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School Drop-Outs Increasing in Palestinian Refugee Camp in Syria

Published : 04-10-2022

School Drop-Outs Increasing in Palestinian Refugee Camp in Syria

Palestinian refugees sheltered in Ramadan Camp, in Syria’s Rif Dimashq province, continue to speak out against the sharp nosepe in access to education for Palestinian children sheltered in the area.

Extreme poverty, child labor, early marriage, and enforced disappearance are among the factors that have led to an increase in school dropouts among the camp residents.

Palestinian refugee families have frequently denounced the inadequate educational services and poor-quality input delivered to their children at local schools.

Local schools face overcrowding, with over 50 students often crammed in a single classroom.

Schoolchildren have also been subjected to bullying and psycho-physical violence by a number of teaching staff.

Upon more than one occasion, UNRWA has raised alarm bells over the striking upsurge in the rate of school dropouts among the Palestinians of Syria, several among whom left schools to help feeding their impoverished families in unemployment-stricken refugee camps.

Several UNRWA facilities were destroyed in the Syrian warfare and others have gone out of operation, including two clinics, a vocational training center, a youth development center, and 28 schools, out of 112 UNRWA schools in Syria. Other education facilities have been turned into prisons or field hospitals, imperiling Palestinians’ academic careers.

 

 

Short URL : https://actionpal.org.uk/en/post/13498

Palestinian refugees sheltered in Ramadan Camp, in Syria’s Rif Dimashq province, continue to speak out against the sharp nosepe in access to education for Palestinian children sheltered in the area.

Extreme poverty, child labor, early marriage, and enforced disappearance are among the factors that have led to an increase in school dropouts among the camp residents.

Palestinian refugee families have frequently denounced the inadequate educational services and poor-quality input delivered to their children at local schools.

Local schools face overcrowding, with over 50 students often crammed in a single classroom.

Schoolchildren have also been subjected to bullying and psycho-physical violence by a number of teaching staff.

Upon more than one occasion, UNRWA has raised alarm bells over the striking upsurge in the rate of school dropouts among the Palestinians of Syria, several among whom left schools to help feeding their impoverished families in unemployment-stricken refugee camps.

Several UNRWA facilities were destroyed in the Syrian warfare and others have gone out of operation, including two clinics, a vocational training center, a youth development center, and 28 schools, out of 112 UNRWA schools in Syria. Other education facilities have been turned into prisons or field hospitals, imperiling Palestinians’ academic careers.

 

 

Short URL : https://actionpal.org.uk/en/post/13498