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Getting an education against all odds in Kismayo

A teacher writes on a blackboard during a class at Ngoma School in Sikaneka village, Maamba district, Zambia, 28 February 2007. Lower education in Zambia is divided into three levels; primary, junior secondary and upper secondary. Higher education is very Manoocher Deghati/IRIN
Five years after a local charity opened a university to offer this bullet-scarred city’s youth an alternative to militia life and emigration, the first degrees have been awarded.

"I want our people to know that education is the ladder of life and that every step of development that a community makes depends on the level of the community's education," one of the 27 new graduates, Qoole Qowden*, told IRIN.

“I am delighted to have completed four years of study during which we underwent unimaginably difficult circumstances. I am hopeful that I will get a job since I now possess the required knowledge and skills. I will also try to transmit what I learnt to every Somali who is ready for it,” he said.

Like much of south-central Somalia, for the past few years Lower Juba, of which Kismayo is the main town, has been controlled by Al Shabab, an Islamist insurgency fighting to topple Somalia’s weak Transitional Federal Government.

Previously, the city frequently changed hands between various warring clan militia groups.

Kismayo University has 200 students, most of whom are from Middle and Lower Juba regions where, for many years, secondary school was the highest level of learning available.

Since it opened, local sources said, the university has helped reduce the recruitment of an otherwise idle youth into fighting groups.

Education collapse

Education in Kismayo had been one of the many casualties of the region’s various conflicts and frequent changes of administration.

Several schools in the city have been converted to other uses such as makeshift homes or stores, forcing talented teenagers to seek educational opportunities in Mogadishu, the semi-autonomous region of Puntland, the self-declared independent republic of Somaliland or in neighbouring Kenya. 

''I want our people to know that education is the ladder of life ''
Quruxlow Shaakle*, a resident of Kismayo, said: "We thank Allah that higher education is now available in our region. I have lived here for the past 33 years and education has been my greatest worry because as a parent, and I am sure all other parents agree with me, no one wants their child to end up as a militiaman or be used to fuel clan divisions.

"For a long time, only well-off parents could send their children across the border to Kenya to get an education; for poor families like mine, this was not possible."

Shaakle urged other Somali families to focus on their children’s education, "for that is how we can put away the gun and seek peace; otherwise wars, famine and hardship in our country will continue".

The 27 who received degree certificates on 5 August were from two faculties, education and business administration, according to a university official, who added that 32 others obtained diplomas.

The university also has a Sharia (Islamic law) faculty. In all, there are 20 lecturers and fees range from US$15 to $30 per month, with some costs met by remittances from the diaspora.

The official said most of the graduates had already secured jobs in local telecommunication firms, remittance or money transfer banks and in other businesses across Kismayo.

"Some are part-time teachers in different schools," the official said, adding that the university had requested heads of companies in the region to consider Kismayo University graduates during their recruitment drives.

*Not their real names

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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