Berliner Boersenzeitung - Fleeing jihadist violence, Niger pupils return to school

EUR -
AED 4.110868
AFN 78.656685
ALL 98.228302
AMD 432.549003
ANG 2.003043
AOA 1026.324118
ARS 1278.74803
AUD 1.747238
AWG 2.017393
AZN 1.901685
BAM 1.956979
BBD 2.262663
BDT 136.162033
BGN 1.956995
BHD 0.421958
BIF 3334.608996
BMD 1.119219
BND 1.455177
BOB 7.743665
BRL 6.341274
BSD 1.120665
BTN 95.80572
BWP 15.153994
BYN 3.667409
BYR 21936.698161
BZD 2.251056
CAD 1.562979
CDF 3213.278226
CHF 0.935218
CLF 0.027485
CLP 1054.707529
CNY 8.06901
CNH 8.076455
COP 4716.793024
CRC 567.636911
CUC 1.119219
CUP 29.659311
CVE 110.331471
CZK 24.866253
DJF 199.560229
DKK 7.460537
DOP 65.949143
DZD 149.059428
EGP 56.085452
ERN 16.788289
ETB 151.289095
FJD 2.544319
FKP 0.842666
GBP 0.841049
GEL 3.066781
GGP 0.842666
GHS 13.896372
GIP 0.842666
GMD 81.141207
GNF 9704.846861
GTQ 8.603953
GYD 234.461255
HKD 8.752306
HNL 29.159307
HRK 7.54024
HTG 146.638345
HUF 402.911083
IDR 18421.28632
ILS 3.968712
IMP 0.842666
INR 95.656707
IQD 1468.084474
IRR 47133.122717
ISK 145.878764
JEP 0.842666
JMD 178.646032
JOD 0.79354
JPY 162.45355
KES 144.603684
KGS 97.876372
KHR 4484.70189
KMF 494.133274
KPW 1007.297414
KRW 1564.786122
KWD 0.343902
KYD 0.933963
KZT 571.384241
LAK 24236.601779
LBP 100410.293998
LKR 335.322021
LRD 224.125028
LSL 20.230088
LTL 3.304763
LVL 0.677004
LYD 6.182725
MAD 10.396464
MDL 19.521761
MGA 5022.981307
MKD 61.556861
MMK 2350.005685
MNT 3999.833922
MOP 9.020835
MRU 44.355326
MUR 51.730749
MVR 17.302942
MWK 1943.153326
MXN 21.792096
MYR 4.821583
MZN 71.515604
NAD 20.230088
NGN 1797.902337
NIO 41.234843
NOK 11.612784
NPR 153.287982
NZD 1.900574
OMR 0.430834
PAB 1.120675
PEN 4.131689
PGK 4.657765
PHP 62.518505
PKR 315.572303
PLN 4.286997
PYG 8947.390517
QAR 4.084451
RON 5.051149
RSD 117.30067
RUB 90.491049
RWF 1604.752474
SAR 4.197851
SBD 9.334769
SCR 15.912549
SDG 672.093754
SEK 10.928617
SGD 1.45311
SHP 0.879531
SLE 25.409208
SLL 23469.469223
SOS 640.480146
SRD 40.942719
STD 23165.579689
SVC 9.805908
SYP 14551.923154
SZL 20.23501
THB 37.163112
TJS 11.553861
TMT 3.922864
TND 3.378745
TOP 2.621323
TRY 43.482145
TTD 7.60158
TWD 33.807024
TZS 3005.10416
UAH 46.51781
UGX 4100.470403
USD 1.119219
UYU 46.626841
UZS 14529.753713
VES 105.437425
VND 29045.979116
VUV 135.562386
WST 3.109782
XAF 656.346564
XAG 0.034514
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.024746
XDR 0.816284
XOF 656.352431
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.178333
ZAR 20.181594
ZMK 10074.316941
ZMW 30.123148
ZWL 360.388156
  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.05

    -0.23%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    10.5

    0%

  • BCC

    0.9200

    91.91

    +1%

  • GSK

    0.4991

    37.64

    +1.33%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    9.45

    +1.9%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    10.72

    +0.19%

  • RBGPF

    64.5000

    64.5

    +100%

  • NGG

    1.2500

    71.28

    +1.75%

  • RELX

    0.5300

    54.57

    +0.97%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    12.9

    +1.24%

  • CMSD

    0.0472

    22.06

    +0.21%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    21.56

    -0.32%

  • BP

    0.1300

    29.76

    +0.44%

  • BTI

    1.2700

    42.64

    +2.98%

  • RIO

    -0.1100

    62.64

    -0.18%

  • AZN

    0.8500

    68.81

    +1.24%

Fleeing jihadist violence, Niger pupils return to school
Fleeing jihadist violence, Niger pupils return to school / Photo: BOUREIMA HAMA - AFP

Fleeing jihadist violence, Niger pupils return to school

With blue schoolbags bouncing off their backs, hundreds of schoolchildren hurtle down small sand dunes eager to attend class again.

Text size:

But these boys and girls are survivors of suffering and trauma that few children of their age could conceive.

Their new school is in the town of Ouallam in southwestern Niger, a region that for five years has been plagued by attacks unleashed by groups linked with Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group.

The pupils come from 18 villages near Mali whose inhabitants fled to the relative safety of Ouallam in 2021 after jihadist killings that also forced the closure of schools.

The UN children's agency UNICEF says 817 schools with 72,421 pupils -- including 34,464 girls -- have closed in Niger, mostly in the Tillaberi, the border region where Ouallam is located.

In Ouallam alone, around one hundred schools have had to shut their doors.

The chronic insecurity has prompted the authorities to create dedicated educational centres where displaced children can resume their schooling, Mahamadou Illo Abarchi, an education official in Ouallam, told AFP.

Some 17,000 pupils have already re-entered the school system and another 55,300 are set to follow suit, enrolling in around 20 centres for displaced children across southwestern Niger, the government says.

- 'Killed by the bandits' -

In Ouallam, almost 1,600 schoolchildren -- some of whom had not attended class for three years -- are registered with three centres built near a site for displaced people.

The sites offer free canteens, a vital resource for families who have escaped violence in a nation that, by the UN's human development index, is the poorest in the world.

Lessons take place in shelters or classrooms equipped with tables and benches provided by NGOs. But in others, the pupils must learn on the floor.

Fatima and Aissa, two young girls from Ngaba, a settlement near Mali, expressed their delight at returning to school as they clutched their slate boards.

But the euphoria of returning to school cannot wipe out the painful memories.

"My uncle was a village chief, he was killed by the bandits in front of our eyes," said Mariama, who also lived in Ngaba. "There was a lot of blood."

Nassirou, Malick, Hasane, Abdou and their parents fled their village of Adabdab on foot after a series of jihadist attacks, the last of which on October 22 claimed the lives of 11 civilians.

"It was the bandits who chased us away, they killed many men," Nassirou said quietly in the playground.

Moussa, who hails from a hamlet in the same area, said: "I'm not afraid anymore, I no longer hide when I hear the sound of motorcycles" often used by jihadists to attack villages.

- 'Encouraging results' -

When they first arrived at the new centres, many children showed "signs of distress and trauma, others were very aggressive", said education official Morou Chaibou.

He spoke of how some pupils recounted harrowing memories -- including seeing their parents being shot.

Adamou Dari, the regional director of the centres, said they also offered the children psychological and social support to give them some stability after their traumatic experience.

"Now they concentrate in class and the results are encouraging," said a teacher as she played in the courtyard with some of her pupils.

Absenteeism is minor but a source of worry, Dari said, explaining that some pupils played truant to work in the town and feed their families.

Harlem Desir of the International Rescue Committee, who recently visited the site for displaced people in Ouallam, said impoverished families often put their children to work or marry their daughters at a young age.

In 2021, Amnesty International warned that boys aged between 15 and 17 were filling the ranks of armed groups, especially the Al-Qaeda-affiliated GSIM, in the Torodi region near Burkina Faso -- with the blessing of their parents.

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)