Photo: Adam Ramsey/IRIN. Syrian, Sudanese and Somali refugees study art at a school run by NGO Tadamon
Source: IRIN
CAIRO, 8 April 2014 (IRIN) - As the number of Syrians in Egypt rises,
refugees say it has become increasingly difficult to find places for
their children in already overstretched government schools.
In addition, refugees, asylum seekers and migrants in Egypt complain of
unaffordable school costs in private and public schools, bureaucratic
enrolment procedures, and a growing atmosphere of suspicion, xenophobia
and discrimination in the classroom.
The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) had 179,762 refugees and asylum seekers registered as of the end of 2013, most of them Syrian and Sudanese.
But according to a report
by Egypt’s largest refugee-focused NGO Tadamon, the real numbers could
be anywhere between 1.5 and 3 million, based on estimates from local
NGOs, some of whom include economic migrants in their definition of
refugees. Tadamon blames “differing legal definitions” and “a failure or
refusal of many refugees to register” for the numbers confusion.
The right to an education is enshrined in the 1951 Convention on the
Status of Refugees, of which Egypt is a signatory. However, in 1981
Egypt put forward reservations to several articles, resulting in diminished refugee rights.
Instead of a free education, refugee families need to apply for tuition
grants from Caritas Internationalis through UNHCR partner Catholic
Relief Services.
“Registered Syrian refugee families with school-going children receive
an education grant to assist families [in] covering the costs of school
fees, uniforms, books, stationary and transport,” said Marwa Hashem,
UNHCR’s education officer in Cairo. “As of mid-February [2014], some
32,000 children have received education grants.”
According to Mohamed El Miligy, an Egyptian-Sudanese activist and
communications officer for Tadamon, there is a conspicuously tortuous
enrolment process set up to deter refugees from entering into an already
overstretched education sector. “The [amount of] paperwork means that
many will not be able to start [school] for a year or two.”
“It is difficult for… refugees to enrol in public school if they lack previous educational documentation,” Hashem added.
Despite UNHCR’s advocacy for Sudanese and Syrian refugees to have access
to education facilities and services, Miligy says that in reality there
are a growing number of cases where the “pretence of acceptance” is
removed altogether and the school doors are simply shut on refugees
attempting to enrol their children.
“There are many schools that will simply not let refugees in,” said
Miligy. “You won’t find an order from the government saying ‘Don’t let
refugees into schools’ but you will see it when you go to a school and
try to apply there. The doors won’t be open for them.”
The Ministry of Education did not respond to multiple requests for an interview.
Discrimination
Hanadi Mohamed, a Sudanese refugee, says her children also encounter
discrimination in Egyptian public schools. Refugees say the general
atmosphere towards them has deteriorated as a result of Egypt’s
political upheaval and flailing economy.
“I took my youngest to kindergarten here and when I came back I found
the other children calling him names and physically beating him because
he was Sudanese. He was crying. I asked the teacher whether she could do
something but she didn’t help at all.”
Mohamed ended up having to remove her child from the school. Several
parents told IRIN they had little choice but to do the same out of fear
of bullying.
Tadamon runs separate refugee schools, under its “Alternative School
Initiative” specifically geared to refugees who have no viable access to
an education. Tucked away behind unmarked doors of unfinished apartment
buildings, the schools often welcome children who have already been
subjected to harassment and discrimination from their previous schooling
environment.
“Their psychology is affected; they get so down. So the families take
them out of the school and take them to us where we can try and deal
with them,” Miligy said. “Some of the children become violent as a
result, while others are very withdrawn and hardly speak.”
No money
Six months of research into the state of refugee education in Egypt by
the UK-based Refugee Youth Project, published in a report at the end of
2013, found over 80 percent of the 400 refugee interviewees cited high
school costs and a lack of money as the main reason they could not
afford to send their children to school.
Magdy Garas, co-director of Caritas Egypt
- a charity that provides financial aid, social support and medical
care to refugees in Egypt - estimates there are around 17,000 Syrian
families who are in financial need yet receive no support from either
UNHCR or Caritas.
“We believe there are around 250,000 Syrian refugees in Egypt. We manage
a humanitarian plan with 31,000 Syrians and the UNHCR supports a
further 138,000, but the remaining 81,000 individuals, around 17,000
families, are still in need of financial support,” he said.
According to a government estimate from June 2013, there are 300,000
Syrian refugees in Egypt. As of 8 March, 134,917 Syrians had registered
with UNHCR as refugees.