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Return of Afghan school children to exceed all expectations, UN survey shows

Return of Afghan school children to exceed all expectations, UN survey shows

An Afghan school girl
Preliminary results of a United Nations survey of Kabul’s primary schools shows that the return to education by youngsters following the start of the new term in March has exceeded all expectations.

According to a rapid appraisal of half of Kabul’s 200 schools, there has been a 34 per cent increase in primary age enrolment, a spokesman for the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said today at a press briefing in the capital. In grade one alone, there was a 68 per cent jump in school attendance.

There were also positive trends in the enrolment of girls, as the survey showed 100,000 of the 202,000 primary school-age students attending classes in the 100 schools were female – 42 per cent more than anticipated, spokesman Manoel de Almeida e Silva said.

The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) was quick to stress that this was a rapid and small survey and that a nationwide assessment of schools was under way, Mr. de Almeida e Silva said. Broader results would be available by the end of May.

“However, the agency feels that this initial snapshot is encouraging, and is a credit to those in the Interim Administration and education departments who worked so hard on the Back to School campaign,” he added.