UK doubles education support for refugees in Lebanon over next 3 years

14 Sep 2015 09:30 AM

An additional £10 million per year for the next 3 years will support thousands more free school places and reach children not in schools.

The UK will support a further 59,000 school places for Syrian refugees and vulnerable children in Lebanon while providing classes and support for thousands more who are out of school. This comes as the UN warns that another million Syrians could flee their homes before the end of the year.

Up to £20 million will be provided to support Lebanon’s severely overstretched school system and give children who have lost everything the chance of a better future. This investment will double Britain’s planned investment in education in Lebanon over the next 3 years.

It will also provide education to 30,000 out of school refugees and poor Lebanese children. This will include offering regular classes and lessons in core subjects to ensure children do not fall behind.

Four years of fighting has forced half a million school-age children to flee from Syria to Lebanon. More than half of them do not have access to a decent education. Britain remains firmly committed to helping this traumatised generation of refugees to continue their education despite the crisis.

New support from Britain will include:

The UK supports the aspirations of Syrian refugee families and their children for academic progress and employment that will enable them to prosper, make a contribution to the region, and eventually return to rebuild Syria. Britain is at the forefront of the international response to the Syria crisis, and our support is already giving thousands of refugees the chance to continue their schooling.

In addition to yesterday’s announcement, UK has already committed £1 billion to assist vulnerable people in Syria and refugees in the region. This includes an existing allocation of £20 million to education in Lebanon in the next 3 years.

In Lebanon alone since the crisis began, we have helped their government to double the number of free school places for refugees in Lebanon to 200,000, supplied more than 300,000 textbooks and we are working with the UN and refugee parents to keep children in school. However it is clear there is still much more to do. That is why, in addition to doubling our support to education in Lebanon, we are lobbying other countries to step up their support for vulnerable refugees fleeing Syria.