Minawi and Khalifa call upon the Chadian government and the Chaddian president to authorize refugee students in eastern Chad to pass secondary exams

The sovereign of the Darfur region, Meni Arco Minawi, called on the Chadian government and President Mohamed Idris Dubai to authorize Sudanese refugee students in the camps of eastern Chad to sit for the secondary certificate exams for the 2024 batch scheduled for the end of this month. This came during his meeting today, under-secretary of the Ministry of Education, Dr Ahmed Khalifa Omar and the UNICEF delegation in the presence of Dr Tawhida Abdul Rahman, Minister of Education, Scientific Research and Vocational Training in the Regional Government of Darfur. Minawi expressed her regret that these students were deprived of the previous examination, highlighting their serious business this time by integrating efforts into the Ministry of Education and the Emergency Emergency Committee and the UNICEF training to allow them to take the exam to their colleagues, praising the efforts of UNICEF, which assured us of thanks during this meeting to provide the necessary logistical support.

For his part, Dr. Ahmed Khalifa Omar, under-secretary of the Ministry of Education, on the efforts of the emergency committee and his efforts to take exams in the refugee camps in eastern Chad, confirming their preparation and their will of the technical aspects at any time when the Chadian government had accepted if these efforts failed. High vigor and a clear effort, and we put our hand on their hands so that our students in the camps of Oriental Chad and the States near the border band with Chad to sit for exams with their colleagues can rent the efforts of the Council of Sovereignty, the Council of Ministers and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as well as the Emergency Committee of Examinations in this aspect. Khalifa added, and we also call and call to President Mohamed Kaka to allow these children to take the exam.

While UNICEF said that the question of children and students in Sudan is one of its concerns and their right to take the exam, and the organization underlined the need for political and diplomatic debate between Sudan and HAD in order to allow refugee students of the examination, confirming the organization’s desire to provide logistical support if these efforts succeed.







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