Kadidia*, 14, and her parents were determined that the violence sweeping Africa’s Sahel region – including her homeland Mali – wasn’t going to end her chances of completing her education. Kadidia* can now go to a Save the Children-supported school, which is helping children caught up in the violence, she wants to become a doctor to take care of her people and the people of her village.

Kadidia*, 14, and her parents were determined that the violence sweeping Africa’s Sahel region – including her homeland Mali – wasn’t going to end her chances of completing her education. Kadidia* can now go to a Save the Children-supported school, which is helping children caught up in the violence, she wants to become a doctor to take care of her people and the people of her village.

Broken Dreams: Girls living on the Frontline of Africa's New War

"Before the conflict, we were at peace, no one was afraid. Today, everyone is afraid."

FAIRFIELD, Conn. (June 10, 2021)—As the G7 Summit begins, Save the Children is releasing a powerful series of photographs to highlight the devastating education crisis facing girls living on the frontline of Africa's deadly conflict in the central Sahel. 

National photographers Seyba Keita, Apsatou Bagaya, and Adrien Bitibaly traveled across Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso with the charity to document the inspiring stories of girls living through war and the challenges they face. The images capture the stories of loss and sadness, but also the girls' strength, resilience, and hope for the future.

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused the greatest education emergency in history. At its height, almost 90 percent of children across the globe were out of school, including nearly 743 million girls [1]. A recent study by UNESCO showed that 11 million girls[2] are at risk of never returning to school, with devastating consequences for their learning, protection, and wellbeing.

In countries affected by conflict, girls are more than twice as likely to be out of school as girls living in non-affected countries. They are also at disproportionate risk of dropping out, adolescent pregnancy, and forced marriage. Save the children analysis shows that the economic impacts of the pandemic were predicted to lead to an additional 2.5 million girls at risk of child marriage by 2025 and 1 million more adolescent pregnancies in 2020 alone.[3]

Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger in the Central Sahel are at the epicenter of the girl's education crisis. Over 4000 schools were shut down due to attacks from armed groups in 2020 alone. In Niger and Mali, more than half of the girls enrolled in primary school do not follow through to secondary education. In Burkina Faso, only 1 percent of girls have completed secondary school. [4]

All three countries have some of the highest rates of child marriage globally, with Niger ranked the highest where a third of children are married before 15 and three-quarters by the age of 18.[5] The region is home to some 20 million child brides, and 95 percent of married adolescent girls in the Sahel are not attending school.[6]

In Niger, 12-year-old Dioura* was forced from her home when armed insurgents attacked her village. Her school was set ablaze during the fighting, and she now lives in a camp for the internally displaced with her family. 

Life in the camps is hard, and food is difficult to come by. Both Dioura's* parents are out of work, and she sometimes has to go to bed on an empty stomach. However, she is now back in school and wants to study to help others, "I would like to become a doctor when I finish my studies," she says. 

14-year-old Kadidia* in Mali fled from her village after the schools were closed by armed groups, leaving the rest of her family behind. She now lives with her aunt so that she can continue her education despite the conflict.  

"There was a school in our village. The school closed when people took up arms,” said Kadidia,* that's why I came here to study. School is important for girls. When you're educated, you have knowledge."

"The difficulty faced by girls, especially in villages, is that when you become a teenager, it's deemed absolutely necessary to be married." 

Each of the girls has been supported by Save the Children and the EU's landmark program in response to the Sahel Crisis to tackle the education, protection, and mental health needs of 200,000 children across Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso.

To tackle the most significant education emergency of our lifetime, Save the Children is calling on G7 leaders and other governments to make ambitious pledges to the Global Partnership for Education of $5 billion for the next five years and urgently work towards making COVID-19 vaccination coverage truly global. National governments need to increase education budgets. Education ministers also need to draw up clear roadmaps to bring all children safely back to school when the time is right and improve their education.

* Name changed to protect identity

[1] https://en.unesco.org/news/covid-19-school-closures-around-world-will-hit-girls-hardest
[2] https://en.unesco.org/news/covid-19-unesco-and-partners-educationlaunch-global-campaign-keep-girls-picture
[3] https://www.savethechildren.org.uk/news/media-centre/press-releases/covid-19-places-half-a-million-more-girls-at-risk-of-child-marri0
[4] https://reliefweb.int/report/burkina-faso/sahel-working-toward-inclusive-education-girls-disabilities
[5] https://atlas.girlsnotbrides.org/map/
[6] https://data.unicef.org/resources/child-marriage-in-the-sahel-brochure/

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