The Watchlist on Children and Armed Conflict said in a new report yesterday that the mostly Muslim Seleka rebel coalition and the anti-Balaka Christian militia have stripped some schools bare, taking doors, desks, roofs, books and office materials.
In recent months, it said, they have been targeting newly rehabilitated schools, disrupting efforts to resume education in the impoverished nation.
The report also criticized African Union, French and UN peacekeeping troops for establishing temporary bases in school facilities, but it noted that fewer incidents were reported in recent months.
According to an assessment released by education experts in the country in April, roughly 29.6 per cent of the 335 schools surveyed were attacked and 8.4 per cent were used by armed groups and international peacekeeping forces between 2012 and April 2015.
Central African Republic has been rocked by violence since Seleka rebels toppled the president in 2013. Widespread human rights abuses committed by Seleka led to the formation of the anti-Balaka Christian militia which unleashed sectarian fighting that has forced hundreds of thousands of Muslim civilians to flee to neighboring countries.
She said reintegrating and educating 10,000 children in armed groups is a major challenge.
Janine Morna, who led the research mission, said many students and teachers returned to school for the 2014-2015 academic year "but remain vulnerable to attack."
She said between 78 per cent and 88 per cent of schools are officially open, but because of the persistent threats of attack attendance is sparse and intermittent.
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