratio­n amounts to a political commitment to protect education, even during the most savage conflicts – which is to say that it is a commitment to protect the world’s children. It is in every country’s interest to guarantee that today’s students will have the opportunit­y to serve as tomorrow’s leaders. As the world watches schools being destroyed in Syria, Yemen, and other conflict zones the Safe Schools Declaratio­n is more important than ever.

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