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Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Monday, March 11, 2024

Report: 21% of Rohingya girls have access to education

Dhaka Tribune
Abdul Aziz
Publish : 11 Mar 2024, 

Rohingya children pose with smiles at a school in a refugee camp in Bangladesh. Photo: Courtesy

Only 21% of Rohingya girls between the ages 12-18 years in the Rohingya camps of Cox’s Bazar continue their education, according to the Joint Multi-Sector Needs Assessment (MSNA) report 2022-2023.

Thursday, September 8, 2022

Rohingya plea for education to deter risks of becoming a lost generation & More News Headlines

AA
Md. Kamruzzaman
September 8, 2022 
  
Only education can ensure future leadership for survival as nation, says father of 3

Rohingya plea for education to deter risks of becoming a lost generation
One early afternoon, thousands of Rohingya Muslims in Bangladesh’s sprawling refugee camps had just completed their midday prayers and were moving toward makeshift tents for lunch.

A sweet sound of the recitation of the Quran by a chorus of children was heard from a camp-based mosque in camp no. 12.

The world’s largest refugee settlement in Bangladesh, divided into 34 camps, is currently home to more than 1.2 million Rohingya, most of whom fled a brutal military clampdown in their home country of Myanmar’s Rakhine State in August 2017.

Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Quality And Equality: Education For Rohingya Refugee Girls

Forbes
UNICEF USA
BRANDVOICE
Aug 30, 2022,


How UNICEF is helping make education more inclusive in Rohingya refugee camps in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. 

Rahima Akhter* would do anything to protect her children in the Rohingya refugee camps in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, where they live in a temporary dwelling tightly packed among strangers. She worries especially about her daughter's safety and dignity. Better to keep 14-year-old Nurkolima* at home, Akhter used to think, than let her go to school where she might be the target of unwanted male attention. If keeping Nurkolima safe meant sacrificing her education, then so be it.

Akhter was herself the victim of sexual harassment as a girl in Myanmar. When her parents heard about it, they considered it such a scandal, they married her off as quickly as possible. The memory, the humiliation of it all, haunts her still.

Rohingya refugee camps in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh are home to more than 400,000 school-age children

Saturday, June 25, 2022

PH to start accepting Rohingya refugees -- Locsin

The Manila Times
June 25, 2022


FOREIGN Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. has signed the Legal Framework for the Complementary Pathways (CPath) Program for Rohingya refugees, which will allow the Philippines to accept them into the country where they can also avail of tertiary education training.

The CPath program aims to provide an educational pathway to eligible beneficiaries, utilize a comprehensive approach by engaging relevant government agencies and private institutions, and promote durable solutions by helping beneficiaries achieve self-reliance.

"This initiative concretizes the country's pledge at the first Global Refugee Forum in 2019 to explore complementary pathways for admitting refugees and President Rodrigo Duterte's emphasis on protection for those fleeing for safety," Secretary Locsin said.

Friday, July 9, 2021

EDUCATION CANNOT WAIT ANNOUNCES US$250,000 IN EMERGENCY GRANT FUNDING IN RESPONSE TO DEVASTATING FIRES AT ROHINGYA REFUGEE CAMP IN BANGLADESH

 EDUCATION CANNOT WAIT

Photo: UNICEF/UN0431936/Saeed

With new funding, local non-profit BRAC and partners will rebuild learning centers, provide mental health services for vulnerable children and youth, and build back better

6 July 2021, New York – The massive March fires in the Cox’s Bazaar refugee camp in Bangladesh took 15 lives and affected more than 61,000 Rohingya refugees. In response to the devastating fires, Education Cannot Wait (ECW) announced today a US$250,000 first emergency response grant that will support non-profit BRAC and other local partners in rebuilding learning centers, and building back better from the tragic disaster that continues to put vulnerable refugee children and youth at risk.

While many major international non-profits and UN organizations have already stepped up their response to the fires, smaller organizations like BRAC lack the funds to fully rebuild.

Monday, June 21, 2021

Rohingya in Bangladesh frustrated with lack of formal education

YeniSafak
June 21, 2021
File Photo

Amid mounting frustration, Rohingya rights groups and experts have called on the Bangladesh government to provide refugees with formal education, which is essential for their reintegration and repatriation to Myanmar.

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Rohingya youths: We need education for empowerment

Dhaka Tribune 
Tribune Report
March 29th, 2021

File Photo of a Rohingya camp in Cox's Bazar Mahmud Hossain Opu/Dhaka Tribune 
 
'We need a chance to change our future, and education is the only way'

The Rohingya community needs access to education facilities to become empowered and build a future, Rohingya youths from the refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar said at a webinar on Monday.

The webinar, titled “Camp voices webinar series-3: Strengths and aspirations of Rohingya refugees,” was arranged by the Centre for Peace and Justice (CPJ) of Brac University. The discussion addressed key issues related to the role of the youth in building peace, social cohesion, livelihoods, and education for Rohingya children and girls.

Monday, January 25, 2021

Entire education system in Cox's Bazar under threat: CCNF

The Daily Star

Star Online Report
January 23, 2021 

With a blank look on her face, a Rohingya child stands outside her shelter at Balukhali camp in Cox's Bazar on Sunday. File photo/Anisur Rahman


Cox's Bazar CSO-NGO Forum (CCNF) has called for taking up special rehabilitation programmes for local educational institutions and students affected by the Rohingya influx in Cox's Bazar in 2017.

The network of 50 local NGOs and civil society organisations also demanded introduction of education for Rohingyas with Myanmar curriculum to make Rohingya repatriation sustainable.

The CCNF made the call in a statement on the occasion of International Day of Education on January 24.

Monday, November 30, 2020

Bangladeshi educating Rohingya earns global praise

AA
Md. Kamruzzaman
DHAKA, Bangladesh
30.11.2020


Rima Sultana Rimu on mission to educate Rohingya children in refugee camps

Bangladeshi woman Rima Sultana Rimu, named one of the 100 inspiring and influential women around the world in 2020 by the BBC, dreams of educating Rohingya children.

The daughter of a farmer from the remote southern area of Ramu in Cox’s Bazar district has played a significant role for the last three years in providing education to women and children in Rohingya camps deprived of formal studies.

“As a human being I feel that the people who have taken shelter in my country should enjoy basic human rights like education and I have started my struggle to educate Rohingya children amid various limitations and difficulties,” Rimu told Anadolu Agency.

Thursday, January 30, 2020

UN, humanitarian bodies laud Bangladesh’s decision

The Daily Star 
January 30, 2020
Diplomatic Correspondent

Education for Rohingya Children


The UN and global humanitarian community have lauded Bangladesh’s decision to expand the access to formal education for Rohingya children living in refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar.

The decision was taken on Monday at the meeting of the National Task Force on Rohignya crisis, chaired by Foreign Secretary Masud Bin Momen at the foreign ministry.

In line with the decision, the education sector for the humanitarian response in Cox’s Bazar now plans to pilot the introduction of the Myanmar curriculum in the Rohingya refugee camps starting in April. Initially, it targets 10,000 Rohingya students from sixth to ninth grade.

'Great news': Bangladesh allows education for Rohingya children

Aljazeera
2020.01.30

Under new programme, 10,000 Rohingya boys and girls to be enrolled in grades 6 to 9, a move hailed by rights groups.
Rohingya refugee children attend a class to learn Burmese language at a refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh [File: Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters]


Rights groups and activists have welcomed Bangladesh's decision to allow Rohingya children living in sprawling refugee camps to receive a formal education, calling it a "positive step".

Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya children, who fled a brutal crackdown in neighbouring Myanmar along with their parents in 2017, only receive primary education in temporary learning centres set up by international NGOs and the UN children's agency UNICEF.

Tuesday, January 28, 2020

S. Korea to help Rohingya aiding 50,000 radios and related education

arirang 
2020-01-28


The South Korean government says it will give 50,000 radios to Rohingya Muslims resettling in Myanmar.
These radios are aimed at helping them access information on administrative, health and education matters, among others.
Seoul has invested 500-thousand U.S. dollars to help some 730-thousand Rohingyas, becoming the first country to participate in ASEAN's new support program for the minority group's resettlement.
Korea has been providing the Rohingyas over 16 million dollars via other international organizations. Reporter : 

Bangladesh allows education for Rohingya refugee children

Mail online
By Afp
28 January 2020 
Nearly one million Rohingya, including more than half a million children, live in the crowded camps near the southeastern border with Myanmar

Rohingya children living in Bangladesh refugee camps will be allowed to receive a formal education after a change of heart by Dhaka in a move welcomed by right activists.

Nearly one million Rohingya, including more than half a million children, live in the squalid and crowded camps near the southeastern border with Myanmar, where many had fled from in 2017 after a brutal military crackdown.

Wednesday, December 4, 2019

Rohingya Refugee Children in Bangladesh Are Being Denied an Education, Rights Group Says

TIME
By Amy Gunia
December 3, 2019
Rohingya children in the Balukhali camp in Cox's Bazar Bangladesh on February 14, 2019. Kazi Salahuddin Razu—/NurPhoto/Getty
The Bangladeshi government is violating the right to education of nearly 400,000 Rohingya children residing in the country, a rights group claimed Tuesday.

Rohingya children are prohibited from enrolling in local schools, Human Rights Watch (HRW) says, basing the allegation on interviews with teachers, aid workers, government officials and more than 150 Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh. More than 700,000 mostly-Muslim Rohingya refugees from majority-Buddhist Myanmar’s western­ Rakhine state live in crowded camps in the country.

Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Bangladesh: Rohingya Children Denied Education


HUMAN
RIGHTS
WATCH
 



December 2, 2019
Unlawful Restrictions on Schooling Risk Creating a Lost Generation

(Bangkok) – The government of Bangladesh is blocking aid groups from providing any meaningful education to Rohingya children in refugee camps and banning the children from attending schools outside the camps, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. The government should urgently lift the restrictions that unlawfully deprive almost 400,000 Rohingya refugee children of their right to education.

Friday, October 11, 2019

Rohingyas should be educated in their mother tongue: Dipu Moni

NEWAGE
Staff Correspondent 
Oct 11,2019
Education minister Dipu Moni on Thursday said the Rohingya people in Bangladesh should be educated in their mother language tongue.

She made the comment at a seminar to launch the Global Education Monitoring Report 2019.

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

UN, NGOs accused of bungling effort to educate Rohingya children

Aljazeera
by &
October 8th 2019.

Questions raised over efforts to give Rohingya children and youth formal education under Myanmar curriculum.
According to UNICEF about 461,000 of the 910,000 refugees in Cox's Bazar are children [File: Abir Abdullah/EPA] 

On May 13, a group of Rohingya refugee education leaders had the rare chance to ask some of the questions that had been weighing on their minds for more than two years.

For the first time, they were meeting representatives from the United Nations and international NGOs tasked with providing education to about half a million Rohingya refugee children living in camps in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.

Minutes of the meeting obtained by Al Jazeera, show how the community leaders questioned the officials about the slow effort to give refugees formal education, the absence of a Myanmar curriculum in the camps, and the lack of consultation with the community.


Sunday, August 18, 2019

All must respect Rohingya children’s right to education


NEWAGE
Aug 18,2019
Opinion

THE Rohingyas sheltered in Bangladesh have been in a survival state, especially since 2017 — when the latest large-scale spate of violence against and persecution of them by Myanmar’s military broke out in their native land of Rakhine State — with humanitarian agencies making substantial progress in health care, nutrition, water and sanitation, protection and other basic services. More than a million of them, and about 745,000 of them since August 25, 2017, who live in camps in Cox’s Bazar started fleeing to Bangladesh in phases beginning in the late 1970s. The facilities that they have been afforded, however, might not be adequate but have at least been enough to provide them with survival. Yet there have been some shortcomings on a few fronts and their education has been one among them. By June 2019, as a UNICEF report, ‘Beyond Survival: Rohingya Refugee Children in Bangladesh’ launched marking two years of their latest arrival since August 2017, says, 192,000 Rohingya children aged 4–14 have been provided with non-formal education after having been enrolled in 2,167 learning centres. But the latest assessments show that 640 more learning centres are needed to accommodate 61,400 children aged 3–14. The report, which says that there are 683,000 children among the 1.2 million Rohingyas living in Cox’s Bazar, also talks about a worrying fact — 97 per cent of the children aged 15–18 are still not attending any type of educational facility.

Two years after exodus, Myanmar’s ‘desperate’ Rohingya youth need education, skills: UNICEF

UN News
16 August 2019

The daily struggle to survive for Myanmar’s Rohingya people in one of the world’s largest refugee settlements, has caused “overwhelming” despair and jeopardized the hopes of an entire generation, the head of the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Henrietta Fore, said on Friday. 
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