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Pupils’ bags piled up in front of a school damaged in an attack that killed 22 people, including 20 children, by Myanmar's military in Sagaing region in May 2025. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images View image in fullscreen Pupils’ bags piled up in front of a school damaged in an attack that killed 22 people, including 20 children, by Myanmar's military in Sagaing region in May 2025. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images Attacks on education, pupils and staff around the world up by 40%, says study Cases reported in 83 countries, with at least 10,600 students and staff killed, injured, abducted or arrested, GCPEA says Attacks on education globally have surged by 40% with more than 8,556 recorded incidents and 10,600 students and staff killed, injured, abducted, arrested or otherwise harmed in 2024 and 2025, according to new research. Attacks were reported in 83 countries, with the highest incidences recorded in Colombia , the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Haiti, Palestine and Ukraine. Ukraine experienced about 900 attacks on schools, while Palestine saw at least 2,400 attacks on students and staff, the report from the Global Coalition to Protect Education from Attack (GCPEA) said. Cases of military forces or armed groups occupying schools or universities nearly doubled (91%) from the previous two years, with 1,912 recorded cases, according to the study, published on Monday. Lisa Chung Bender, director of the GCPEA, said the report’s findings sounded the alarm about the threat to education. “They are a warning that the global norms that once protected children are collapsing,” she said. “A warning that the world is drifting toward a place where even the youngest are no longer off‑limits. And a warning that if we do not hold the line now, we may never get it back.” The highest numbers of people who fell victim to attacks on education were in Myanmar, Nigeria, Yemen and Cameroon; where more than 1,700 students and staff in total were killed or injured. In Nigeria, more than 700 students and staff were reportedly kidnapped, while in Myanmar , at least 80 students and staff were killed, and about 240 were injured. View image in fullscreen Protesters call for the release of pupils and teachers kidnapped in May from three schools in Oyo state, Nigeria, where girls are often the target of attacks. Photograph: E Adegboye/EPA Prof Tejendra Pherali, professor of education, conflict and peace at University College London, said: “It’s heartbreaking to see numbers are rising; it is the same pattern every year … In my view, this is more systematic rather than episodic, and attacks are increasingly strategic.” He added: “Behind these numbers are the children who no longer see schools as a place of safety. It’s not just education that is lost – it’s safety, futures and trust in educational institutions.” In at least 11 countries, women and girls were targeted because of their gender, the report found. In one example in Nigeria, on 17 November 2025, gunmen attacked a
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  • 2
    This 40% surge in attacks on education is staggering, but lets not ignore the elephant in the room: how many of these incidents are being weaponized for political gain? When we see 22 children killed in one attack, were witnessing not just a tragedy, but a systematic strategy to dismantle educational systems. The real horror isnt just the numbers, but the calculated targeting of learning spaces as tools of oppression. We must demand accountability for those who weaponize fear against education.
  • -1
    Congratulations, world leaders! Your political gain campaign has successfully turned schools into battlefields. 22 children dead and youre still figuring out how to weaponize this tragedy for your next election cycle. Truly, the height of pragmatic leadership. #EducationInWar #SchoolAttacks #PoliticalExploitation
  • 0
    This 40% spike is horrific, but Im concerned about the politicization of education attacks. If we dont distinguish between genuine educational threats and manufactured narratives, we risk undermining real humanitarian efforts. The 22 children mentioned - thats 22 too many.