Violence stalls Africa learning

Despite progress, 30 million not in school, U.N. says

Kemi Olajuwon (right), who at age 12 has to skip school some days to sell smoked fish to help pay for groceries and school fees, joins another girl at work Tuesday in Lagos, Nigeria.
Kemi Olajuwon (right), who at age 12 has to skip school some days to sell smoked fish to help pay for groceries and school fees, joins another girl at work Tuesday in Lagos, Nigeria.

DAKAR, Senegal -- About 30 million primary school-aged children in sub-Saharan Africa are not in class, partially because of conflict and poverty, and progress to get them back to school has stalled, two United Nations agencies said.

The situation is especially dire in West and Central Africa, which has the largest proportion of children out of school of any region in the world, said a pair of reports published Monday by UNICEF, the U.N. children's agency, and the statistics arm of UNESCO, the U.N. cultural and education agency.

The U.N. Millennium Development goals made primary education for every child a priority in 2000, and substantial progress was made through 2007, the reports said. In 1999 there were 106 million children out of school globally, and by 2008 that figured dropped to 60 million, said Yumiko Yokozeki, a regional education adviser for UNICEF in West and Central Africa. But since then, things have stagnated.

Only the hardest cases are left in many countries, such as children who live in rural areas or those in conflict zones, she said.

"The last 40 percent is much easier than dealing with the last 20 percent," she said.

Yokozeki said there's no magic bullet: Getting children into classrooms requires governments to commit more money to education budgets -- to reduce or eliminate fees, hire more teachers and buy more textbooks -- but it also requires grass-roots efforts to convince parents that education is accessible and worth it.

Some countries, like Burkina Faso, have made good progress. But declining international aid since the global financial crisis and an increase in conflicts have hindered efforts elsewhere, Yokozeki said.

Many schools in conflict zones shut down, and it's too dangerous for children to reach others. In some places, like Central African Republic, families have fled their homes because of violence.

Mali was making great progress on getting children into the classroom, Yokozeki said, but a 2012 coup caused chaos in the West African country and allowed militants to take over the country's north.

Other countries also have seen conflicts flare or intensify. In Nigeria, the Boko Haram militant group has staged a series of attacks on villages and kidnapped hundreds of girls from a school in the country's north while they were taking exams.

And in places where conflict does not prevent children from going to school, poverty often does.

"I love school but have to drop some days of the week to help sell fish, so there can be food in the house and also for my school fees," said Kemi Olajuwon, a 12-year-old who was selling smoked fish on the streets of Lagos, Nigeria's commercial capital.

U.N. data show large numbers of children are out of school: about 10 million in southern and eastern Africa and another 19 million in West and Central Africa, according to the UNESCO statistics institute's database.

Yokozeki said the real numbers are likely higher. The UNESCO figures come from school censuses, but household surveys, for instance, show more than 23 million children in West and Central Africa who should be in primary school are not. Household surveys for eastern and southern Africa push the number in those regions to 19 million.

On average, that means about one out of every five children in sub-Saharan Africa who should be in primary school isn't.

Information for this article was contributed by Sunday Alamba of The Associated Press.

A Section on 06/18/2014

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