Friday, 4 October 2013

Nigeria school killings condemned by Amnesty

A schoolteacher in a burnt out school building, Mamudo, Nigeria, 12 August 2013. 
 Teachers were left in shock after this attack in Mamudo in August

The rights group Amnesty International says the killings of schoolchildren in Nigeria show an absolute disregard for the right to life and education.
In a report it says hundreds have been killed in attacks by militants and thousands have been forced from school.
On Sunday up to 50 students died when militants attacked an agricultural college in northern Nigeria.
The militant group Boko Haram, which means western education is forbidden, has targeted many schools recently.
A file picture taken on 21 April, 2013 shows children walking outside a charred house in the remote northeast town of Baga. An attack early on 6 July, 2013 saw gunmen storm a secondary boarding school in the village of Mamudo, where they rounded up students and staff in a dormitory, threw explosives and opened fire, killing 42 people, almost all of them students. Many school buildings in northern Nigeria have been burnt or damaged in a wave of attacks
School buildings in ruins at Mamudo, Nigeria, 12 August 2013. Amnesty said this year the attacks had become more targeted and brutal
Nigerian authorities were urged to "provide better protection" for schools.
In the wake of the college attack earlier this week, officials told the BBC the government and military would work to increase protection in schools.
Catalogue of horror Amnesty has calculated that in 2013, scores of pupils and 70 teachers have been slaughtered.
Some 50 schools have been also burnt or damaged and more than 60 others have been forced to close.
In some cases students have been murdered in their sleep, and in others, burnt alive in locked dormitories.
BBC World Service Africa Editor Richard Hamilton says the report represents a catalogue of horror.
In May, Nigeria declared a state of emergency in three north-eastern states: Yobe, Borno and Adamawa.
MAP
Authorities launched a military offensive aimed at crushing the Islamists. Casualty figures vary widely but reports suggest hundreds of people have been killed.
Amnesty says it is not aware of anyone being prosecuted by the Nigerian authorities in connection with the school attacks.
"Thousands of children have been forced out of schools across communities in northern Nigeria and many teachers have been forced to flee for their safety," Amnesty's deputy Africa director Lucy Freeman said.
Some 15,000 students in Borno state have been stopped going to school because of the violence, Amnesty's report said. 


SOURCE: BBC