By Anjali Sharma
UNITED NATIONS – International Migration agency on Saturday said that Venezuela child refugees and migrants in Trinidad and Tobago were barred from State-run schools.
The agency said that this year, a change in the law backed by the UN means that several dozen were able to benefit from formal education.
Astrid Saavedra 11 year old Venezuelan refugee walked into her fourth-grade classroom in Trinidad and Tobago for her first day of school in September, she was eager to begin lessons in her favorite subject, mathematics.
But the prospect of teaching fellow students about her homeland Venezuela was equally exciting.
Astrid is one of the first refugee and migrant children from Venezuela to be allowed to enter the Trinidadian national public education system, after a change in the country’s immigration rules.
There are 60 children to meet the admission criteria, which included possession of a certified, translated birth certificate and immunization record, and be assigned a school, marking an important milestone in fulfilling Trinidad and Tobago’s commitment to fully meeting its obligations under the Convention on the Rights of the Child, an international UN human rights treaty.
Senior UN migration agency official, Desery Jordan-Whiskey said “These young people, should they stay in Trinidad and Tobago, would be adequately prepared to enter the workforce of this country, filling gaps in the labour market and contributing to innovation and sustainability”.
“It’s also an opportunity for these children, who are mostly Spanish speaking, to contribute just as much as they would gain, by helping their peers learn a second language.”
Trinidad’s Minister of Foreign Affairs officially announced the Government’s decision which changes in legislation that allowed children like Astrid to go to school came about in July 2023, during a meeting of UN officials and politicians.
UN agencies agreed that the right to receive an education is an example of the way human rights overlaps with sustainable development.
Amanda Solano, head of the UNHCR in Trinidad and Tobago said “Advocating for access to education is key to bridging the gap between immediate humanitarian needs and long-term development goals” .
“By providing education to refugee and migrant children, we’re not just meeting their immediate needs, we’re investing in their future and the future of Trinidad and Tobago.”
Over 2,000 refugee and migrant children remain excluded from the school system.
UN has made efforts to provide them with alternative learning opportunities or to place them in private schools but has expressed a preference for wider admission to the state school system.
A committee of UN agencies and partners, the Education Working Group is working with the Government of Trinidad and Tobago to better understand the training and logistical support that would be required to accommodate larger numbers of refugee and migrant children into local schools.
The hope is that many more students like Astrid will be able to walk into the nation’s classrooms to start the 2025-2026 academic year.
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