World News | Pakistan: Sindh Children Deprived of Education as 20,000 Public Schools Destroyed in Floods

Get latest articles and stories on World at LatestLY. Public education -- particularly among poorer sections -- has hardly been a priority with governments. UNICEF reckons that Pakistan has the world's second-highest number of out-of-school children.

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Sindh [Pakistan], April 9 (ANI): Around 20,000 public schools have been destroyed or considerably damaged in Sindh due to floods, depriving hundreds of thousands of poor children of education, and that too, at the most formative stage of their lives, reported Dawn.

Although the provincial government has since declared an 'educational emergency', barring some official meetings and pressers, nothing much has come forth in the form of concrete efforts on the part of the provincial or federal government to rehabilitate these ill-fated schools.

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While the elites are locked in an internecine power struggle, millions of flood-affected, homeless and destitute citizens have been left to fend for themselves, reported Dawn.

Most of these wretched families have been practically forced to cater to their own needs -- food, shelter, health and above all, the education of their psychologically traumatised children.

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Indeed, the prospect of these forgotten children resuming their schooling anytime soon seems rather dim. Although the country is listed among the climatically most vulnerable states, there seems to be hardly any urgency or preparedness on the part of provincial and federal governments to meet the impending, let alone long-term, climatic challenges, reported Dawn.

Public education -- particularly among poorer sections -- has hardly been a government priority. UNICEF reckons that Pakistan has the world's second-highest number of out-of-school children.

The numbers themselves are horrifying: 22.8 million children aged five to 16 or 44 per cent of the total population in this age group are out of school; 5 million children drop out after the primary level; 11.4 million adolescents aged 10 to 14 don't receive any formal education. In Sindh, 52 per cent of the poorest children (58 per cent of them girls) are out of school, reported Dawn.

The other ills include low national spending on public education, a dilapidated educational infrastructure, poor quality of teaching, curricula guided by faith and ideology rather than facts and science, and the opaque recruitment of teachers.

In these cataclysmic times, ignoring the education of millions of poor children is like preparing the country to become a wasteland in a world run by cutting-edge technology and super-human resources, reported Dawn. (ANI)

(The above story is verified and authored by ANI staff, ANI is South Asia's leading multimedia news agency with over 100 bureaus in India, South Asia and across the globe. ANI brings the latest news on Politics and Current Affairs in India & around the World, Sports, Health, Fitness, Entertainment, & News. The views appearing in the above post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY)

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