Dark Mode
Friday, 15 November 2024
Logo
UNICEF says 18.5 million children in Nigeria are out of school
School children play outside as schools reopen in Nigeria amid the coronavirus-disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Abuja, Nigeria January 18, 2021. (Reuters)

The Africanews reported, according to the United Nations children’s fund (UNICEF), in Nigeria, 18.5 million children, are out of school, a figure that has risen since 2001.

Last year, Unicef estimated that 10.5 million children were out of school in Africa's most populous country.

Rahama Farah, head of the UNICEF office in Kano (North), told journalists on Wednesday (May 11): "Currently in Nigeria, there are 18.5 million children out of school, 60% of whom (more than 10 million) are girls."

Farah said, the numerous attacks on schools by jihadists and criminal gangs in the north have particularly harmed children's education.

Farah insisted: "These attacks have created a precarious learning environment, discouraging parents and guardians from sending their children to school."

In Nigeria, 18.5 million children, are out of school, a figure that has risen since 2001 - Photo: Pixabay

Since Boko Haram abducted 200 schoolgirls in the northeastern town of Chibok in 2014, dozens of schools have been targeted for similar mass abductions.

Last year, about 1,500 students were kidnapped by gunmen, according to UNICEF. While most of the young hostages have since been released for ransom, some still remain in captivity in forests, havens of armed groups.

Daesh murders 20 Nigerian Christians in ‘revenge’ for setbacks in Middle East

In the predominantly Muslim north, Mr Farah said only one in four girls from "poor, rural families" finish secondary school. Insecurity, he said, "accentuates gender inequalities".

According to UNICEF, violence and mass kidnappings have forced the authorities to close more than 11,000 schools in the country since December 2020.

Seven bodies recovered, a dozen missing after boat capsizes in Nigeria

The situation has resulted in increasing cases of child marriage and early pregnancy, according to the UN agency.

Source: africanews