Top Photo: Vincent Macisaac/IRIN
Soy Chet- orphaned and now out of school also
Bottom: Photo: Vincent Macisaac/ IRIN
Students outside a temporary school set up after flooding in Anlong Chrey village. Stop-gap schooling
Soy Chet- orphaned and now out of school also
Bottom: Photo: Vincent Macisaac/ IRIN
Students outside a temporary school set up after flooding in Anlong Chrey village. Stop-gap schooling
PHNOM PENH, 24 November 2011 (IRIN) - Schools damaged in Cambodia's worst monsoons in more than a decade may take up to a year to recover after flooding delayed the start of school for thousands of students nationwide, say aid workers and officials.
As of late October, 323 schools out of 1,400 damaged ones were closed; some have since reopened. Though flood waters have receded, how well those schools are functioning and how many remain closed is still unknown, as the government continues its damage assessments in a dozen flood-hit provinces.
At least 77 schools are beyond repair, while students and teachers were still pumping water out of dozens more, said the director of the education ministry's construction department on 21 November, Song Yen.
"We have not yet completely assessed the damage," he added.
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