Mingora Students Attend Classes In Rented Shops, Garages

1 min read

SWAT: Residents have complained the Government Primary School Rahimabad No 2 in Mingora’s Rahimabad area doesn’t have a permanent building, forcing more than 900 students both boys and girls to attend classes in rented shops and garages.

They said the school, established years ago, never had a proper structure, raising concerns about the safety and learning of students.

The residents said they sent their children to school for a brighter future.

“Despite being in the heart of the city, our children study in garages and shops in this modern century because the government has yet to provide them with a proper school building,” a schoolchild’s parent told Dawn.

Students said they had to endure extreme weather as their classes didn’t have adequate protection.

“When it rains, classroom roofs leak water forcing us to either stand or leave. In winters, it’s nearly impossible for us to stay in the classrooms, which have no doors,” said fourth grader Talha Ahmad.

Education activists noted that most families in Rahimabad were day labourers, who couldn’t afford their children’s education at private schools, so the government school was the only option.

“With no other government primary school around, poorer families have no choice but to send their children here, while others enroll their children in private schools,” said social activist Ibrar Alam.

Teachers complained they struggled to take classes in small, cramped rooms, which limited educational activities.

They added that once there were more than 1,300 students, the number had dropped to around 900 due to inadequate space and facilities.

When contacted, headmaster Abdul Latif said he had been actively seeking an alternative building to accommodate students.

“Since I took charge in 2018, I’ve been working to find a suitable place but the land is very expensive, so locals are reluctant to sell it for government use. The education department is paying monthly rent for the current space and continues searching for a more suitable facility,” he said.

Published in Dawn, November 1st, 2024

Previous Story

Prep Student Raped By School Employee

Next Story

Female Teachers of Bara College Awaiting Salary for 10 months

Latest from Blog

LHC Upholds Child Maintenance Orders

LAHORE: The Lahore High Court (LHC) has ruled that financial hardship cannot relieve a father of his legal, moral and religious obligation to provide maintenance for his minor child, declaring the responsibility a continuous duty protected under both Islamic and Pakistani law. In a detailed 15-page judgment, Justice Mohsin Akhtar…

Raised on Fear

One day Suhana, a Year 6 student, entered the classroom with tears in her eyes. Her teachers had noticed that she had become unusually quiet over the past few months and was continuously failing her assessments. Teachers often called her out, asking her to focus more on studies and improve…

Madressah Teacher Jailed for 15 Years in Two Sexual Assault Cases

KARACHI: A sessions court on May 20 sentenced a seminary teacher to 15 years in prison each in two cases after he was found guilty of sexually abusing two of his students in a local madressah in Landhi. Additional District and Sessions Judge Naseer Noor Khan, who is also the…

Child Nutrition Crisis

Pakistan’s child nutrition crisis has long been treated as a welfare issue when, in reality, it is a national emergency with generational consequences. To cater to this worsening crisis, Unicef has partnered with the University of Health Sciences to launch a capacity-building programme aimed at incorporating nutrition and child health…

Ghotki Police Register Gang Rape FIR

SUKKUR: The Ghotki police have registered a gang rape case against some influential figures of Adilpur and their several associates on May 19 after much uproar on social media over the “horrific and inhuman treatment” allegedly meted out to the victim. The 15-year-old seemingly devastated girl had narrated her ordeal…
Go toTop