DR Congo: Children’s access to education under threat from ongoing violence in Kasai region

As school year begins, UNICEF and partners launch campaign to help 150,000 children return to school

15 September 2017

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KINSHASA/DAKAR/GENEVA/NEW YORK, 15 September 2017 – A large campaign to get 150,000 primary school-aged children back to the classroom has kicked off in the volatile Kasai region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) following months of clashes between militias and security forces that have displaced thousands of families and left 850,000 children without access to essential services like education and healthcare.

UNICEF estimates that in the five provinces hit hardest by the crisis – Kasai, Kasai Central, Kasai Oriental, Sankuru and Lomami – 440,000 children were prevented from finishing the previous school year because of insecurity. Since the start of the crisis, more than 400 schools have been attacked, and the fear of violence means that parents are reluctant to send their children to school.

“It is crucial for children to return to school to restore a sense of normalcy in their lives after months of fear and uncertainty,” said Dr Tajudeen Oyewale, Acting Representative of UNICEF in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The back-to-school campaign carried out by UNICEF and it partners across the Kasai region includes communication activities encouraging parents to enroll their children, distribution of school material for the most vulnerable children and training for 2,750 teachers in peace-education and psychosocial support.

In order to create a safe return to school, UNICEF supported the training of teachers and conducted awareness raising of communities on risks related to mines and war remnants in the school environment.

The violence that started a year ago has expanded throughout the Kasai region and even beyond, forcing thousands of children and their families to flee into the bush to escape the fighting. 

“Children who have returned home after hiding for months all speak of their eagerness to be back in school,” said Oyewale. “The same goes for all the children who have been compelled to take part in the hostilities in one way or another. They are looking to the future, and they know education is a way forward.”

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Editor’s note

Until now, UNICEF and its partners have reached more than 500,000 people affected by the crisis in the Kasai region with life-saving interventions, multi-purpose cash transfers, education material, essential non-food items and child protection interventions. In early September, UNICEF shipped 35 tons of non-food items, and water and nutrition supplies donated by Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA)/USAID to the Kasai benefitting 120,000 displaced people.

For more information, please contact:

Yves Willemot, UNICEF DRC, +243 81 88 46 746, ywillemot@unicef.org

Thierry Delvigne-Jean, UNICEF Dakar, +221 778192300, tdelvignejean@unicef.org;

Christopher Tidey, UNICEF New York, + 1 917 340 3017, ctidey@unicef.org;

Suzanne Moody, UNICEF Johannesburg, + 2779 495 5935, smoody@unicef.org;

Christophe Boulierac, UNICEF Geneva, +41 79 963 92 44, cboulierac@unicef.org;

Marixie Mercado, UNICEF Geneva, mmercado@unicef.org.

 

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