Teacher in violence-torn Kashmir starts makeshift schools

Teacher Ghulam Rasool Kambay has more than a dozen of children attending makeshift school.

Update: 2016-08-30 06:07 GMT
Children with school bags crossing a road in Srinagar. (Photo: PTI)

Srinagar: Wedding halls and prayer rooms have been turned into classrooms in Jammu and Kashmir as families struggle to provide children with a normal life after more than 50 days of violence.

At least 70 civilians and two security officials have been killed and more than 9,000 people injured, according to official tallies, in clashes between protesters chaffing at security forces.

Authorities trying to stifle protests that erupted after Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani was gunned down by the security forces on July 8, ordered schools and colleges to close two days later. There's no sign of them re-opening.

Teacher Ghulam Rasool Kambay, seeing children becoming increasingly restless cooped up at home, decided to do something.

He opened a tutorial centre in a village on August 3 and now has more than a dozen of them in villages in a district south of the region's main city of Srinagar.

"The response is good. We have about 800 students in these centres. Parents are eager to send their children as they have no option right now," Kambay said.

Students find their way to the makeshift schools in small groups through back lanes. They often sit on the floor as there are not enough desks and share books. "It's more like a self-learning exercise, just a way to keep in touch with books," said Muneer Wani, 16, at his temporary school at a mosque where classes begin after morning prayers.

Muneer said it was the only place to meet friends and study. "We can't even go outdoors."

India has blamed Pakistan for supporting the violence but Pakistan denies that.

Thousands of teenage boys defy curfew every day and gather in groups to pelt stones at police. On the streets of Srinagar, people have scrawled “Go India, go back”.

Zubair Ahmad said he was too worried about the safety of his two children to send them to classes at a nearby mosque. His wife has been teaching them at home instead, but the children were getting restless, he said. "It is very difficult for children...they've become aggressive."

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