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Gazas children have missed 2 years of school. Truce wont undo damage

Gazas children have missed 2 years of school. Truce wont undo damage

News182 days ago
Khan Younis (Gaza Strip), Jul 21 (AP) Two years ago, Sarah Qanan was a star high school student preparing for final exams and dreaming of becoming a doctor. Today, the 18-year-old lives in a sweltering tent in the Gaza Strip and says she is just trying to stay alive.
She's part of a generation of Palestinians from grade school through university who have had virtually no access to education in the territory since the war began in October 2023. Classes were suspended that month and schools were transformed into crowded shelters as hundreds of thousands fled their homes at the start of Israel's campaign of retaliation after Hamas Oct 7, 2023, attack.
The closure of schools has removed a key social outlet for young people as they grapple with war, hunger and displacement. For younger children, it has meant missing out on basic skills like reading and simple arithmetic. For older students, advanced subjects, graduation exams and college applications have all been put on hold.
Even if negotiations lead to another ceasefire, it's unclear when anything in Gaza will be rebuilt. Vast areas have been completely destroyed, and the U.N. children's agency estimates that nearly 90% of schools will need substantial reconstruction before they can function again.
Like many in Gaza, Qanan's family has been displaced multiple times and is now living in a tent. When an Israeli airstrike destroyed their home in early 2024, she dug through the rubble in search of her books, but 'there was nothing left." 'My sole dream was to study medicine," Qanan said. 'I stopped thinking about it. All my thoughts now are about how to survive." Hundreds of thousands out of school More than 650,000 students have had no access to education since the start of the war, according to the UN children's agency, UNICEF. That includes nearly 40,000 students who were unable to take university entry exams that largely determine their career prospects.
It's the first time in decades that the exams were not administered in Gaza.
Israel's bombardment and ground operations have killed tens of thousands of Palestinians and displaced 90% of Gaza's population. School-age children in crowded shelters and tent camps are often forced to help their families find food, water and firewood. A complete Israeli blockade imposed in early March that was only slightly eased 2 ½ months later has driven the territory to the brink of famine.
Local education officials, working with UNICEF and other aid groups, set up hundreds of learning spaces to try and provide education during the war.
'We're trying to salvage what we can of the educational process, so that the next generation doesn't slip through our fingers," said Mohamed al-Asouli, head of the education department in the southern city of Khan Younis.
During a six-week ceasefire in January and February, some 600 learning spaces provided lessons for around 173,000 children, according to UNICEF. But since March, when Israel ended the truce with a surprise bombardment, nearly half have shut down.
'The impact goes beyond learning losses," said Rosalia Bollen, a UNICEF spokeswoman.
'Children in Gaza have been trapped in a cycle not just of exposure to unprecedented violence, but also a cycle of fear, of toxic stress, of anxiety." Two years of my life are gone Some have tried to continue their studies through online learning, but it's not easy in Gaza, where there has been no central electricity since the start of the war. Palestinians must use solar panels or hard-to-find generators to charge their phones, and internet is unreliable.
'The mobile phone is not always charged, and we only have one at home," said Nesma Zouaroub, a mother of four school-age children. She said her youngest son should be in second grade but does not know how to read or write.
'The children's future is ruined," she said.
Ola Shaban tried to continue her civil engineering studies online through her university after the campus was destroyed by Israeli forces in April 2024. She had to walk long distances to get a signal in her hometown near Khan Younis, and she eventually gave up.
'I couldn't continue because of lack of internet, continuous displacement and the constant sense of fear," she said. 'Two years of my life are gone." Israel's offensive has killed over 57,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. The ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government, does not differentiate between combatants and civilians but says over half the dead are women and children. Its figures are used by the UN and other international organisations as the most reliable statistics on war casualties.
Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people in the Oct 7 attack and abducted 251. They are still holding 50 hostages, less than half believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire deals or other agreements.
Qanan's father, Ibrahim, a local journalist, said his family did everything it could to support Sarah's ambition to study medicine, only to see it go up in smoke when the war broke out.
'The war stunned us and turned our life upside down," the father of six said. 'Our dreams and hopes were buried in the rubble of our home." (AP) NSA NSA
(This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed - PTI) view comments
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Tiny Pacific nation of Vanuatu turns to world court as climate disasters mount

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Bangladesh declares mourning day after deadly jet crash claims 31 lives
Bangladesh declares mourning day after deadly jet crash claims 31 lives

First Post

time19 hours ago

  • First Post

Bangladesh declares mourning day after deadly jet crash claims 31 lives

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Bangladesh Air Force jet crash: death toll rises to 27, over 170 injured — here's what we know so far
Bangladesh Air Force jet crash: death toll rises to 27, over 170 injured — here's what we know so far

Indian Express

timea day ago

  • Indian Express

Bangladesh Air Force jet crash: death toll rises to 27, over 170 injured — here's what we know so far

In one of the deadliest crashes Dhaka has seen, a Bangladesh Air Force jet crashed into a private school campus in the country's capital on Monday afternoon. The death toll stood at 27, while over 170 others are said to be injured, as per news agency AP. The jet experienced a technical problem shortly after take-off, resulting in the accident at Milestone School and College in the northern Uttara area, a military spokesperson said. The military said in a statement that the F-7 BGI training aircraft had taken off at 1:06 p.m. local time (0706 GMT) before crashing. Detailing the crash on Monday, Lieutenant Colonel Sami Ud Dowla Chowdhury said: 'The pilot…made a valiant attempt to divert the aircraft away from densely populated areas. Despite his best efforts, the aircraft…crashed into a two-storey building belonging to Milestone School and College,' Reuters reported. 📌A Chinese variant of the fighter jet F-7 BGI crashed into the campus of Milestone School and College in the Uttara locality of Dhaka. The jet took off around 1:07pm (local time) on Monday from the Bangladesh Air Force base in Kurmitola, Dhaka for a routine training mission but faced a mechanical failure. 📌The jet, which has been described as a training aircraft by the officials, caught fire soon after crashing in the school campus in Dhaka. As per a fire official, the pilot was among the dead. And according to the special assistant to the chief advisor for health, the death toll in the crash has gone up to 27, while 171 people, mostly students, have been injured. 📌Bangladesh military has said that the pilot tried to avoid densely populated areas after the F-7 jet faced technical difficulties but the training aircraft hit a two-storey school building. The military added that the aircraft experienced a 'technical malfunction' and the crash will be investigated by a high-level Air Force committee. 📌The crash took place on the campus of Milestone school which has reportedly 2,000 students enrolled. The school describes itself as having over two decades of experience in leading private educational institutes. The Uttara neighborhood, where the crash happened, is a metropolitan region with over 20 million people. 📌The interim Bangladesh government has announced a national day of mourning on Tuesday, with flags to fly at half-staff throughout the country. Bangladesh's interim leader Muhammad Yunus promised a full investigation into the crash. 'Necessary measures will be taken to investigate the cause of the accident and ensure all kinds of assistance,' he said, as quoted by Reuters. 📌Prime Minister Narendra Modi also responded to the tragic plane crash in Dhaka by expressing his condolences on social media. 'Deeply shocked and saddened at the loss of lives, many of them young students, in a tragic air crash in Dhaka,' PM Modi said in a post on X. 'Our hearts go out to the bereaved families. We pray for the swift recovery of those injured.' (with inputs from AP)

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