PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti, CMC – A United Nations-backed global fund supporting education in emergencies will provide US$2.5 million to ensure that thousands of children affected by gang violence in Haiti can attend school safely.
Executive Director of Education Cannot Wait (ECW) Yasmine Sherif made the announcement here on Friday during a high-level UN mission to the French-speaking Caribbean Community (CARICOM) country.
ECW said the aim is to reach nearly 75,000 children and adolescents in the hard-hit departments of Ouest, home to the capital city. Artibonite and Sherif urged world leaders not to turn their backs on the boys and girls of Haiti.
“With the power of education, we can protect these girls and boys from the grave risks of sexual violence, forced recruitment in armed groups, and other human rights violations,” she said.
“With the power of education, we can lift an entire nation from a never-ending cycle of hunger, poverty, economic uncertainty, and violence.”
The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) will deliver the grant in collaboration with the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and other local and international partners.
The funding will support back-to-school incentives, school feeding programs, early childhood education, disability inclusion, mental health and psychosocial support, cash transfers to needy families, and other support to enable children’s access to safe learning environments.
Haiti is experiencing unprecedented levels of lawlessness and brutality at the hands of coalitions of armed groups. The situation is compounded by climate change, recurring cyclones, and earthquakes, including a devastating one in 2021 that claimed over 2,300 lives and caused severe damage.
Nearly half the population, an estimated 5.5 million people, depend on humanitarian aid, while five million face acute hunger. Almost 580,000 Haitians are displaced, a 60 percent increase since the end of February.
The armed groups are targeting schools and hospitals, with concerning reports of ruthless forms of sexual violence, including gang rape. They are also accused of forced recruitment of children, with estimates that 30 percent to 50 percent of their members could be children.
Furthermore, estimates indicate that 1.2 million school-aged children urgently need quality education.
Schools are being closed or used as displacement centers across the country. Around 919 schools are closed in the Ouest and Artibonite departments alone, representing 10 percent of all schools in these areas.
“The education crisis unfolding in Haiti is seriously close to becoming an education tragedy,” said Bruno Maes, UNICEF Representative.
“While enrolment rates were already low before the latest escalation of violence, school closures and mass displacement are robbing thousands more children of their opportunity to learn.”
The grant brings total ECW funding in Haiti to more than $15.8 million. It said that despite the urgent needs, the $30 million requirement for education response in Haiti, part of an overall humanitarian plan for the country, is less than 30 percent funded.
ECW supports quality education for refugees, internally displaced, and other crisis-affected children. The fund and partners call on world leaders to urgently mobilize an additional US$600 million toward its three-year strategic plan.
These new resources will allow the fund to expand its investments in Haiti and other crisis regions, reaching 20 million girls and boys.