Arab News

UK aid cuts will close down hundreds more Syrian schools

- Arab News

British aid cuts will lead to the closure of hundreds more Syrian schools, with 40,000 children already having fallen out of education as a result of the move, a leading charity has warned.

UK funding for 133 schools run by Syria Relief ended on April 30 as the government “rushed” through a £4.2 billion ($5.3 billion) cut in foreign aid spending that slashed Britain’s total commitment from 0.7 to 0.5 percent of gross national income.

“If funds are not found the plug the gap, a generation of children in northern Syria will be out of school,” Jessica Adams, head of communicat­ions for the charity, told The Guardian.

“This will lead to a close-toimmediat­e rise in child labor, child marriage, early pregnancie­s, child conscripti­on to military and armed groups, and child exploitati­on and traffickin­g.

“This was a political choice we, children, parents and teachers hope desperatel­y will be reversed.”

Syria Relief had been the largest nongovernm­ent provider of schools in the country, at one point operating 306 schools.

But donors have reduced their spend or shifted their focus to Ukraine, leaving the charity with just 24 remaining schools

‘If funds are not found to plug the gap, a generation of children in northern Syria will be out of school.’

supporting 3,600 children.

UK cuts hit Syria hard, removing 69 percent of aid, which the charity said would push more girls into early marriages rather than Britain’s “stated goal” of helping them into school.

Abu Halid, whose children are at school in Mahmoodli displaceme­nt camp in northern Syria, told The Guardian: “If this school closes, we’ll have to send them to schools that ask for money, but we don’t have money, not even for rent, so we need the school to stay open.”

Syria Relief said camp schools are overcrowde­d, lack electricit­y or heating, and already-high rates of child labor and early marriages will increase with more school closures.

Joyce Msuya, assistant secretaryg­eneral for the UN Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs, told the Security Council last week that an estimated 14.6 million Syrians are in need of humanitari­an aid, with 2.4 million children out of school in the country.

“Unless we significan­tly scale up our support, even more are at risk of dropping out,” she added. “Rapid and substantia­l investment­s are now required to help us break the vicious cycle.”

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