NHRC Laments Gov’t Neglect Of 1,000 Education Support Of Displaced Children

By Tom Garba, Yola
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The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), has lamented with a great dismal of government handling the 1000 educational needs and support of displaced children by insurgency in the North East.

The commission made the observation in Yola yesterday, when its officials visited, the Sangere IDP makeshift school, were over 1000 internally displaced children, attend School in that host community, lamented government's dismal handling of the educational needs of IDPs.

It regretted that educational rights which is a fundamental human rights has however not been adequately addressed because of uncoordinated response of government and its agencies towards the plight of displaced persons living in host communities, especially educational needs of their children who are out of school.

The commission's state acting coordinator Ms. Grace Mamza, who spoke during the visit, said it has documented several lapses, indicating inadequate attention to the education of children displaced by insurgency, occurred in the North East.

The NHRC officials who inspected donations of tents and other educational logistics it helped to facilitate to the Sangere IDP schools said the visit to the school was part of its official engagement to provide protection support to victims affected by insurgency in the North East.

" We are here to assess the impact of some of the relief items, like tents and shelters we helped to secure for most of the camps in the state.

And our concern has been the number of kids, who do not have access to education under their present conditions as IDPs. Unfortunately, in most cases a lot of this kids have been kept out of the school system due to government's failure in most cases to provide alternative schooling environment for them," she said.

Peter A. Banu the Head master of the school visited, said the intervention of the NHRC helped to increase enrollment, taking the initial population of kids who came to the center from 570 to above the 1000 mark.

Banu lamented that the school has 54 volunteers but none of them has received any financial assistant or relief material from the government, living off the assistance of NGO's and other public spirited individuals.