UNICEF provides education supplies and support for rehabilitation in Benin
Ganvie, Benin, 16 December 2010 – In the past two months, Benin has experienced some of its worst floods since the 1960s. And now, students in the flood zone are returning to school under harsh conditions.
Even in the lake districts of southern Benin, where villagers are used to floods and live in houses on stilts, the water levels have risen so high that most people had to flee their flooded houses. In the hardest-hit areas, the education infrastructure has suffered greatly. Hundreds of the schools across the country have been partially or totally destroyed, and have lost significant amounts of teaching and learning materials.
Overcrowded classrooms In Ganvie, a locality in southern Benin, children have been able to start school but overcrowding is an issue because the floods caused the collapse of three classrooms. “In this classroom, we have children from two classrooms. Each of them had already around 90 children before the floods, “ explains David Houngbadji, the Ganvie school’s director. “Now in this very room, we teach a class of 185 children. We don’t even have the benches to seat them all.” Books destroyed “Every single school book we had to start the year has been completely ruined by the floods,” says school director Ambroise Vignon Botondji. “We planned to start school in early October but we couldn’t; the school was still underwater. My pupils are now two months behind.” To help children get back to school as soon as possible, UNICEF has started distributing school kits. The distribution is starting for schoolchildren in villages located along the Oueme. Families without resources This week in Hetin Sotta, southern Benin, some 450 children received books, pens and school bags. UNICEF is supporting the distribution of more than 100,000 school kits overall, as well as the rehabilitation of schools across the flood zone. By Edward Bally
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