Unrest cripples school system in Myanmar’s Rakhine

This photograph taken on October 15, 2016 shows teachers and displaced residents being evacuated by military troops to a Buddhist monastery in Maungdaw, located in Rakhine State. Buddhist teachers have been airlifted and trucked out of northwestern Myanmar to escape a new surge of violence in the ethnically divided region, another blow to persecuted Muslim Rohingyas already marginalised by a lack of opportunity. / AFP PHOTO / YE AUNG THU / TO GO WITH "MYANMAR BANGLADESH UNREST EDUCATION, FOCUS"

 

Maungdaw / AFP

Buddhist teachers have been airlifted and trucked out of northwestern Myanmar to escape a new surge of violence in the ethnically divided region, another blow to persecuted Muslim Rohingyas already marginalised by a lack of opportunity.
Residents have fled their homes in the area near the Bangladesh border on military helicopters and other army vehicles over the past week, fearing a repeat of widespread bloodshed between Buddhists and Rohingya that ravaged Rakhine state in 2012.
Poor education has long been cited as one of the many ways that Myanmar sidelines the Rohingya, a stateless Muslim minority in the Buddhist-majority nation who are considered one of the most persecuted peoples in the world.
In the northern region of Maungdaw, where Rohingya are the overwhelming majority, Buddhist schoolteachers who fear becoming targets for their pupils are among those fleeing—a potential death blow to an already crippled school system.
Reports of Rohingya students killing their Buddhist schoolteachers in 2012 already meant few had returned to the area.
“We are scared because there are many Muslim villages around us. We don’t dare to go out,” said Aye Aye Oo, 28, a Buddhist middle school teacher among evacuees huddled inside a monastery in Maungdaw town.
“Many people have already left the town. I still don’t know what to do, I only know I’m frightened,” she said tearfully.
More than 400 schools have been closed since raids on border guard posts on October 9, which the government has blamed on extremist insurgents.
State media said security forces have killed at least 29 people in a subsequent military crackdown.
More than 1,300 teachers had been evacuated from around Maungdaw as of Friday, said district administrator Ye Htut. He did not know when they would return. “We might not be able to reopen all schools in the region,” he said, adding that examinations due in a few weeks were in jeopardy. “We have to try to reopen schools as soon as possible…. We are also planning security for educational staff.”
The 2012 bloodshed in Rakhine left more than 100 people dead and drove tens of thousands of Rohingya into squalid displacement camps.
Some 60,000 children in the camps have no access to formal teaching, aid groups estimate.
Those who do attend school are effectively barred from moving on to university in the state capital Sittwe, since only Myanmar citizens can enrol.

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