Gulf News

Raqqa city struggles to revive schools

Unicef estimates that 2.1m children in Syria are out of school and funds are scarce

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Unicef estimates that 2.1m children in Syria are out of school and funds are scarce |

In the Syrian city of Raqqa, children wear hats, scarves and coats to guard against the winter cold as they struggle to catch up on years of lost learning in a classroom with no doors or glazed windows.

More than a year since the United States and its allies defeated Daesh at Raqqa, many of the city’s schools still look like battlefiel­ds with buildings left lying in rubble and playground­s dotted with wrecked cars.

“When the crisis started, we stopped studying, the schools closed. Now we’ve come back to study and we need help. Fix the windows, doors, we’re dying of cold,” said 12-year-old Abdullah Al Hilal at Uqba Bin Nafie school.

Ali Al Shannan, the head of the education council says that “very basic” aid had allowed for some renovation work, covering only 10 per cent of needs.

The schools generally “have no doors, no windows, in addition to the sanitation systems that are in a deplorable state”, he said.

At Uqba Bin Nafie school, one classroom looks out onto a wrecked building, its floors collapsed on top of each other and a car flipped on its side nearby. In the yard, children stand around large pools of dirty water while others eat snacks by the crumpled wreckage of another vehicle.

Lack of books

Amnesty Internatio­nal has said 80 per cent of the city still lies in ruins, with thousands of bodies under the rubble. With much of Raqqa destroyed by US-led air strikes, Amnesty has faulted the coalition for not doing more to help recovery.

Unicef, the UN children’s agency, estimates that 2.1 million children in Syria are out of school.

In Raqqa, Unicef is providing textbooks to more than 121,000 children so they can get a start while waiting for a classroom, said Juliette Touma, Unicef’s regional chief of communicat­ions.

“The self-learning programme allows children who are out of school to learn at home, an NGO or community learning centre,” she said.

Al Shannan said 57,000 books have been received so far, short of 95,000 he said had been requested.

As winter sets in, the dilapidate­d state of the schools is leading some children to miss out on yet more lessons.

Ayman Al Qurt, the director of at Uqba Bin Nafie school, says attendance in one of his classes is just 11 of 38 pupils “because of the bad state of the school and the bad weather”.

 ?? Reuters ?? Children sit in a classroom at a school in Raqqa. With cold weather sweeping the region, children are finding it difficult to keep warm as schools have no windows or doors.
Reuters Children sit in a classroom at a school in Raqqa. With cold weather sweeping the region, children are finding it difficult to keep warm as schools have no windows or doors.
 ?? Reuters ?? A child attends a class in Raqqa. Most schools here have deplorable sanitation systems.
Reuters A child attends a class in Raqqa. Most schools here have deplorable sanitation systems.

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