Thousands of children of Burundian refugees in Rwanda have been
integrated into Rwandan schools, according to the Rwanda humanitarian
situation report released by the United Nations Children’s Fund
(UNICEF).
The report that was released to the media on Thursday indicates that
about 19,422 students are enrolled in Primary One to Secondary Six
grades in the Rwandan schools across the country.
Since July last year, all Burundian children of school-going age
started going through a five-month induction programme aimed at
acquainting them with the Rwandan education system before starting
school this year.
Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Antoine Ruvebana, permanent
secretary of Rwanda ministry of disaster management and refugee affairs
said that all school-age Burundi refugee children have been enrolled in
the Rwandan schools.
“Education is considered to be an essential component for the quality
of life. These children deserve quality life; they are supposed to be
in schools not in refugee camps,” he noted.
Ruvebana stated that increased funding and cooperation is needed to
ensure that all refugee children are able to access educational
opportunities.
Refugees are entitled to inclusive and quality education as stated by
the 1951 Geneva Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, and the
new UN Sustainable Development Goals.
According to UNICEF report, inadequate teaching and learning materials and the capacity of teachers remain key challenges.
The report further says that the total number of Burundian refugees
in Rwanda has increased to 76,603 with about 48,450 of them living in
Mahama camp, Bugesera district, Eastern province.
UNICEF says that cases of severe acute malnutrition among children
aged 6-59 months living in the refugee camps continue to decline, with
currently only 51 children are undergoing treatment.
“The number of unaccompanied children is gradually decreasing as 62
out of 813 unaccompanied children have been reunified with their
families or relatives in the camp,” reads the UN agency report.
According to the findings, 48 percent of Burundi Refugees in Rwanda are children.
The report says that UNICEF needs 3.4 million U.S dollars to cover the Burundi refugee crisis funding gap.
Source: cctv-africa.com
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