Aid cuts disrupt education for 1.8 million children supported by Save the Children
More than 1.8 million children will miss out on learning due to aid cuts impacting Save the Children's education programmes in over 20 countries from the Democratic Republic of Congo to Syria to Tanzania.
In Tanzania, more than 50,000 children face having their education disrupted or completely stopped due to aid cuts, with one headteacher in a refugee camp in the country's north-west saying this was having "heartbreaking consequences" for children.
Headteacher Isack said that attendance rates, dropouts and academic performance at the school have worsened as funding cuts mean children no longer receive free notebooks while girls cannot be provided with the sanitary pads they need to attend school.
Maria*, a refugee from Burundi and a student at Isack's school, said: "I want to study, I want to be a doctor, but without the right materials, it feels like I'm losing the fight. When we are given tests, only a few of us can do them because many don't have notebooks. It feels unfair, but what can we do?"
Tanzania is one of 20 countries where Save the Children's education programmes will be affected unless urgent funding is secured as governments cut foreign aid budgets. In 2024 Save the Children's education programmes directly reached over 7.6 million children in 60 countries, including children facing conflict, climate change and other crises.
Sabera*, 14, is among the over one million Rohingya refugees living in the highly congested camps in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, since fleeing the violence in Myanmar with her family in 2017. The Save the Children-supported learning centre she had been attending was closed following the aid cuts which have affected the education of over 2,400 children in Cox's Bazaar camps and host communities.
Sabera* said: "I liked to study and learn in my classes. I suddenly came to know that the learning centre would stop and felt someone snatch freedom and happiness from me. I thought that after completing this year I would be admitted to the next class which opens a whole new world for me, but that dream is now gone."
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, over 21,300 children in war-torn South Kivu have had lost access to learning materials and training for their teachers. In Syria's Al Hol Camp, the closure of Save the Children's two temporary learning spaces have taken away safe spaces for education and mental health services for 640 children who face high levels of child labour and violence.
Across the sector, as little as $7.2 million might remain of over $1 billion of US funding for global education, [1] while cuts by the UK could see at least a 73% drop in real terms in funding to education from 2019 levels, according to Save the Children analysis.
Susan Nicolai, Save the Children International's director of education, said:
'Every child has the right to education and these cuts to education funding threaten to take away one of the most powerful tools we have to transform children's lives.
'In crisis contexts, more children need lifesaving aid than ever before and education in emergencies is truly lifesaving. It protects children in a safe space and provides a sense of stability as well as lifesaving learning such as how to stay safe from unexploded bombs or prevent the spread of disease.
'Foreign aid is about hope, peace, and creating pathways to a better future and education is the epitome of a 'long game'. We are witnessing the start of generational learning and developmental setbacks that will reverberate through communities and families for years to come."
Today, nearly 400 million primary school-aged children – or about half of primary school-aged children - cannot read or write and more than half of all three to 6-year-olds lack access to preschool, according to World Bank data.[2]
In some humanitarian and conflict settings, where Save the Children is often the sole education provider, the situation is even worse. Children in refugee and displacement camps will not only lose schooling but also critical support like food, mental health services, and safe spaces. Children, parents and caregivers have repeatedly told us that education is a top priority, including in crises.[3]
Save the Children is calling for world leaders, partners and all donors to financially invest in children and their futures. The humanitarian and aid sector will be forever changed by these rapid decisions to cut funding. but Save the Children is committed to working with global leaders, institutions and civil society to reform the system and to help create a fairer, more stable global financing system to care for those most in need.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Save the Children.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Zawya
5 days ago
- Zawya
Nigeria: Children among 1,500 people displaced as town submerged in devastating floods
Difficulties reaching communities impacted by devastating flooding in Mokwa in north-central Nigeria is hampering relief efforts, said Save the Children which is preparing to respond to the disaster. Over 1,500 people have been displaced from their homes, scores of people are dead, and nearly 100 people are reported missing since torrential rains and the collapse of a dam last week led to the worst flooding to hit the area in 60 years. Houses, roads and farmland have been completely submerged in water and mud, with the floodwaters destroying vital aid routes, including two bridges, making it hard to reach Mokwa which is about 230 miles (370km) west of Nigeria's capital, Abuja. Duncan Harvey, Save the Children's Country Director in Nigeria, said: 'The reports coming out of Mokwa are nothing short of devastating. Large parts of the bustling town have been reduced to mud and rubble, and many families have lost everything. Tragically, it is also a situation of deep mourning, as dozens of people including many children remain missing. 'Reaching communities in Mokwa is also challenging due to the devastation the floods have wreaked, cutting off transport links, which makes children separated from their families even more vulnerable. 'The needs are huge and children and families in Mokwa desperately need donors and the government to urgently ramp up support in the form of a coordinated response that meets the needs of children and families who have lost everything.' Nigeria is no stranger to flood crises, with major floods devastating 30 of Nigeria's 36 states in September last year, killing hundreds and forcing some 640,000 people from their homes. Save the Children has been working in Nigeria since 2001 and has been responding to the humanitarian crisis in the northeast since 2014. Save the Children is providing food, clean water, nutrition and protection services and education to families across Nigeria. Save the Children also provides technical support to the government on policy changes and reforms, especially in critical sectors such as health, education, and social protection – and Anticipatory Action for crisis prevention. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Save the Children.


The National
7 days ago
- The National
UN demands Yemen's Houthis release aid workers held for year
The UN on Wednesday issued a new call for Yemen's Houthi rebels to release dozens of aid workers a year after their arrest by the group. The Iran -backed rebels, who control much of Yemen, detained 13 UN staff members, and more than 50 employees of aid groups last June. Between January 23-25 this year, the Houthis carried out another wave of arrests, detaining an additional eight UN staff members. Others have been detained since 2021, according to the UN. Two have died while in detention, one of them a Save the Children staff member and another an employee of the World Food Programme. 'As of today, 23 UN and five international non-governmental organisation personnel remain arbitrarily detained. Tragically, one UN staff member and another from Save the Children have died in detention,' the office of the UN envoy to Yemen, Hans Grundberg, said on Wednesday. 'Others have lost loved ones while being held, denied the chance to attend their funerals or say goodbye,' it added. Mr Grundberg's office said those detained have spent 'at least 365 days – and for some, over 1,000 days, isolated from their families, children, husbands, and wives, in flagrant breach of international law.' 'We call on the de facto authorities to deliver on their previous commitments, including those made to the director general of the World Health Organisation during his mission to Sanaa in December 2024,' it said. The UN and international NGOs will continue to work through all possible channels to secure the safe and immediate release of those arbitrarily detained, the office added. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres on Tuesday said those detained should have never been attacked by the rebels. 'I renew my call for their immediate and unconditional release,' Mr Guterres said. 'The UN and its humanitarian partners should never be targeted, arrested or detained while carrying out their mandates for the benefit of the people they serve,' he said. Since the arrests were made, the UN has limited its deployments and suspended activities in parts of the country. At the time of the arrests, the Houthis said an 'American-Israeli spy cell' was operating under the cover of aid groups, an accusation firmly rejected by the UN. Mr Guterres also lamented the 'deplorable tragedy' of the death in detention of a World Food Programme staffer in February. At the time, WFP executive director Cindy McCain said the worker who died in detention was named Ahmed and that he was a 'devoted humanitarian and father of two' who had helped deliver life-saving food assistance. He had been working for the agency since 2017, according to the agency. He was one of seven staffers detained by the Houthi rebels on January 23 this year. Mrs McCain said she was 'heartbroken and outraged by the tragic loss'. In October 2023, Save the Children confirmed the death of a staff member who died in detention in Yemen and called for an immediate independent investigation. Safety and security director Hisham Al Hakimi was detained on 9 September while off duty. He died a month and a half later. Mr Al Hakimi, aged 44 and a husband and father of four, was a dedicated member of the Save the Children family since 2006, the organisation said.


Middle East Eye
12-05-2025
- Middle East Eye
Famine imminent in Gaza if Israel doesn't lift blockade, hunger monitor warns
Famine is imminent in Gaza, with half a million people at risk of starvation unless Israel lifts its siege, according to a grim new report released on Monday by a global hunger monitor, marking a major deterioration since its last report in October. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), a global network of UN agencies and humanitarian groups, reported Monday that 477,000 people in Gaza, or 22 percent of the population, are facing 'catastrophic' hunger from May to September, the highest classification level. Over one million more are at 'emergency' levels, marked by severe food gaps and high acute malnutrition. 'The current level of human suffering, destitution and harm is extreme and requires urgent action from all parties,' the IPC said in its report. The IPC warned that famine is imminent if the current conditions persist. The ongoing Israeli blockade, in place since 2 March, has severely restricted the entry of essential food and medical supplies into Gaza. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters The blockade, coupled with over 19 months of intense bombardment, has decimated local food production and infrastructure, leaving residents almost entirely reliant on dwindling external aid. Communal kitchens, which have become the primary source of food for many, are rapidly shutting down due to a lack of supplies. Thousands of Palestinians queue daily, hoping for minimal food rations, often leaving empty-handed. The data was gathered by IPC in Gaza between 1 April 1 and 10 May. The IPC, which rarely declares famines, has done so in Somalia, South Sudan and Darfur in previous years. Engineered starvation In reaction to IPC's report, the World Food Programme (WFP) said that over 116,000 metric tons of food, enough to feed one million people for four months, remain blocked at the border. The WFP said on Monday that it had exhausted its food stocks in April, and all 25 WFP-supported bakeries have closed due to shortages of wheat flour and cooking fuel. 'Death of a generation': Gaza infants battle starvation under deepening Israeli siege Read More » 'Families in Gaza are starving while the food they need is sitting at the border,' said Cindy McCain, executive director of the WFP. 'If we wait until after a famine is confirmed, it will already be too late for many people.' Children are among the most severely affected. Save the Children reported that more than 93 percent of Gaza's children, around 930,000, are at critical risk of famine. Unicef said it has treated 11,000 children for acute malnutrition since the start of 2025, with cases climbing dramatically in March. 'Hunger and acute malnutrition are a daily reality for children across the Gaza Strip,' said Unicef executive director, Catherine Russell. Oxfam also condemned the situation. 'Gaza's starvation is not incidental - it is deliberate, entirely engineered - and has now created the largest population facing starvation anywhere in the world,' said Mahmoud Alsaqqa, Oxfam's food security and livelihoods coordinator. 'It is unconscionable and is being allowed to happen.' He described the total siege as a 'manmade famine unfolding in real time,' with scenes of malnourished children too weak to cry and entire communities surviving without food or clean water. 'In one displacement camp, only five of 500 families had any flour left to make bread,' he added. Weaponised aid The IPC said that an Israeli plan announced on 5 May to facilitate aid delivery was 'highly insufficient to meet the population's essential needs'. Israel is starving Gaza to death, and still the world does nothing Read More » Israel maintains that the blockade is necessary to pressure Hamas into releasing the remaining captives and insists on a new aid distribution system under its control. Humanitarian agencies oppose this plan, saying it weaponises assistance. 'Turning aid into a tool of control endangers civilians, erodes the neutrality of humanitarian work, and risks unleashing even greater chaos and suffering across Gaza,' Alsaqqa said. Meanwhile, international leaders have voiced their concerns, including the new pope. Pope Leo XIV, in his inaugural Sunday address, called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and urged the global community to allow humanitarian aid into the strip. Irish Taoiseach Micheal Martin labelled Israel's blockade as a "war crime" and said it is "wholly unacceptable'.