Haiti's schools re-open but many parents now can't afford them
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[August 20, 2020]
By Andre Paultre and Sarah Marsh
PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Haiti's school
children missed class this year first due to months of violent unrest,
then the coronavirus pandemic. Now, as schools are finally reopening,
many parents can no longer afford it, raising the prospect hard-won
gains in education could be lost.
"The deadline to pay is next Monday. Without paying, I won't be able to
attend the class," said Nickerla Etienne, 16, through streams of tears,
after being sent home from her private school in the capital,
Port-au-Prince, for failing to pay up.
While the pandemic has disrupted education worldwide, the situation is
especially acute in Haiti, where just an estimated two-thirds of adults
can read and write.
"We've never seen a crisis quite on this scale before," said Beatrice
Malebranche at United Nations children's agency UNICEF in Haiti.
Virtual schooling has been impossible for most in the Caribbean country
where more than half the population lives on less than $3 per day and
has little internet and television access.
Meanwhile, given the weakness of the Haitian state, suffering from years
of unrest and mismanagement, and still struggling to recover from a
devastating 2010 earthquake, four out of five schools in the Caribbean
nation are private.
And while fees are typically low, they have become unaffordable for many
as the pandemic has worsened Haiti's already dire economic plight.
Even families whose children have scored coveted places at public
schools are struggling just to buy them stationery or decent shoes.
Outside of schooling, children risk entering the informal jobs sector,
or worse, being drafted into Haiti's gangs.
The education ministry has little firepower to tackle the problem, with
it receiving 11% of the total budget down from 16%. The global average
is 20% of total spending.
Spokesman Miloody Vincent told Reuters it would provide financial aid to
at least 50,000 of the most vulnerable families, which will not go far
in the country of 11 million.
The situation is a setback after Haiti hiked its primary school
attendance rate to 84% from 76% over the last decade, said Malebranche.
NO MONEY FOR TEACHERS
While coronavirus has left Haiti relatively unscathed healthwise, the
education ministry has mandated that staff and pupils wear masks.
Schools must provide hand washing, even if it is just a bucket of water.
The government has also ordered the most overcrowded schools divide up
classes to ensure physical distancing and rotate each in shifts of two
to three days a week, raising concerns over the fact they would provide
fewer lessons per child.
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Nickerla Ambroise Etienne dries her tears, after being informed that
she cannot attend school yet, as she walks along a street in
Port-au-Prince, Haiti, August 17, 2020. Picture taken August 17,
2020. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares
Yet directors of five private schools in low-income areas visited by
Reuters said only around half of their pupils had returned so far.
Overcrowding is no longer a problem - school finances are.
"I haven't been able to pay teachers since March," said Leonard
Turenne, director of the Pierre Fermat secondary school. "The state
promised us some financial aid but we haven't received anything
yet."
TRADING CHALK FOR FIREARMS
Some already underfinanced schools will likely close, with teachers
switching to other professions, experts say.
Etienne's father, Jackson Dorceus, 53, used to be a teacher himself
but in the 1990s switched to working as a bodyguard because his
school had not paid him for a year.
Yet although he "traded chalk for firearms", and his wife runs a
parapharmacy, the economic situation is so bad they still cannot pay
their daughter's fees.
The unrest last year financially ruined many businesses which were
unable to get back on their feet before coronavirus hit, while
double-digit inflation is ravaging household incomes and remittances
are falling.
"Most our clients owe us money," said Dorceus, standing outside
their corrugated iron one-room house. Like many parents, he said he
would seek to negotiate the fees with the school, or failing that
ask for church alms.
Some parents who cannot afford to send their children to school now
might send them next year - a practise that explains why so many
Haitians are well into their twenties before they graduate high
school.
The risk though is the parents might never afford it.
Etienne, an eager student, dreams of becoming an air stewardess. For
the time being though, she must content herself with selling popcorn
from the front porch of her parents' shop.
(Reporting by Andre Paultre in Port-au-Prince and Sarah Marsh in
Havana; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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