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Education at Buduburam: SHIFSD’s Concerns

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

Anyone present at the 1972 Commencement at the University of Liberia would have taken a great deal of solace in the following words of Liberia’s longest-serving speaker and former Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the University, the late Hon. Richards Henries: “Today is a great, high, and history-making day, not only for the University of Liberia but also the Republic of Liberia, for the world is now convinced that like many successful nations Liberia now realizes that education is the buttress to any nation”.

Arguably, products of the Louis Arthur Grimes School of Law and the prestigious A.M. Doglotti College of Medicine and a retinue of faculties at the University of Liberia have since spread far and wide contributing considerably in their respective feats.

Our educational system was indeed remarkable and Liberians could proudly make good ambassadors of so small a country that is ten times the size of Lebanon.
Regrettably, the pursuit of war as an option to capture state power has sent Liberia more than a century back. Every facet of society has suffered at the expense of destruction.

At the Buduburam refugee camp, education and the status of learning remain bleak. Classrooms are joked and crammed, commitment of the part of teachers is secondary due to lack of incentives, library facilities completely unavailable and the traditional enthusiasm synonymous to students’ upbeat mood tends to be tilted along a lackadaisical front for a number of obvious reasons.

The nation Liberia is on the road to stability and such an environment points to the fact that reconstruction, readjustment, rehabilitation, resettlement and reintegration have got to abound. Varied skills and trained human resource potentials have to be mobilized in that direction.
But with the existing trend, there is an element of juxtaposition to fill the gap. SHIFSD, is therefore of the conviction that various international interventions would be required to salvage the looming development.

At Buduburam Camp, there are many who out of zealotry are clamoring to enroll into schools: be it primary, Junior Secondary, Secondary, short-term courses, skills training for women and young girls especially out of school dropouts, vocational, professional and tertiary institutions.
Our concern at SHIFSD stems from the understanding that in order to return to our proper place within the comity of nations and in order to be seen as effective competitors on international platforms, we must first seek the academic kingdom, empower ourselves – so that such empowerment would culminate into all other things to enhance the work of so ideal a kingdom.

No country can ever survive without the requisite skills and human resource base to deliver in terms of the increasing demands and challenges our changing world is poised to bring.

Democracy in the new Liberia would only be seen credible if those structures that obtain in a democratic society are controlled, managed, administered, engineered and made implementable by trained Liberian professionals, academics, technocrats and the like.
The battle against poverty, disease and ignorance would no doubt be ours if the question of our shattered educational system gets redressed in a holistic manner. It’s the only way the late Speaker’s speech would attract real meaning.

An Evolving Staggering Refugee Environment

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

If ever there existed any group of people who deliberately brought upon themselves ‘refugeeism’ - that remains an unimaginable figment of thought which invariably seem far from a dot of speculation or better still a semblance of truth.

Although the actions and inactions of man coupled with their attendant ramifications could amount to approximate indicators for possible outburst or looming tenterhooks, an iota of conjecture with proximity to the latter cannot be ignored.

So was the case of Liberia - that despite despotism, political patronage, cronyism, nepotism, single domination by an insignificant minority of the population, saw itself at each other’s throat in a ruthless, barbaric and uncivilized bid for power.

Then the unforeseeable happened resulting to families being torn apart, homes shattered, brothers and sisters pursuing a belligerent path, destruction worsened, diseases became prevalent, displacement abound and life in exile considered an option for and dozen others.
To put it mildly, what currently obtains as Buduburam Camp originally hosted a psychiatrically related facility, which was apparently deserted. But thanks for the kind courtesy of the Government of Ghana, which after the brief stay of the initial batch of Liberian refugees at the Tema Harbor in September 1990, relocated them to Buduburam - 30km outside of Accra.

The lack of inadequate infrastructure to house refuges at the time made the option as to the use of tents compelling. Like all others who experienced the tragic consequences of war, Liberian refugees of course had to form queues daily for meals, wash-down and visit the lavatory. Those days could be empathetically described as rough-ride moments - there were scrambles for almost everything.

However, the dynamics associated with man in an attempt to conform to, improve upon, maintain or surmount the challenges of any new environment began to take roots. The refugees temporarily adjusted and started to learn by the ropes - as it were the hard way. The role of religious and civic bodies cannot be over-emphasized given the huge level of humanitarian inflows to Liberian refugees.

As the combination of physical, social, psychological and physiological adjustment started to inundate the refugees; the need to expand their firmaments, infuse comfort and attract convenience took on their resilience.

With the advent of increase possibilities and opportunities to make their stay cozy to say the least, skills, especially of vocational relevance took the center stage in the construction of affordable mud-brick styled structures by refugees’ standards were built. These houses were poorly roofed with ‘roofing fell’ not meant to take the role of corrugated roofing sheets. Anyway, a staggering population was making do to blaze the trail. Worth noting, a systematic evolution of the refugees from tents to manageable dwelling - at least this time with corrugated iron sheets is almost predominant.

Folks on the other hand with a background in education and who once stood in the vanguard along the frontier of knowledge reckoned the need to begin what set off as tutorials on a voluntary basis and laboriously germinated into the present Buduburam Refugee Community School with a population of over 800 pupils. The UN Refugee Agency through its implementing partners, the Christian Council of Ghana has contributed significantly to bringing BUDUSEC to its current status.
Seizing the strategic initiative to prepare some refugees for constructive re-absorption into a new, stable and peaceful Liberia, the UNHCR has since 1992 provided educational assistance to a trickle of the refugees - which a number of critics regard as negligible amidst the task of reconstruction. Some of the beneficiaries are to date contributing to the emergence of a new Liberia, some journeyed across the Atlantic while the rest are yet to make a final determination but continue to exert their presence through meaningful contributions in a number of areas.

The survival question is one of serious concern for refugees in particular. While some tend to attach great deal of unease to ecumenical preoccupation in the name of faith in God, to the contrary, there are some who believe that the days of ‘manna intervention’ are no more and that one must take his/her destiny into his/her own hands.

A few are edging on to venture into a diversity of business initiatives. Although some might not be as economically prosperous and profitable as could have been the case in a normal environment - the tendency to be positively engaged is a worthwhile end product. On the whole, those who have and continue to make it per the micro-economics and its slow returns vis-à-vis the market forces operating in the refugee camp deserve a pat on the back.
About 15%, of the population at the camp is relying on either regular or intermittent remittances from relations, friends and the alike. Insignificant as beneficiaries of remittances are to non-beneficiaries, most refugees remain resolute in doing whatever profitable an undertaking that would reap for them credible capital. The majority relies on small-scale back yard gardens.

Entering the Buduburam camp as a first-time visitor; the euphoric gestures and seemingly jiggy fiesta of many a hyper-trigger youth tend to present an all-jolly-good-time bunch of folks. What’s the big deal about merriment and the craze of youthfulness? That’s no condonation or justification for a 360-day nice-time spree.

The track-record of some refugees could be nothing to write home about though but as in any society, the taint of so irrelevant a fingerful of chaps take precedence over the dignified majority.

Life may not be all that burgeoning if you like but a firm determination to rise to the occasion gracefully and assertively are cornerstones and crucial proponents that have helped immensely to motivate the human spirit of Liberians.
The attendant fortunes of refugeeism that culminated into family reunion and possibilities for political asylum-seekers to get resettled to America and parts of Europe, it is hoped would bring about substantial human resource and developmental returns to Liberia in years to come - given the foresight of beneficiaries, especially the youth who would be expected to assume the mantle of statesmanship. It is hoped they would attach meaning to the huge opportunities that would unfold.

For most Liberians, the signing of the Accra Comprehensive Peace Agreement brings glamour of hope, prospect and challenge towards the birth of a new Liberia. Sustaining that goodwill on the part of parties to the Accord is a sacrifice worth pursuing in the supreme interest of lasting peace.
Notwithstanding, while there has been an element of impressive showing and yearning to embark on voluntary repatriation to Liberia, a significant proportion of refugees think the outcome of the October 11 General and Presidential Elections in Liberia could inform mass return after a little over a decade in exile.

SHIFSD/Unite for Sight Conducts Capacity-building Workshops

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

Owing to its philosophy aimed at health education, SHIFSD/Unite for Sight, in the Pilot Phase of its intervention at Buduburam, was not only seen on the screening vision, eye care cum eyeglass distribution spree but also contributed to capacity building of SHIFSD staff.

The Two-Day alternating training sought to provide SHIFSD staff with the skills and know-how in the scientific collection of data, processing, data analysis, the quantative and qualitative synchronization, steps and approaches relevant to narrative report writing in the most comprehensive though but logical manner.

Meanwhile, another staff capacity-building workshop in strategic leadership skills in appreciation to the varied roles of all components in a management setting was all conducted for folks at SHIFSD.

SHIFSD-Ibis-West Africa Sign Pilot Project Agreement

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

A litmus test in partnership agreement terms that could inform what might lead to the determination of a much wider scale of collaboration between SHIFSD and Ibis-West Africa has been signed to mark the Pilot Phase of EfE The Pilot Agreement was signed in November 2004.
Accordingly, the common objective of the two partners is to collaborate and support the further development and implementation of an Education for Empowerment Programme (EfE) specifically Education in Emergency Programme at the Buduburam Refugee Camp.

The Terms of Agreement shall seek to address relevant concerns in the following fields:

  • Organization capacity-building for SHIFSD.
  • Organize programme on HIV/AIDS Day for School Children in the Camp.
  • Baseline Survey on out of school kids and dropouts.
  • Identification of teachers for the proposed Accelerated Learning Programme.

The Pilot Phase covers the period from November 2004 to March 2005.
Speaking to SHIFSD Online News, Jeremiah Burgess, Executive Director of the Organization extolled the donor for their keen interest in the plight of Liberian refugees and said SHIFSD was prepared to justify the confidence reposed in it.

Earlier, Ms Diana Appiah, Education facilitator of the Ibis-West Africa EfE Buduburam Project, told SHIFSD the onus was on them to demonstrate professionalism in the discharge of the Agreement to the letter. She called on SHIFSD to creditably use expertise and human resource at its disposal to diligently deliver on performance. Said she: “SHIFSD has a duty to work assiduously and break new grounds as the Education in Emergency Programme (EEP) gets off the ground in the Buduburam Settlement.”

West Africa Launches EfE at Buduburam Camp

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

SHIFSD/Ibis-West Africa Launches EfE at Buduburam Camp

Owing to its institutional outreach objectives through a new programme of capacity-building initiatives with national and sub-regional networks of civil society organizations, Ibis West Africa has officially launched its Education for Empowerment Programme at the Buduburam Refugee Settlement.
The focus of Ibis-West Africa’s EfE programme at Buduburam would target out-of-school children between the ages of 6 and 15 as well as improve the quality of education on the Buduburam Refugee Camp. The programme reckons its secondary target group to be teachers and community education volunteers who will assist in the quality improvement and ‘out-of-school’ programme.

Ibis holds the conviction that the programme’s expected outcome will achieve/ensure:

  • A significant number of education actors working together to improve education in deprive areas.
  • Significant improvement in the quality of education.
  • Significant number of “out-of-school” children gaining basic literacy and numeracy skills.
  • Improvement of the status of girls and gender equity within the education sector.
  • Significant increase in civil society participation in the education sector.
  • School administrators, teachers and education volunteers’ capacities supported to improve their abilities to cope with their role.

The October 2004 launch EfE at the Buduburam Refugee Camp, paying host to approximately 50,000 Liberian refugees underscores Ibis critical intervention in the Mano River Union of which Liberia, Sierra Lone and Guinea are the key stakeholders. Ibis’ focus will be on democratization including media rights, peace-building and conflict resolution.

It must be emphasized that Ibis’ role will indeed be strategic given the huge rate of school dropouts amongst youths at the Buduburam Camp.