The
Human Rights Watch on Wednesday condemned as "reprehensible" attacks by
suspected members of Boko Haram on schools in and around restive
Maiduguri city, hotbed of the Islamist sect in northern Nigeria.
"Boko Haram's attacks on schools represent a new and reprehensible development since the group began its campaign of violence in 2009," said Zama Coursen-Neff, deputy children's rights director at Human Rights Watch {HRW}.
"Boko Haram's attacks on schools represent a new and reprehensible development since the group began its campaign of violence in 2009," said Zama Coursen-Neff, deputy children's rights director at Human Rights Watch {HRW}.
As a result of the attacks, at least 5,000 students are staying at home, HRW said in a statement, quoting media reports.
Over the past two weeks at least a dozen public and private schools in Maiduguri have been set ablaze by members of the sect.
The Islamist Boko Haram, whose name translates to "Western education is sin", has claimed responsibility for some of those attacks, saying their actions were in response to "raids" by soldiers on an Islamic seminary in the city.
A self-styled spokesman for the group, Abul Qaqa, said last month that the school attacks were over the "indiscriminate arrests of students of Koranic schools by security agents".
HRW said the attacks on schools "not only put children and teachers' lives at risk, but they may also deprive children of an education. Schools may close and children drop out entirely."
Nigeria is a party to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, both of which guarantee children the right to education, HRW said.
Troops in Maiduguri on Monday shot dead three suspected Boko Haram members, injured and captured two others as they allegedly tried to burn down a school, the army said.
A number of homemade explosives which they allegedly intended to use to attack a primary school in the Lamisula district of the city were recovered, army spokesman in the city Lieutenant Colonel Hassan Mohammed told AFP.
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