Pakistani children displaced by floods listen to a teacher at an army-run makeshift camp in Sehwan, Sindh province, on September 21, 2010 |
Pakistan floods hit more than 10,000 schools: UN
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's flood crisis has damaged more than 10,000 schools, affecting several million pupils and requiring massive investment in a nation struggling with literacy, the UN warned Wednesday.
Torrential rain began falling in northern Pakistan in July and the floods have since moved slowly south, wiping out villages and farmland, and affecting an area roughly the size of England.
“Five to six per cent of all schools have been damaged by the floods. This means that between 1.5 to 2.5 million students have been affected,” Umar Amal, an official with UNESCO, told a news conference.
“That number can rise and it will rise,” he said, unable to estimate how much it would cost to repair the damaged infrastructure.
The United Nations has issued a record two-billion-dollar appeal to cope the disaster, which UN agencies say affected 21 million people and and left 12 million in need of emergency food aid.
Amal said more than 9,780 government schools were damaged - 2,700 fully and 7,000 partially.
The number of private schools affected - a statistic he said was not yet available - would push the figure beyond 10,000, he said.
The UN Children's Fund has said over 10 million children have been affected by the flooding, including 2.8 million under five-year-olds.
Education standards are poor in much of Pakistan, particularly in the most impoverished, rural areas worst hit by the floods.
Primary school enrollment is around 57 per cent and government expenditure on education accounts for just 2.1 per cent of Gross Domestic Product.
The overall adult literacy rate is 57 per cent and Pakistan has three years to meet a Millennium Development Goal target of 88 per cent.
But many of the flood-affected areas have far worse rates - for example in rural parts of southwestern province Baluchistan female literacy can be as low as seven percent, Amal said.
“Already before the floods, they were lagging behind... If 9,000 schools are partially damaged and 2,000 schools fully damaged you need a huge investment in education to re-activate it,” he warned.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said a further 5,563 schools are still being used to shelter about 567,000 people displaced in the crisis. – AFP
Torrential rain began falling in northern Pakistan in July and the floods have since moved slowly south, wiping out villages and farmland, and affecting an area roughly the size of England.
“Five to six per cent of all schools have been damaged by the floods. This means that between 1.5 to 2.5 million students have been affected,” Umar Amal, an official with UNESCO, told a news conference.
“That number can rise and it will rise,” he said, unable to estimate how much it would cost to repair the damaged infrastructure.
The United Nations has issued a record two-billion-dollar appeal to cope the disaster, which UN agencies say affected 21 million people and and left 12 million in need of emergency food aid.
Amal said more than 9,780 government schools were damaged - 2,700 fully and 7,000 partially.
The number of private schools affected - a statistic he said was not yet available - would push the figure beyond 10,000, he said.
The UN Children's Fund has said over 10 million children have been affected by the flooding, including 2.8 million under five-year-olds.
Education standards are poor in much of Pakistan, particularly in the most impoverished, rural areas worst hit by the floods.
Primary school enrollment is around 57 per cent and government expenditure on education accounts for just 2.1 per cent of Gross Domestic Product.
The overall adult literacy rate is 57 per cent and Pakistan has three years to meet a Millennium Development Goal target of 88 per cent.
But many of the flood-affected areas have far worse rates - for example in rural parts of southwestern province Baluchistan female literacy can be as low as seven percent, Amal said.
“Already before the floods, they were lagging behind... If 9,000 schools are partially damaged and 2,000 schools fully damaged you need a huge investment in education to re-activate it,” he warned.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said a further 5,563 schools are still being used to shelter about 567,000 people displaced in the crisis. – AFP
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