Pupils desert schools in Cameroon border towns over the fear of bokoharam attacks
The 2014-2015 academic year began in Cameroon with thousands of
students and teachers deserting schools in towns along the border with
Nigeria’s Borno State, which is home to the Boko Haram terrorist group.
With some schools either destroyed or occupied by the militants, Cameroon officials said they will relocate populations to more secure areas.
In Kolofata this week, 1,000 children were expected to start in government schools, but only a few students showed up.
Foncha Rene, 17, who was one of the few who arrived, said Boko Haram attacks in the area have scared his fellow students away.
“There is no way we can go to school. Some time ago the Boko Haram
kidnapped some students in Nigeria and they have been attacking schools
in the border zone of Cameroon,” Foncha said.
Foncha’s school was
attacked two weeks ago. Walls were knocked down in an armed
confrontation between the Nigerian insurgents and Cameroon soldiers.
English teacher Pamela Singeh, who works at the government school in
Kolofata, spoke to VOA while taking refuge in a military camp.
“I
cannot advise any child to go to school in the border zone because it is
dangerous,” Singeh said. “Look at some classrooms, they have been
destroyed by Boko Haram. They even come here to pray, so I would not
advise or allow any child to go to school in this area.”
In Mora, 100 of the 700 expected students showed up only to find more than 2,000 Nigerian refugees in their school building.
The area’s senior administrative official, Babila Akao, said he has
asked the Ministry of Education to postpone the beginning of the school
year.
“So what we are expected to do is to make proposals to the
ministers of basic and secondary education to postpone the date of the
school year here. People are suffering; the situation is a bad
situation,” Akao said.
Kolofata and Mora are just two of the 25 localities on the border with Nigeria’s Borno State.
Cameroon Secretary of State for Secondary Education Monouna Fotsou said
the government plans to move students for security reasons.
“Where
the situation is so bad, we will de-localise some schools,” Fotsou said.
“At that moment also, we will bring the staff and the students to the
new sites. The objective of this Boko Haram is to traumatise our
citizens.”
Boko Haram group has massacred, kidnapped and looted
villages along Cameroon’s 2,000 kilometer border with Nigeria – with
attacks becoming more frequent as the group has gained momentum in its
fight for its own caliphate in northern Nigeria.
Military action by Cameroon and Nigeria armed forces has done little to stop the violence.
9/10/2014
Pupils desert schools in Cameroon border towns over the fear of bokoharam attacks
COPYRIGHT. FIRSTCLASS NEWSLINE: All rights reserved.Every publication,material and other content on this site should not in anyway be reproduced,published,rewritten or copied wthout adding this site address link,name or giving credit to the site.Failure to do this will attract severe battle in the court of law or reporting of any site found guilty over intellectual property theft.
Like the Post? Kindly share with your Friends.
Related News
Subscribe by Email and Get Free Updates on my Blog
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
To get the world and your friends informed.. Feel free to share every news you read on this site on any web or on any social network by clicking on the SHARE BUTTON ABOVE or share it by any other means but ensure to always share with the site link(web address) for reference and to avoid being SUED for intellectual theft.......post a comment after reading as well..,...we are here to serve you the best
use anonymous to post a comment if necessary