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How natural disasters in Asia Pacific have left hundreds of thousands out of school

Education funding, Education in emergencies


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A boyswims in floodwaters at Kyaut Ye village in Myanmar

By Alisa Tang (Thomson Reuters Foundation)

From earthquakes in Nepal to flooding in Myanmar, disasters damage or destroy thousands of schools – leaving hundreds of thousands of children unable to go to class. But education is often overlooked in humanitarian responses.

Deadly earthquakes in Nepal last year damaged or destroyedmore than 8200 schools, leaving 870,000 children withoutclassrooms.

Nearly a year on, many children were still taking lessons inmakeshift facilities without walls, exposed to cold winterweather, said in a report on lost educationdue to disasters in the Asia Pacific.

Part of the problem is that less than 2% ofhumanitarian aid is earmarked for education, leading to delaysin the reconstruction and repair of damaged schools, the globalaid agency said.

“Regardless of the size of the disaster – it doesn’t matterif it’s small or big – education is disrupted, and students’lives are impacted,” said Sarah Ireland, the author of thereport, by telephone from Melbourne.

A child walks along a Nepalese street destroyed by the earthquake Picture: A World at School/Claire Wilkinson

The report, to be launched tomorrow, details the impact onschoolchildren of five disasters in 2015, including flooding inMyanmar that put 4100 schools out of action, leaving 250,000children in limbo for several months.

“Education needs to be prioritised as part of a holisticresponse,” said Ireland, the humanitarian advocacy and policyadviser for Save the Children.

“If education is supported before, during, and afterdisasters, it can save lives, protect children and benefit wholecommunities and countries.”

For example, many children attend schools that are not builtto withstand the impact of natural disasters, Ireland said.

Primary school children wear masks while walking home from school in Karo district, North Sumatra province, after the eruption of Mount Sinabung in May

“If you consider how much time a child spends in schools, ifa disaster hits, like an earthquake or a flood, that school islikely to cause injury or loss of life,” she said. “We need toensure the school is a safe place for children to go.”

Schools that are still standing often play an importantrole in the humanitarian response to a disaster, serving as acommunity hub where disaster-hit families can access healthcare,clean water and food in safety.

“If children are in a school … their parents can actuallygo about their business rebuilding their lives, knowing theirchildren are in a safe place and that their children will beless vulnerable to trafficking, abuse or exploitation,” Irelandsaid.

Save the Children’s report – titled Education Disrupted – will be launched in Bangkok on the sidelines of a United Nationsconference on disaster risk reduction.

Ireland said the report aims to provide information thatwill help improve future data collection and thereby improvepost-disaster support and response.

Cyclone damage to a school in VanuataPicture: OCHA

Here are some key facts and figures from Save the Children’s report Education Disrupted.

INDONESIA

Between January and August 2015, Indonesia experienced1160 disasters, including drought, forest fires, volcaniceruptions, landslides and floods

Also during that period, there were 373 floods, affecting607,000 people, according to the (OCHA).

Rains in January 2015 submerged roads in Jakarta and moredownpours in February caused further flooding. It affected 351 schools in northern Jakarta.Inaccessible and submerged, some were closed for up to twoweeks.

VANUATU

The Pacific island nation of Vanuatu is home to about250,000 people, with 64% of the population exposed tonatural hazards each year, including storms, floods, volcaniceruptions and earthquakes.

Cyclone Pam, a category five storm in March 2015, triggeredfloods that destroyed infrastructure, homes and livelihoods,affecting 80% of Vanuatu’s people and leaving half thepopulation in need of emergency assistance.

More than half of schools were damaged or destroyed and34,500 children were affected. Schools were closed for up to 30 days and 34 schools wereused as evacuation centres.

NEPAL

A 7.8 magnitude earthquake on April 25, 2015, followed bya 7.3 magnitude quake on May 12, killed 8900 people,destroyed 605,000 homes and damaged 288,000 more.

About 3.2 million children were affected by the quakesand of those 870,000 were left without permanent classrooms.

More than 8200 public primary and secondary schools weredamaged in the quakes. Almost 52,200 classrooms were damaged or destroyed.

MYANMAR

In June 2015, seasonal rains triggered heavy flooding inparts of Myanmar.

At the end of July, Cyclone Komen brought heavy rains andstrong winds, resulting in severe, widespread flooding thataffected more than nine million people across 12 of the country’s14 states and regions.

From June to October, the floods displaced about 1.7million people and damaged 4116 schools. About 250,000 children could not attend school because ofthe floods.

PHILIPPINES

In 2015, 14 typhoons and tropical storms hit thePhilippines.

Between 2007 and 2011, 10.8 million students in thePhilippines were impacted by disasters and 8472 schools wereused as evacuation centres.

Typhoon Koppu, a category three storm in mid-October, hitCentral Luzon, north of Manila, causing widespread floods andlandslides.

The typhoon displaced one million people and damaged 803schools, which were closed an average of two weeks, while 138schools were used as evacuation centres.

The , the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, corruption and climate change.


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