Situated in Burkina Faso’s Loroum province, near the border with Mali, the school – the only middle school within a 45-kilometer radius – was located in a region that had seen an increasing number of attacks by armed Islamist groups that year. Schools had become a prime target of the insurgents. The students knew this. And it was with growing apprehension that they pursued their education.
In many corners of Burkina Faso’s border area with Mali and Niger, schools were burning, teachers were being kidnapped or killed, and parents terrorized into keeping their children out of school. For the village of Toulfé, in Nord region, the relentless attacks on education would prove disastrous. And, as documented in a new Human Rights Watch report, “Their War Against Education,” teachers and young people are bearing the brunt of the conflict.
By that November day, the armed Islamists were fast achieving their goal to shut down French, Western-style education. Hundreds of schools had already closed, and teachers gone into hiding. “Fear,” a UNICEF report said at the time, was “widespread.”
Time and again, the students at Toulfé Middle School looked out the windows, anxiously scanning the school yard. Three weeks earlier, a health center had been attacked in a nearby village and a school building set on fire. A few months prior to this, during an attack at a primary school in Soum, a neighboring province, a schoolgirl had been shot and killed and a teacher abducted. One of these days, they feared, the “jihadists” would come to Toulfé, too.
Grégoire heard the students’ screams before he saw the attackers: four men in military fatigues who’d arrived on motorcycles, AK-47 assault rifles over their shoulders and ammunition belts draped around their waist. With the cloth from their turbans wrapped around their heads and faces, only their eyes were visible. It was a terrifying sight.
Stunned, Grégoire watched as students began vaulting out the windows and running for safety. Those who didn’t get away in time were ordered to get down on the ground. Then the attackers came for him and his colleagues. “One pointed a gun at me,” Grégoire recounts. “He said ... he was there for jihad [and] they’d already said to stop teaching French, so why were we still teaching French.... Then one asked the other, ‘Should we kill them?’”
Grégoire and his colleagues were flogged instead, one by one, while lying face down in the dust, with guns trained on them and their students looking on. When the attackers retreated, having set fire to one of the school’s offices, they left behind a group of men so traumatized they had trouble starting their motorbikes, and a message “for the Burkinabé authorities” demanding the closure of all schools in the provinces of Soum and Loroum. “After this warning, if we find a teacher teaching, we will kill him,” the note scribbled on a piece of notebook paper read. “Democracy [is] barred.” Signed Ansaroul Islam, a militant group.
Since the emergence of this group in 2016, Burkina Faso has been grappling with a surge in armed Islamist attacks, spreading from central Mali to Burkina Faso’s northern Sahel region. Between 2017 and 2020, there have been at least 126 attacks on education professionals, students, and schools by Ansaroul Islam and other groups allied with Al Qaeda or the Islamic State (also known as ISIS) that Human Rights Watch was able to document. Dozens more attacks were reported by the media and local sources.
Abusive counterterrorism operations by state security forces have aggravated the situation. As a result, people have been fleeing the conflict zones in droves. Today, the once-relatively stable country is shattered by the world’s fastest-growing displacement crisis, and Toulfé is a ghost town. “Not even one person stayed in the village,” says Grégoire.
Hundreds of schools have been burned, looted, and destroyed, exposing children to an uncertain future. By March this year – before the coronavirus pandemic led to the general closure of schools – nearly 350,000 students were unable to continue their education. The attacks have reversed decades of progress in increasing school attendance. And thousands of education workers have fled their posts as a result. So, too, has Grégoire.
Like almost everybody interviewed by Human Rights Watch researcher Lauren Seibert for her report, Grégoire wants neither his real name nor his present location known. Even a year and a half after the Toulfé attack, he is scared his attackers will track him down. He is not aware of any official investigation of the incident, nor was he ever offered any counselling. “We had the impression we were abandoned to ourselves,” he says, a notion which pains him more than the beating.
Psychological support for teachers and students who experienced attacks has remained inadequate. Like Grégoire, many still suffer from anxiety and nightmares, have difficulties sleeping, or are afraid to be out after dark. “For months after the attack I used to wake up and cry out loudly,” Grégoire recounts. To this day, the sound of motorcycles startles him. “You never know who’s coming,” he says. These days, however, it is the thought of the children and their “lost chance to succeed” that keeps him up at night.
While the government, with assistance from aid agencies, has taken measures to strengthen schools’ capacities to plan for and respond to potential attacks, these initiatives have only reached a small portion of schools in the affected regions, leaving many vulnerable. Efforts to reintegrate displaced children into schools in safer towns have led to dramatically overcrowded classrooms. With some class sizes stretched to as many as 150 pupils with only 2 teachers, schools are saturated and unable to enroll the ever-growing number of students fleeing from areas that have come under attack. “What will become of these children?” Grégoire asks.
He knows of many students from Toulfé who did not finish the 2018-2019 school year because parents were unable to re-enroll them elsewhere. Like so many others whose schools were shut down or who were displaced, the children are now working as street vendors, domestic workers, brick-makers, or in Burkina Faso’s many artisanal gold mines. Girls forced out of school by the cascade of school closures are particularly at risk of early marriage, domestic violence, or sexual abuse.
With so many children missing out on an education, quite a few might become vulnerable to recruitment drives by armed Islamist groups, warns Jacob Yarabatioula, a Burkinabè researcher specializing in terrorism. “That’s what the terrorists want – children to be ignorant, so they can influence them and put whatever they want in their heads,” he says. “We all should fear this.” Grégoire shares these concerns. “The government needs to help these students,” he says. “If you let them grow up like that, just wandering around, it could be a problem later.”
He would return to his job at Toulfé Middle School tomorrow, he says, provided the staff’s and students’ safety could be guaranteed, something which has proven difficult to ensure as long as armed Islamist groups don’t cease their attacks against schools. “I am ready to go back,” Grégoire says, “for the love of these children.”
This piece is based on interviews with and by Human Rights Watch researcher Lauren Seibert.