Malala a symbol for girls' rights (CNN) -- The gruesome gunning-down of 15-year-old Malala Yousufzai spotlighted the fate of children in Pakistan, one of the world's most dangerous places to go to school. But in war zones around the world, from Afghanistan to Yemen, students, teachers and schools are regularly coming under attack. These are the world's unrecognized Malalas.
In southern Thailand,
I visited a school that was still smoldering from an arson attack a few
days earlier. Separatist insurgents had doused the classrooms with
gasoline and dragged books from the library and mattresses from the
kindergarten to fuel the flames. The insurgents view schools as places
where the Buddhist Thai government indoctrinates the local Muslim Malay
population.
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The school's teachers
were distraught but worried that if they fled the area, the children
would be left with no one to teach them. These teachers' bravery is
astounding: This month, three bullets to the head felled Komsan
Chomyong. He was the 152nd teacher to be assassinated since violence
erupted in southern Thailand in 2004.
In the past five years,
armed forces and armed groups have attacked or taken over schools in at
least 25 countries, endangering children's lives, education and future.
Armed groups target schools and teachers as symbols of the state. They
oppose what is being taught, and to whom. These attacks are not a matter
of collateral damage; they are part of deliberate, despicable
strategies.
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This year in eastern
Yemen, I met a 14-year-old boy who explained how al Qaeda-linked
extremists had replaced the teachers and curriculum at his school.
Pointing to a card I brought displaying pictures of various weapons, he
identified five that his new "teachers" had taught him and his
classmates to use.
I met another 14-year-old in Yemen's capital, Sanaa,
who told me how frightened he had been when the principal led students
into the basement to escape gunfire aimed at the militia that had
established a base on the school's top floor. "You couldn't recognize
that this was a school because of the military barracks here," one
teacher told me.
In central India,
I sifted through the shrapnel and splintered desks in a school that had
been bombed by Maoist guerrillas. "This school has been badly damaged,"
lamented a 16-year-old student showing me around. "Everything is in
ruins." In India, the Maoists attack schools because the isolated pink
buildings make easy targets in rural areas otherwise devoid of
government structures. But in doing so, the Maoists harm the country's
most marginalized and needy: the very children for whom they claim to be
fighting.
Safe schools offer
essential protection for children in wartime. They can provide
lifesaving information about things like avoiding land mines and
preventing HIV. They can also shield children from trafficking and
recruitment by armed groups. In the long term, a good education promotes
peace and post-conflict reconstruction, and helps young people develop
the skills to build lives for themselves and prosperity for their
communities. Perhaps most important, access to a safe space to study and
learn provides students with a sense of normality, routine and calm
amid the chaos of war.
Suspect identified in Malala attack
Malala's story
Ending attacks on
students, teachers and schools requires action at both the national and
international levels. We need a shared recognition that such attacks can
amount to war crimes and need global attention. Where attacks occur,
the United Nations should be allowed access to negotiate with armed
groups to end grave violations against children. (Thailand recently denied the U.N. access to verify the crimes being committed against children in the south.)
We also need better
preventive measures and a more timely response. Destroyed schools should
be quickly rebuilt, not left as piles of rubble like so many in
Pakistan.
Militaries should commit
to refraining from converting schools into military bases and barracks,
to prevent turning schools into targets. In Syria right now, school
buildings are being bombed as both sides target each other's bases set
up inside classrooms.
The cause for which
Malala Yousufzai risked her life -- ensuring that children, no matter
where they live, can enjoy an education in safety and security -- has
received new attention since her bloody attack. Let us work to ensure
that it does not take more Malalas for the world to react and give
attacks on schools the attention it deserves.