BAGHDAD, 29 October 2007 (IRIN) - Education
specialists in Iraq are worried about the low school attendance of girls as it
could create a huge educational gap.
“The fear of losing their children
through violence has led many families to keep their children at home but the
number of girls kept at home is higher because in addition to the security
problem, they are being forced by their families to assist in household chores,”
said Sinan Zuhair, a media officer for the Ministry of Labour and Social
Affairs.
“Many families have lost their fathers or mothers and girls are
asked to stay at home to help to cook, wash and clean. They are the ones paying
the price of the violence since they have to forget about their future to be
able to help the lives of their brothers,” Zuhair told IRIN. “The problem is
worse in the rural areas where religion is being used by fathers as an excuse to
justify why their daughters no longer attend school.”
According to
Mustafa Jaboury, a spokesman for the Ministry of Education, in the southern
provinces, the ratio of girls attending school has dropped from two girls to
three boys to one to four.
| "Many families have lost their fathers or
mothers and girls are asked to stay at home to help to cook, wash and
clean."
|
Better in northern Iraq
“The situation is slightly better in the northern provinces but
even there it is only in the main towns; in many villages, either girls have
never attended school or they have been forced by their parents to leave
school,” Jaboury said.
“In Baghdad the situation was relatively balanced
last year but since the school term began in September, we have observed that
the number of girls at primary and secondary schools has dramatically decreased,
raising serious concerns for the future of women in this country,” he added.
Mayada Marouf, a spokeswoman for the local NGO Keeping Children Alive
(KCA), told IRIN that girls are becoming disadvantaged compared with boys in
schools and this might affect the country’s future.
“After some years
the number of women able to assume responsible positions in the government and
universities will be reduced, accentuating the gender disparity that already
exists in Iraq,” Marouf said.
“Families should be aware that taking
their girls out of schools to work at home will destroy their future and will
have serious repercussions for the future of the nation,” she noted. “Boys and
girls should be equally encouraged to get an education."
| "This year I was forced to take my two
daughters out of school. The main reason is violence. I cannot have one of
them killed or raped as has happened with many of their colleagues."
|
Attendance expected to fall
There are no comprehensive recent statistics on school
attendance in Iraq but official figures from the Iraqi Ministry of Education
show that even before the escalation of sectarian violence in February 2006, one
in six children did not attend primary school. Since the upsurge, that number is
two in six.
According to the ministry, school attendance is expected to
fall by another 15 percent this term for boys and 25 percent for girls.
“This year I was forced to take my two daughters out of school. The main
reason is violence. I cannot have one of them killed or raped as has happened
with many of their colleagues,” said Um Nour Zeid, a mother of four and a
resident of Baghdad.
“Since my husband died I need to work outside the
home and someone should stay at home to take care of the youngest children and I
have no one but them. It is sad to see my two girls losing their future like
this but it is better than losing their lives,” Um Nour
said.
The above article comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian information unit, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies. © UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 2007
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