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Eritrea: College of health science and technology graduates 367 students

África/Eritrea/10 Julio 2016/Fuente y Autor:Shabait

Resumen: El Colegio asmara de Ciencia y Tecnología de la Salud graduó el 2 de julio a 367 estudiantes en los diferentes campos de estudio. 40% de los graduados son mujeres, 124 de los estudiantes graduados en grado y 243 en Diploma.

The Asmara College of Health Science and Technology graduated on 2 July 367 students in different fields of study. 40% of the graduates are females. 124 of the students graduated in Degree and 243 in Diploma.

At the graduation ceremony conducted at the Asmara University premises, Prof. Tadesse Mehari, Executive Director of the Commission of Higher Board of Education, congratulated the students on the special day of their education.

The Dean of the Asmara College of Health Science and Technology, Dr. Ghidei Gebrehannes pointed out that the college has registered a commendable progress in terms of upgrading the human resources development and thus improving the health care services nationwide. He further called on the graduates to live up to the people’s expectations.

Noting that the Government is giving utmost priority to ensuring the health of the society, Ms. Amina Nur-Husein, the Minister of Health, indicated that the graduates assigned to the different parts of the country are significantly contributing to the improvement of the health care provision to the society.

The Minister further called on the graduates to serve their people with honesty and dedication.

The graduates on their part expressed appreciation for the opportunity they were provided and reiterated readiness to live up to expectations.

The Asmara College of Health Science and Technology has so far graduated 2,950 students since its establishment in 1999.

Fuente de la noticia: http://www.shabait.com/news/local-news/22121-college-of-health-science-and-technology-graduates-367-students

Fuente de la imagen: http://www.shabait.com/images/stories/sawa/july-5-news-health1.jpg

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Honduras: Asesinada Lesbia Yaneth, luchadora y compañera de Berta Cáceres

Centro América/Honduras/10 Julio 2016/Fuente y Autor:Kaos en la Red

Ha ocurrido otra vez. Cuatro meses después del asesinato de la hondureña Berta Cáceres, ha aparecido muerta Lesbia Yaneth, lideresa indígena y también integrante del Consejo Cívico de Organizaciones Populares e Indígenas de Honduras (COPINH). La defensora medioambiental hondureña militaba de forma activa contra la construcción de represas de los ríos de su municipio y  estaba inmersa en un proceso de lucha contra la construcción de un proyecto hidroeléctrico en San José (La Paz), según ha confirmado el COPINH en un comunicado.

El cuerpo sin vida de Lesbia Yaneth Urquía apareció este miércoles en el vertedero municipal de Marcala, en el departamento de La Paz. Según la versión recabada por las autoridades policiales, la mujer salió de su casa el pasado martes alrededor de las 5:00 de la tarde en su bicicleta, informa el diario local El Heraldo. Como no llegaba a casa, sus familiares comenzaron a buscarla y hasta que fue localizada sin vida.

El asesinato de Yaneth ha tenido lugar en el marco de un proceso de ‘consulta’ llevado a cabo por el Gobierno de Honduras acerca de la aprobación del proyecto de ley del Mecanismo de la Consulta Previa, Libre e Informada, por la que llevan años luchando las comunidades indígenas en Honduras. Se trata de un derecho amparado por el Convenio 169 de la Organización Internacional del Trabajo (OIT).

Según aseguran desde el COPINH, “las reuniones con las que el gobierno pretende impulsar su propuesta de ley se llevaron a cabo en el municipio de Marcala -donde ha aparecido asesinada Lesbia Yaneth- los días 4 y 5 de julio.

El proyecto hidroeléctrico Aurora I, contra el que estaba luchando Lesbia Yaneth, pretende ser instalado en el municipio de San José, La Paz. Según el COPINH,  “la presidenta del Partido Nacional y vicepresidenta del Congreso Nacional, Gladys Aurora López” tienen una “vinculación directa” con la construcción de la represa.

Violencia contra los ambientalistas en Honduras

En marzo de este año, la líder indígena y presidenta del COPINH, Berta Cáceres, fue asesinada. Su caso despertó un fuerte movimiento de solidaridad y presión internacional, que de momento no ha frenado los asesinatos a defensores del medioambiente y los derechos humanos en Centroamérica. Recientemente, un exsoldado hondureño reveló a The Guardian que el nombre de Berta Cáceres figuraba desde hacía meses en una lista negra en manos de una unidad especial del ejército hondureño entrenada por Estados Unidos.

Dos semanas después del asesinato de Cáceres, Nelson García, compañero en la defensa del medioambiente, también líder regional del COPINH, fue abatido por varios tiros cuando se dirigía hacia su casa después de participar en una protesta contra el desalojo forzoso de un centenar de familias.

La persecución y violencia contra quienes defienden el medio ambiente es una constante en aquellos países donde empresas transnacionales extractivas, hidroeléctricas o del sector agroindustrial tienen intereses, muchas veces en connivencia con los poderes políticos y financieros.

Un total de 185 personas fueron asesinadas en 2015 en todo el mundo por su implicación en la defensa de la naturaleza, según el último informe de  Global Witness. El año pasado, los países más peligrosos para los defensores del medio ambiente fueron Brasil, con 50 muertes, y Filipinas, con 33.

“La muerte de Lesbia Yaneth constituye un feminicidio político que busca callar las voces de las mujeres que con coraje y valentía defienden sus derechos en contra del sistema patriarcal, racista y capitalista, que cada vez más se acerca a la destrucción de nuestro planeta”, han lamentado los integrantes del COPINH.

Fuente de la noticia: http://kaosenlared.net/otro-asesinato-en-honduras-lesbia-yaneth-luchadora-y-companera-de-berta-caceres/

Fuente de la imagen:https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTb6wT-OHrbcEZTeph_XwXIjQLTdk2aDXPy8hOvC78p7SiO98M_dw

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UNESCO: Nueva y creadora estrategia de aprendizaje se aplica a más de 30.000 alumnos palestinos

10 Julio 2016/Fuente y Autor: UNESCO

El método, consistente en colocar a los niños en el eje de su propio aprendizaje, ha sido un éxito clamoroso en 119 escuelas piloto de la Ribera Occidental y Gaza.

Más de 30.000 alumnos y sus docentes se han beneficiado del programa, que se aplicó de 2013 a 2016, como parte de la iniciativa Educación para Todos en Palestina, coordinada por la Oficina de la UNESCO en Ramallah, en colaboración con el Ministerio de Educación y Educación Superior y el Organismo de Obras Públicas y Socorro de las Naciones Unidas para los Refugiados de Palestina en el Cercano Oriente (OOPS).

El programa proporcionó formación a los docentes sobre la manera de planificar y presentar sus clases de forma dinámica, con la participación activa de los estudiantes en su propio aprendizaje, mediante actividades de acopio de información, comunicación, análisis crítico, solución de problemas y planificación.

El aprendizaje fue de índole multidisciplinaria, mediante el uso de la lengua árabe, el arte, la ciencia, la religión, las matemáticas, la historia y la geografía, y se centró en temas escogidos por los propios alumnos, desde el medio ambiente hasta los derechos de la infancia, pasando por los animales, la música, la naturaleza, la paz, el género y la cultura.

El cambio trajo consigo nuevas ideas

Los niños que asistían a escuelas piloto en la Ribera Occidental y en Gaza notaron de inmediato los cambios ocurridos en sus docentes y escuelas, así como en sus comunidades.

Khalil, de 10 años de edad, que cursa estudios en la escuela Hafeth Abdul Nabi de Hebrón y que es discapacitado de nacimiento, señaló: “Nuestro profesor empezó a enseñar de otra manera y nos dio inspiración, a mí y a otros alumnos, para realizar un proyecto”.

Él y otros estudiantes concibieron la idea de hacer que la escuela fuera más ecológica mediante la plantación de verduras en un huerto escolar, con la ayuda de los padres, que aportaron las semillas. Su amiga Nadia y otros condiscípulos le ayudaron en la tarea.

Al respecto, Khalil declaró: “Me siento feliz porque puedo plantar semillas y cultivar plantas, aunque estoy en una silla de ruedas. Y estoy aún más feliz porque nada me ha impedido participar y compartir con mis colegas del aula”.

En la escuela, los alumnos de cuarto grado adquirieron conocimientos acerca de las estaciones y las frutas mediante canciones seguidas de una composición de textos o por medio del trabajo colectivo en la fabricación de pulseras hechas con semillas o el dibujo de plantas de temporada.

En la escuela primaria Alestiqlal de Belén, las lecciones de lengua árabe se basaron en la ceremonia de una boda tradicional, con los estudiantes disfrazados de novia, novio, invitados y miembros de la orquesta. Los equipos de trabajo se encargaron de las invitaciones, la elaboración de dulces y la música.

Cuando a los alumnos de la escuela primaria Ateel de Tulkarem se les preguntó si querían volver a los métodos tradicionales de enseñanza, la respuesta fue un sonoro “¡No!”

Fuente de la noticia: http://www.unesco.org/new/es/education/resources/online-materials/single-view/news/fresh_creative_approach_to_learning_works_for_more_than_30/#.V3578xIZk8A

Fuente de la imagen: http://www.unesco.org/new/typo3temp/pics/4055e91c1a.jpg

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Uganda: Universities to benefit from world bank Shs469 billion support

África/Uganda/10 Julio 2016/Fuente: Monitor/Autor: Dorothy Nakaweesi

Resumen: Uganda ha sido seleccionado entre los ocho países de África oriental y meridional para beneficiarse del crédito de $ 140 millones (Shs469b) de la Asociación Internacional de Fomento (AIF) del Grupo del Banco Mundial. De acuerdo con un comunicado emitido del Banco Mundial, esta línea de crédito se canalizará a través de los Southern Africa Centros de Educación Superior del Este y del Proyecto de Excelencia (ACE II) de los países participantes – principalmente de Etiopía, Kenia, Malawi, Mozambique, Ruanda, Tanzania, Uganda y Zambia.

Uganda has been selected among eight Eastern and Southern African Countries to benefit from the $140m (Shs469b) credit of the International Development Association (IDA) of the World Bank Group.

According to a communiqué issued early this week from the World Bank, this line of credit will be channeled through the Eastern and Southern Africa Higher Education Centres of Excellence Project (ACE II) of participating countries – of mainly Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia.

«The objective of the ACE II project is to strengthen selected Eastern and Southern Africa higher education institutions to deliver quality postgraduate education and build collaborative research capacity in the regional priority areas,» the communiqué noted.

The selected ACEs are expected to address specific development challenges facing the region through graduate training in Master’s, PhD, and short-term courses and applied research in the form of partnerships and collaborations with other institutions and the private sector.

A total of 24 Africa Centres of Excellence (ACE) will each be funded up to $6m (Shs20b) over the project period of five years.

It is envisaged that at the end of the project the centres will have developed sufficient capacity to become sustainable regional hubs for training and research in their specialised fields, capable of leading efforts to address priority development challenges and improve lives in the region.

The ACE II project is expected to close in October 2021.

Criteria

The ACEs were selected through an open, objective, transparent and merit-based competitive process based on the following criteria like proposal writing that addressed a specific challenge in one of the five priority areas in the region–industry, agriculture, health, education and applied statistics.

Highest quality proposal, hosting institution had evident capacity, selection that provided for geographical balance and the hosting country had International Development Association (IDA) funding eligibility and availability.

ACEs’ Role

According to WB, all these ACEs are expected to perform the following tasks:

– Build institutional capacity to provide quality post-graduate education with relevance to the labour market.

– Build institutional capacity to conduct high quality applied research, relevant to addressing a key development challenge/priority.

– Develop and enhance partnerships with other academic institutions (national, regional and international) to pursue academic excellence.

– Enhance and develop partnerships with industry and the private sector to generate greater impact.

– Improve governance and management of the institution and set up a role model for other higher education institutions.

– Deliver outreach, and create an impact to society by delivering excellent teaching and producing high quality applied research.

Expected results

According to the WB, over the project duration of five years collectively these ACEs are expected to enroll more than 3,500 graduate students in the regional development priority areas.

«Out of which more than 700 will be PhD students and more than 1,000 will be female students,» the statement says.

The ACEs are expected to publish almost 1,500 journal articles, launch more than 300 research collaborations with the private sector and other institutions, and generate almost $30m (Shs100b) in external revenue.

The Inter-University Council for East Africa (IUCEA), a coordinating higher education institution of the East African Community, was selected by the Regional Steering Committee (RSC) of the ACE II project as the Regional Facilitation Unit (RFU).

Beneficiaries

The four ACEs from Uganda to benefit from this programme are:

– Makerere University Centre for Crop Improvement (MaCCI)

– Centre of Materials, Product Development & Nanotechnology (Mapronano)-Makerere University

– African Centre for Agro-ecology & Livelihood Systems (Acalise) – Uganda Martyrs University

– Pharm-Biotechnology & Traditional Medicine Center (Pharmtac) – Mbarara University of Science & Technology

Fuente de la noticia: http://www.monitor.co.ug/Magazines/Jobs-Career/Ugandan-Universities-to-benefit-from-World-Bank-shs469b-support/-/689848/3274706/-/awwl09/-/index.html

Fuente de la imagen: http://www.monitor.co.ug/image/view/-/3274712/highRes/1368810/-/maxw/600/-/113dyx9z/-/job01pix.jpg

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EEUU: Spending on Jails Outpaced Spending on Schools by Three Times Over the Last 30 Years

América del Norte/EEUU/Julio 2016/Autor: Teresa Welsh / Fuente: readersupportednews.org

Resumen:  Durante los últimos 30 años, los gobiernos locales y estatales aumentaron la cantidad que gastan en poner a la gente en la cárcel tres veces más que la cantidad que gastan en la educación de los estudiantes, de acuerdo con un nuevo análisis realizado por el Departamento de Educación.

Over the last 30 years, local and state governments increased how much they spend on putting people in jail three times more than how much they spend on educating students, according to a new analysis by the Department of Education.

The department examined corrections spending and education spending data from 1979-1980 to 2012-2013 and found that over that time, governments increased spending on incarceration by 324 percent (from $17 to $71 billion). This is more than three times the spending increase on education, which only grew 107 percent (from $258 to $534 billion) over the same time period.

All of the 50 states had lower expenditure growth rates for PK-12 education than for corrections. Seven states increased corrections budgets more than five times as quickly than they did K-12 education budgets:  Idaho, Michigan, Montana, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota, and West Virginia . Texas had the largest percentage increase over 30 years, hiking incarceration spending by 850 percent.

“These aren’t just statistics. When I think about the lives of those who are incarcerated, I can’t help but feel disheartened,” Education Secretary John King wrote on Medium. “I can’t help but think about their families, spouses, sons, daughters, and parents — or about the art not created; the entrepreneurial ideas that may never reach the drawing board; the classrooms these Americans will never lead; and the discoveries they’ll never make.”

According to King, more than two-thirds of state prison inmates dropped out of high school. Young black men between ages 20 and 24 without a high school diploma or GED are more likely to be in jail than to have a job.

King also cited research showing a relationship between education rates and incarceration rates: A 10-percent increase in high school graduation rates leads to a 9-percent decrease in the rates of criminal arrest, and reduces murder and assault rates by 20 percent. The department said that increasing the amount of money state and local governments spend on educating students could help decrease the jail population.

“Reducing incarceration rates and redirecting some of the funds currently spent on corrections in order to make investments in education that we know work,” the Department of Education report said, “could provide a more positive and potentially more effective approach to both reducing crime and increasing opportunity among at-risk youth, particularly if in the PK–12 context the redirected funds are focused on high-poverty schools.”

Some of those education investments include increasing teacher salaries for those willing to work in “hard-to-staff” schools and increasing access to high-quality preschool. According to the report, “all too often” children who grow up in poor communities do poorly in school and are disproportionately arrested and incarcerated as teens and young adults.

The U.S. has the highest rates of incarceration in the world, with more than 2 million people jailed across the country. The U.S. is only 5 percent of the world’s population, but has 20 percent of its incarcerated population.

Fuente de la noticia: http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/37897-spending-on-jails-outpaced-spending-on-schools-by-three-times-over-the-last-30-years

Fuente de la imagen: http://readersupportednews.org/images/stories/article_imgs21/021768-jail-070816.jpg

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Reino Unido: The Think Project, Brexit and the urgent need for better citizenship education

Europa/Reino Unido/Julio 2016/Autor: Rocio Cifuentes  / Fuente: opendemocracy.ne

Resumen: The Think Project in Gales, que nace de un proyecto para combatir el naciente extremismo islámico, demuestra que la discusión abierta puede aprovechar eficazmente a los jóvenes en riesgo de las ideologías de extrema derecha.

Last Friday’s momentous decision by the majority of the voting UK population to leave the EU was shocking, but, in retrospect, not surprising. It is now glaringly obvious that too many people for too long have been without prospects, without education and without hope. For these people, the benefits of the EU – including the possibility to live and work in one of 27 countries, or the many jobs it funded, were simply never considered as relevant or accessible to them. The imagined disadvantages however – of too many immigrants, and EU bureaucracy – were shouted out to them daily for more than a decade through the populist mainstream media, and legitimised more recently by opportunist mainstream politicians anxious to seem in touch with their concerns.

Indeed Brexit is just a moment on a journey which arguably began after the terrorist attacks in New York on 9/11 and London on 7/7. This is when historical dichotomies of east vs west and narratives of anti-Islam were energetically revived, quickly evolving into anti-anyone-who-looks-Muslim as we saw with the mistaken killing of the Brazilian Jean DeMenezes on the London underground. The global financial crash and acceleration of austerity measures in the UK offered the perfect storm in which foreigners, asylum seekers and Muslims could all be blamed for ‘taking all the jobs and all the houses’.

Preventing extremism with dialogue
In this UK context of increasing racism, xenophobia and Islamophobia, the Ethnic Youth Support Team – a charity established in 2005 to support young ethnic minorities living in Wales – saw a need to do something more practical than simply support victims of, or condemn or report racist hate crime. We knew from our experience delivering projects to address Islamist extremism that young people’s resilience can be increased by simply allowing them to air their grievances and concerns in a safe and respectful environment, coupled with giving them facts and ideas to counter extremist narratives. We also knew, from 10 years of working with a wide range of young people that, given the time, space and opportunity, most have a huge capacity to learn and to change.

Consequently, we developed the ‘Think Project’ – a practical educational programme designed to engage with and educate the most ‘disadvantaged’ young people. These are arguably those most vulnerable to far-right messages, and they include those excluded from mainstream schools in alternative education, and those in the youth offending system, youth prisons, and so on. It was designed as a three-day educational programme giving young people the truth about immigration, about asylum and about Muslims, and changing their views on these issues for the better.

Delivered by ethnically diverse and engaging youth workers, its uniqueness stems from the fact that it combines facts about immigration, Islam and asylum, with a positive first-hand experience of diversity. Also central to its success is its emphasis on open dialogue and debate, allowing young people to say openly how they really feel about migration and Muslims, before those views can be debated and challenged.

The proof of the pudding is in the eating
Following a successful pilot, the Think Project was funded by the Big Lottery Innovation Fund, and between 2012 and 2015 438 young people completed the three-day programme. The project’s formal evaluation found a 95% success rate in radically changing young people’s views from being anti to pro-diversity. As one young man from Merthyr Tydfil said: “I’ve always been a bit racist, I’m not gonna lie, but this project has changed the way I look at things, I see everything completely differently now – it’s changed my life”.

What stood out was the degree of misconception surrounding the issues of immigration, asylum and Islam. At the beginning of the programme, 96% of young people did not know what an asylum seeker was, and those who tried to define it understood it as ‘someone who comes here to take our jobs and benefits’. By the end 83% did know what the term meant, and could link it to the human right to be offered sanctuary from war and persecution. One of the most valued parts of the programme, which was mentioned repeatedly by project participants, was the opportunity to meet and hear first-hand the experiences of someone who had sought asylum in the UK, which they said was something they would never forget.

Crucially, and illuminatingly in light of the Brexit decision, the vast majority of young people grossly overestimated the number of people from a different ethnic background to themselves living in Wales – over half of the young participants estimated that this was more than 50%, and about a quarter thought it was over 75%. By the end of the programme 89% correctly put the figure at under 10%. Distorted perceptions of reality chime perfectly with the message of the Brexiteers; the UK is being over-run with immigrants, who are here to take jobs, houses and benefits, and that we are indeed at a ‘breaking point’. However, our programme shows that given the opportunity to learn the facts, and given a positive first-hand experience of meeting and talking to Muslims and refugees, all this can be changed, making these young people significantly more resilient to the messages and ideology of far-right extremists.

The shame is not that the popular press has been allowed to peddle these myths and misrepresentations for so many years, nor that opportunist politicians have capitalised and exploited these stereotypes, turning vulnerable groups into scapegoats for austerity. No, the greatest shame has been that educational institutions, charged with giving young people the tools to become positive and active contributors to society, have failed to give such a large proportion of young people a clear understanding some of the biggest issues and challenges facing contemporary societies. And of course there have been personal tragedies and victims along the way, including most recently the murder of MP Jo Cox at the hands of a far-right terrorist. If we are to avoid more tragic murders, we need to stop such home grown terrorism in its tracks, and prevent it from taking root in the minds and hearts of our young people.

Citizenship, diversity and democracy all need to become core parts of the national curriculum taught to all young people at every stage of their education. However this should not be the preserve of the high-flying elite. Such programmes rather need to reach out in a more targeted and proactive way to those young people who arguably need it the most, including those who miss out on mainstream schooling, and whose life prospects are limited due to other complex factors linked to poverty and deprivation.

There are much wider challenges involved in addressing the entrenched and inter-generational poverty facing many young people today, and it is no wonder that many feel aggrieved. However, it is essential that schools and educational institutions in particular work proactively to counter and challenge the anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim narratives which have been enjoying a resurgence in the UK and across Europe in recent years, and equip young people to question and critique the media, politicians and extremist groups.

The Think Project is one example of such an approach which has been shown to be effective.

Fuente de la noticia: https://www.opendemocracy.net/rocio-cifuentes/think-project-brexit-and-urgent-need-for-better-citizenship-education

Fuente de la imagen: https://cdn.opendemocracy.net/files/u555228/PA-7708644_920.jpg

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Irak: Iraq’s war children face void without world’s help- UNICEF country chief

Asia/Irak/Julio 2016/Autor:  Tom Esslemont / Fuente: Reuters

Resumen:  Una generación de niños se enfrentan a la sombría perspectiva de estar sin una educación, a menos que el gobierno iraquí, sus aliados y los organismos de ayuda reconstruyan las comunidades desgarradas por años de guerra, dijo el viernes un funcionario superior de la agencia oficial de los niños de ONU.

A generation of children face the bleak prospect of going without an education unless the Iraqi government, its allies and aid agencies rebuild communities torn apart by years of war, a senior U.N. children’s agency official said on Friday.
Peter Hawkins, UNICEF representative in Iraq, said recent fighting between government forces, backed by a U.S.-led coalition, and Islamic State fighters, had cut off thousands of children from school and healthcare.
«We are faced with a whole generation losing its way and losing prospects for a healthy future,» said Hawkins in an interview.
Government institutions, faced with financial deficit, are collapsing leaving them dependent on U.N. agencies to provide schools and teacher training, following more than a decade of sectarian violence, Hawkins said during a visit to London.
«What is needed is a cash injection through central government so that we can see it building the systems required for an economic turnover,» he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Conflict has worsened the situation across Iraq, with an estimated 4.7 million children – about a third of all children in the country – in need of assistance, the U.N. agency said in a report last month.
Mass movements of people forced from their homes by fighting in areas like Ramadi and Falluja, west of the capital, Baghdad, put one in five Iraqi children at risk of death, injury, sexual violence, abduction and recruitment into fighting, the report said.
UNICEF said earlier this year that at least 20,000 children in Falluja faced the risk of forced recruitment into fighting and separation from their families.
«A big problem is the lack of schools, with a lack of investment in recent years meaning the systems have all but collapsed,» Hawkins said.
CHILD RECRUITMENT
Thousands of civilians across much of western Iraq’s rugged Anbar province have been driven from their homes into the searing desert heat in the last two years, as a tide of Islamic State fighters took control of key towns and cities.
Despite losing considerable ground on the battlefield, a massive suicide bombing in Baghdad’s central shopping district of Karrada last weekend showed Islamic State remains capable of causing major loss of life.
In Anbar, where fighting has ruined scores of residential areas, many of the people displaced by the militants were now «in limbo», waiting in displacement centres, Hawkins said.
Nearly one in five schools in Iraq is out of use due to conflict. Since 2014 the U.N. has verified 135 attacks on educational facilities and personnel, with nearly 800 facilities taken over as shelters for the displaced, UNICEF data shows.
But Hawkins said he expected thousands of families to soon return home and rebuild their lives.
In Ramadi, where government forces retook control last December, UNICEF will help the ministry of education reestablish schools, provide catch-up lessons and teacher training over the summer after it had been «flattened» by fighting, Hawkins said.
The veteran aid worker, who has also worked in Angola, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan and Pakistan, said his «biggest fear» was that children could get caught up in a battle to retake Mosul, Iraq’s biggest northern city still held by the militants.
Protection of children must be part of a military strategy to retake Mosul, said Hawkins.
Pressures on UNICEF’s $170 million annual budget for 2016-17, which Hawkins said was short by $100 million, were hampering its ability to reach all those affected and may mean some child protection programmes are abandoned, he said.

Fuente de la noticia: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/reuters/article-3681136/Iraqs-war-children-face-void-without-worlds-help-UNICEF-country-chief.html

Fuente de la imagen: https://www.google.co.ve/search?q=guerra+escuela+irak&espv=2&biw=1366&bih=681&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj3282inOXNAhUBJh4KHUrlCjUQ_AUIBigB&dpr=1#imgdii=UXBgFFweGa111M%3A%3BUXBgFFweGa111M%3A%3Bkoao8M7azQY4qM%3A&imgrc=UXBgFFweGa111M%3A

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