Archive footage
We want peace, no more killing! (Repeat)
Voice Over
In October 2020, suspected armed separatists attacked the Mother Francisca International Bilingual Academy in Kumba, South-West region of Cameroon, killing 7 children and injuring at least 13 others. It was one of more than 70 attacks on schools by armed separatists documented by Human Rights Watch and other international organizations since 2017 in the English-speaking regions of the country.
Mark
Teacher
For more than two years, I was not teaching because about 90% of the schools in the North-West and South-West were actually shut down, especially in rural areas like the one which I was working in Ekona.
Voice Over
Education has been a flash point in the Anglophone crisis. In late 2016 Cameroonian security forces began cracking down on teachers and lawyers protesting against what they considered to be marginalization of Anglophone education and legal systems.
Since then, armed separatist groups have emerged. They have declared a boycott on schools that they violently enforce.
During the past 5 years of violence, nearly 600,000 people have been forced to leave their homes.
Mark
The separatists were targeting teachers, sometimes students. I’ve been fortunate to receive only threats, where others have received more than threats. Their fingers were actually cut off, many were kidnapped, some have been killed of course.
Voice Over
Leaders of separatist groups should immediately announce an end to the school boycott and should cease all attacks on schools, teachers, and students.
Cameroonian authorities should investigate and prosecute those responsible for attacks on students, teachers, and schools and establish a reparations program for the victims and their families.
They should also establish a task force on education to ensure that all students in Anglophone regions have access to safe and quality education.
Ben
Student
I was in Form 5 by that time preparing my ordinary levels examination. When the crisis started, the separatist fighters came to school, they warned us, we were all beaten. many of us have been injured. I was even having internal bleedings. they burned our administrative block and then they destroyed our documentation, so the school has to shut down since 2016, up to today.
Voice Over
According to the UN, 700,000 students are currently out of school in the Anglophone regions.
Felix Agbor Nkongho
Human Rights Lawyer
The first consequence to it is that our kids are not going to be educated. Ignorance will be running riot in our community. It would lead to teenage pregnancy, juvenile delinquency, and a culture where people don’t valorize education. But the worst thing is that it affects future generation of Anglophone Cameroonians, and it also has a psychological impact on their parents when kids are not going to school.
Voice Over
In September 2018, Cameroon endorsed the Safe Schools Declaration, an international political commitment aimed at strengthening the prevention of and responses to attacks on students, teachers, schools, and universities during times of violence and armed conflict.
Mark
There has been a mass exodus into the urban areas where school goes on. There’s some degree of security. The government and the schools are making some efforts to solve the issue of overpopulation. They are trying to build many classrooms rapidly so they can decongest some of the classes.
Ben
I arrived (in) Buea on the 22nd of February 2020. I started schooling. I’m studying sciences in school hoping to become a medical doctor, so I can better up my life and the life of my family and the people around my community, so I can save lives.