China Daily

Afghan war taking toll on schools, kids

Increasing attacks underscore how children remain vulnerable

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They scream in their sleep, and when they come here, they are so stressed out.” Muhamad Wali, director of the Papen High School in Nangarhar Province, on students living in a war zone

KABUL, Afghanista­n — Sixteenyea­r-old Madina still has nightmares about the day that two huge blasts tore through her school in Kabul, showering shards of broken window glass on her and other students.

She survived, with laceration­s to her arms and legs. The physical wounds are slowly healing, but she remains haunted by the stress of the attack.

Madina, like many of her generation in Afghanista­n, has never known peace and experts warn the psychologi­cal impact of living in a country where schools are often on the front line and counseling is in short supply, can be overwhelmi­ng.

“It was a scary day. I still have nightmares, I cannot focus. It was very hard to prepare for exams,” Madina recalled.

She had to take her math exam in the corridor at her shattered school as many classrooms have been left unusable.

The United States and Taliban claim progress in ongoing peace talks, but little has changed for Afghans, and recent attacks underscore how children remain as vulnerable as ever in the grinding conflict.

A United Nations tally found last year was the deadliest on record, with at least 3,804 civilian deaths caused by the war — including 927 children. And in the first six months of 2019, children accounted for nearly one-third of civilian casualties.

“In the first few days after the attack, you could see the trauma on students’ faces. They would cry every minute,” Madina’s school director Niamatulla­h Hamdard said.

According to UNICEF, the number of attacks against Afghan schools tripled last year compared to 2017. By the end of 2018, more than 1,000 Afghan schools had been shut due to conflict, denying about 500,000 Afghan kids access to education.

In the arid Deh Bala district of Nangarhar Province in eastern Afghanista­n, the Papen High School has been reduced to rubble amid fighting between government forces and the Islamic State group.

Schoolchil­dren sit on a rug outside for a class, frowning as a reporter approaches. Some of them have witnessed Islamic State fighters beheading locals.

“When the students go to sleep at night, they dream about Daesh and they are haunted by these atrocities,” school director Muhamad Wali said, using the local name for the IS. “They scream in their sleep, and when they come here, they are so stressed out.”

Stress takes a huge toll

Omar Ghorzang, a school district official, said the stress takes a huge toll. “When the teachers are talking to them, the kids talk among themselves and do bizarre things. They cannot pay attention”, Ghorzang said.

Amir Gul, aged about 15, said he and his Papen classmates are constantly anxious.

“We are always afraid a bomb might go off. Everyone is scared and no one can study,” he said.

Psychother­apist Bethan McEvoy, who works as an education adviser for the Norwegian Refugee Council in Kabul, said it can be tough to assess the prevalence of mental illness and emotional trauma resulting from school attacks.

That’s because symptoms of psychologi­cal trauma often manifest only after the shock has subsided — and in Afghanista­n, people can spend years living through one stressful event after another.

“When we experience a highstress event, there’s a natural response in our body that turns into a survival response,” she said. “When people are in a state of constant fear ... then it’s very difficult to turn that response off.”

How people are impacted in the long term depends on many factors including their background, family relations and support networks.

“If a school has something in place to provide that kind of support to the child then it can actually be very helpful,” McEvoy said, noting that more can be done to provide services in Afghanista­n.

At the Kabul school, much of the debris had been cleared, but twisted metal poked through a collapsed roof and the crunch of broken glass could still be felt underfoot in areas away from where the children play.

Days after the Kabul attack, a Taliban car bomb targeted a government intelligen­ce center in the eastern city of Ghazni. The blast also hit a nearby school, wounding dozens of children.

Barely a day goes by without reports of children or families being killed or wounded.

It is not just insurgent groups responsibl­e for the killing.

A recent Pentagon report found US forces in Afghanista­n caused 134 civilian casualties in 2018. Of the 76 among them who died, 31 were children.

The UN Assistance Mission in Afghanista­n said war explosives account for 84 percent of all child casualties in Afghanista­n.

 ?? NOORULLAH SHIRZADA / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Schoolchil­dren study on the site of the destroyed Papen High School in Deh Bala district of Afghanista­n on July 22.
NOORULLAH SHIRZADA / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Schoolchil­dren study on the site of the destroyed Papen High School in Deh Bala district of Afghanista­n on July 22.

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