Pandemic’s cruelest blow
COVID-19 has left children displaced by Middle East conflicts facing additional barriers to education and family life
Millions of people have been displaced by recent wars in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA)
— a significant number of them children. Cut adrift in an unfamiliar world, the trauma of losing their homes is often compounded by the brutalizing experience of displacement.
According to the UN’s World Migration Report 2020, there are an estimated 31 million child migrants worldwide. Roughly 13 million of them are refugees, 936,000 are asylum seekers, and 17 million have been forcibly displaced inside their own country.
Individual tragedies have occasionally drawn the attention of the international community. When photographs emerged of Alan Kurdi, the drowned Syrian toddler lying face down in the Mediterranean surf, the issue of child migration appeared, for a time, to take center stage.
The world soon moved on, though, and initial pangs of sympathy and charity reverted to earlier anxieties about security. Now the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has left jealously guarded borders bolted tight.
Of course, it is not just war and terror that drives civilians from their homes. Political and cultural persecution, loss of economic opportunities and the ravages of climate change have also contributed to this vast nation of stateless people. However, it is the recent spate of conflicts in the Middle East that has specifically fed the phenomenon of child migration. As Ramzy Baroud, author and editor of the Palestine Chronicle, says, the cause of child migration in the Arab region is the direct result of “violent” conflict. “Unlike economic hardship, which often evolves over prolonged periods of time, war is decisive and often leaves people with no other option but to flee,” he told Arab News. “We have seen this trend taking place in the early months of upheaval in the Arab world, starting in 2011 in Libya and continuing in Syria as well.” Turkey hosts the largest number of refugees in the MENA region, while Lebanon hosts the largest number of refugees per capita, according to the UN High Commission for Refugees’ (UNHCR) regional spokesperson, Rula Amin. “The situation in Syria continues to drive the largest refugee crisis in the world. There remain over 5.5 million registered refugees from m Syria in the main hosting countries es — Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq q and Egypt, and 2.6 million are re children,” she said.
Syrians are by far the largest st forcibly displaced population in the world — 13.2 million of them by late 2019, including 6.6 million refugees and more than 6 million n internally displaced persons, s, according to the UNHCR.
Bombs and bullets no doubt drive the initial wave of displacement. But Baroud said the waves that follow are the result of the economic deterioration caused by conflict.
“This is important, because quite often war refugees and economic migrants are delinked, while in reality they are escaping the same threat, either that of war ar or its disastrous outcomes,” he said. d. This can be seen in the case of Libyan and Syrian children, who o fled the immediate danger with their families to become internally displaced persons — known in the humanitarian glossary as IDPs. It was predominantly the young and physically fit who dared to venture ov over land and sea to Europe. However, as these conflicts d dragged on, families with children in increasingly lost hope in ever re returning home and began contemp plating far riskier options. As of Ja January this year, Mediterranean cr crossings in rickety boats have ki killed at least 19,164 migrants since 20 2014, according to the International O Organization for Migration.
“With time, whole families were es escaping on long and arduous jo journeys together. In many cases, ch children were not even accompan nied by adults, for their parents might have either been killed or separated from their children during the war,” Baroud said. This trend was made clear in 20 2019, when UNICEF reported m more than 33,000 child refugees cr crossed into Greece, Malta, C Cyprus, Italy, Spain and Bulgaria. “These first countries of asylum of often serve as a gateway to other destinations in Europe, where refugees hope to reach a different country, which might be Germany, Sweden, or any other,” said Baroud. “So quite often, once a refugee arrives in Greece, for example, where he or she is granted some kind of refugee identification, they hope to continue with their journeys past Greece to somewhere else where they can permanently settle.”
Keeping families together is a “concern and a priority” for aid agencies, says Amin. Key to this is obtaining civil documentation, such as birth, marriage and death certificates. With these, refugees and IDPs are able to access services, move freely and have their rights respected.
The coronavirus pandemic has complicated matters. According to the UNHCR, lockdown measures have pushed displaced populations even deeper into poverty and uncertainty, with children bearing the brunt.
“Refugees have lost their incomes and livelihoods, they are suffering from serious historic disruption to the education of their children, deteriorating economies in their host countries add to their challenges and expose them to increased risks of child labor, early marriage and school drop-out,” Amin said.
In fact, 50 percent of refugee girls worldwide are at risk of dropping out of school entirely because of COVID-19. With classes moving online, many displaced children simply don’t have access to computers, consistent internet, or a stable learning environment. “The pandemic is threatening to erase years of progress made to ensure that refugee children get a proper education,” Baroud said. “Today, 48 percent of all refugee children globally are out of school, 77 percent are enrolled in elementary education, 31 percent are enrolled in schools at secondary education, and only 3 percent get a chance to enrol for higher education.”
And the longer these children are out of school, the harder it will be to go back. Baroud added the economic realities of displacement effectively rob them of their childhoods, pushing them into the world of work.
“Families have to make a choice between turning their children into providers or having them enlist in long-term education,” he said. “They often choose the former.”
Quite often war refugees and economic migrants are delinked, while in reality they are escaping the same threat.