The U.N. Says No School for Many Syria Refugees in Lebanon

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

A shortfall of funding from the world community means that only a small minority of Syrian refugee children in Lebanon will attend school this year, U.N. agencies said Tuesday.

U.N. Children's Fund representative Annamaria Laurini said only 68,000 Syrian children can be covered by U.N.-supported education programs because of funding gaps.

Children make up 52 percent of the 756,000 registered Syrian refugees who have fled to Lebanon from the war in their country.

Speaking at a press briefing, Laurini warned that children deprived of any kind of education risk having "no future."

UNICEF had hoped to provide educational assistance to 200,000 children, but the lack of funds means only a fraction of those can be helped.

U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees representative Ninette Kelley added that, "to say we have an educational challenge in Lebanon would simply be an understatement."

An appeal calling for $1.6 billion (1.2 billion euros) for U.N. agencies working in Syria has only been funded by 27 percent, she said.

"That is a very sad statistic," Kelley said.

The 30-month war in Syria has killed more than 110,000 people, and forced millions to flee their homes, disrupting the lives of hundreds of thousands of children.

Lebanon has welcomed the largest share of refugees.

The country was already struggling with strain to its own education system before the crisis began, which has only worsened with the influx of refugees.

Citing "limited funds and overwhelming numbers," UNICEF's Laurini said the U.N. can only help the "most vulnerable localities" in Lebanon.

"We have to concentrate on the vulnerabilities, making sure that we are addressing the ones who don't have any other coping mechanism," Laurini said.

The U.N. says education is key not only to securing children's futures, but also to ensure they are kept clear from dangers such as child labor and other forms of exploitation.

Learning also helps children who suffered conflict recover a sense of normalcy.

Funding shortfalls are also have an impact on children's right to health, the U.N. representatives said.

"We have to make a very harsh decision only to support life-saving and emergency secondary healthcare," Kelley said.

"How many mums, how many dads have presented children who needed a cataract operation? If the child had the cataract operation, the child could see," she said.

"But the cost of that is so expensive here in Lebanon, and it's not lifesaving... It is heartbreaking the decisions we're having to make because the consequences are so dire when we can't do enough," Kelley added.

In a report published last spring, UNICEF warned of a risk that millions of Syria's children will become "a lost generation."

Comments 6
Missing imagine1979 24 September 2013, 19:37

One small coment if i may, if israel invades lebanon, yes we will fight and have a divine victory again, but in the meantime were will we go? Would we like to be treated as we treated syrian refugies, would we like our childreen to go beg for food and chelter? Where did humanity vanished....
I know it is a burden but put urself on their shoes.... I wish we wont live this again but what if?....

Missing imagine1979 24 September 2013, 20:30

Not defending the GCC but i hope like most of the refugies that they will get back home someday and it normal to come to closest country like a lot of us did ran away to syria during 2006 war...so that's why lebanon turky, jordan... (Irak is such a mess thx to the US that staying in syria wouldn't be worse than going there

Missing imagine1979 24 September 2013, 20:35

What i was saying if we did put camps for them with UN help it would hv been better for them and for us... And please stop treating then as scum we (saddely) always risk to find ourself in such a situation and i think none of us would like to see our families treated as our gov treated them... As they were nothing or more a burden... Please review the past position of march 8 : no refugies, nothing in syria... It would hv been a lot better if we have tackled this issue since the begining... Yet i might be wrong....

Missing peace 24 September 2013, 23:58

true M8 and their gvt didn't want to acknowledge there were refugees... they never did a thing to take care of them letting them go unregistered wherever they wanted! LOL... noww they are reaping what they sowed and their propaganda that nothing was going on in syria...!!!

Missing imagine1979 24 September 2013, 20:44

And sorry for my english the roar....

Thumb eli-g 25 September 2013, 14:21

the roar under what government did these people come in to Lebanon????
what government botched it up???
who should fix this???