Bangladesh Want to Become Kid Again

Now that Bangladesh is allowing formal schooling for Rohingya refugees, children will no longer have to sneak effectually pursuing covert education, says a Rohingya-Canadian activist.

Yasmin, a Rohingya girl who was expelled from Leda High School for being a Rohingya, helps her younger sister to study in Leda camp in Teknaf, Bangladesh, March 5, 2019. (Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters)

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Now that Bangladesh is allowing formal schooling for Rohingya refugees, children will no longer take to sneak around pursuing covert education, says a Rohingya-Canadian activist.

Bangladesh announced Wednesday that it volition partner with the United Nations to expand educational programs for hundreds of thousands of Muslim Rohingya children living in refugee camps.

"This was a moment of joy as jubilation for us. We've been really pushing difficult for this," Raees Tinmaung of the Rohingya Human Rights Network told As It Happens host Carol Off.

"When nosotros got this news, this is like a dream come true."

Doing whatever it takes to get an instruction

The pilot project starts in April with 10,000 children, who will receive formal education in the Myanmar language and curriculum from Grades half dozen to ix. Vocational preparation volition be available after that.

Currently, Rohingya children in Bangladesh attend 1,500 informal learning centres run by UNICEF that provide basic education, cartoon and activities, the UN said.

A child reads a book in a makeshift school run by Rohingya teachers in Kutupalong refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, People's republic of bangladesh, Feb. seven, 2019. (Jiraporn Kuhakan/Reuters)

Merely what the kids actually desire is a full curriculum that includes math and scientific discipline, says Tinmaung, who lives in Ottawa, only recently visited the camps in Bangladesh.

And they'll do whatever it takes to become it, he said, including sneaking into schools in Bangladesh or attending covert classes in the camps.

"They're not in a place anyone would want to stay," he said. "Just the drive and their resilience is withal there."

Some schools had been quietly welcoming the students into their classes, until the country started cracking down on the practice and expelling students concluding year.

Meanwhile, adults in the refugee camps take been running covert schools where they teach the Myanmar curriculum, Tinmaung said.

"It'southward very difficult for Canadians and North Americans to imagine that you've got to contrivance authorities but to, you know, provide basic education," Tinmaung said. "And then this is going to exist unlike. Our schools will non have to exist shut down."

Why did it take and then long?

At that place are more one million Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, and 400,000 Rohingya children live in the camps.

More than than 730,000 Rohingya fled Myanmar afterward a military-led crackdown in 2017, forced into camps across the edge in Bangladesh.

UN investigators said before this calendar month the armed services entrada was executed with "genocidal intent."

Mohammed Tuahayran, 17, teaches English language in a makeshift school at Kutupalong refugee camp in Cox'due south Bazar, Bangladesh, February seven, 2019. Picture taken Feb vii, 2019. REUTERS/Jiraporn Kuhakan (Jiraporn Kuhakan/Reuters)

Tinmaung says Bangladesh has been hesitant to educate the refugee children because it feared that would requite them reason to stay in the country.

Merely the opposite is true, he says. That's why advocates have specifically pushed for programs that follow the official curriculum and language of Myanmar, previously known as Burma.

"That'south giving u.s. that recognition that we are from Burma, indeed, and that i twenty-four hour period we we promise to go dorsum," he said. "We all aspire to go back."

The Rohingya have lived in Myanmar for generations, but the government considers them to be migrants from Bangladesh. Near all have been denied citizenship since 1982, effectively rendering them stateless.

Bangladesh, meanwhile, doesn't recognize them as citizens either, and does not issue birth certificates for those built-in in the camps.

Tinmaung says young adults returning to Myanmar without a formal education only exacerbates the trouble.

"They will be jobless, they will be uneducated, illiterate. And in one case over again the Burmese authorities will kickoff accusing them, saying look, you lot are not Burmese because you lot don't know how to read and write Burmese," he said.

"But now because nosotros are teaching our kids Burmese language, we will now have the pride and dignity, you know, to go dorsum and say look, we have followed up. Even though you lot've expelled u.s. from our lands, nosotros are back again with the pedagogy that you were supposed to take."


Written by Sheena Goodyear with files from Reuters and The Associated Printing. Interview with Raees Tinmaung produced by Chloe Shantz-Hilkes.

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Source: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/as-it-happens-wednesday-edition-1.5444593/like-a-dream-come-true-bangladesh-grants-rohingya-children-access-to-education-1.5444596

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