‘800 million Muslims out of 1.4 billion are illiterate’ All their time is WASTED on the DEATH CULT ISLAM! For your information =
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Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebookand boys lashed for making a mistake or just not reciting loudly enough in Chad refugee camps
- Children at the Islamic school near the Chadian capital of N'djamena fleeing violence from Central African Republic
- Their teenage teacher punishes the kids as young as three for not paying attention and not singing loudly enough
- Their parents back in the war-torn home country know they are suffering tough corporal punishment at the school
- More than 5,000 Chadian refugees escaping violence have been living in the Zafaye refugee camp for over a year
Published:
15:55 GMT, 12 March 2015
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Updated:
19:38 GMT, 12 March 20151.9k
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Children as young as three are being lashed at a Muslim refugee camp in Chad for not reciting the Koran loud enough.
A
teenager with a leather whip teaches the holy text to around 30 boys
and girls who fled sectarian violence from neighbouring Central African
Republic.
The
cruel tutor whips the children for not being enthusiastic enough,
losing attention for just a moment or even making a small mistake.
On Wednesday, a small boy too young to speak was struck in the eye by a strike meant for another girl.
The
class continued to sing as his anguished cries echoed through the room -
inspiring a moment of tenderness from the oppressive teacher who tended
to the youngster's injury.
Punished: A three-year-old boy cries
uncontrollably after his religious teacher in a Chadian refugee camp
accidentally struck him in the eye - but many of his classmates have
been punished intentionally for not reciting the Koran loud enough
Cruelty: The teenage teacher walks among
his frightened pupils with a leather whip - punishing the smallest
mistake or lack of enthusiasm with brutal lashes
Oppression: Around 30 young girls and boys
at this makeshift madrassa - or Islamic school - are fleeing sectarian
violence in their native Central African Republic
Exodus: These young children are among
5,000 Chadian refugees occupying Zafaye refugee camp after fleeing their
war-torn home country
Whipped: Children like this girl risk a
brutal lashing for not paying attention, not reciting the Koran loud
enough and even making a small mistake
It
has been more than a year since these refugees fled their home country
when Christian extremists began killing members of a Muslim militia
group that overthrew the government in 2013.
Their
devout parents are aware of the corporal punishment their kids suffer
at the madrassa - or Islamic school - but send them there anyway.
The
unofficial establishment offers the children some relief from the
blistering sun overhead, as others learn more traditionally at the
formal school elsewhere in the camp.
Officials
from UNICEF who maintain a presence in the camp near Chad's capital
N'Djamena say they were not aware the school existed.
Chad
has also become home to thousands of Nigerians who fled attacks by Boko
Haram - another extremist Islamic group which has recently pledged
allegiance to ISIS.
More
than 5,000 Muslims of Chadian descent live in the camp built on the
site of an unfinished resort complex near 10 miles from its capital.
Impoverished: 4-year-old Mariam, who was
recently injured by a pot of boiling water, sits outside her tent which
is just 10 miles from Chad's capital Zafaye
Cared for: At least one-month-old Hambra
Jibril has his mother to hold him before he is bathed, unlike many of
the children whose parents still live in CAR
Safe for now: Two three-years-olds are
making the best of their time in the Zafaye refugee camp which is at
least free of brutal sectarian violence, unlike their native CAR
Hard times: But one place the children are
not safe is the unofficial madrassa - or Islamic school - in the camp
where a teenager takes lessons and doles out oppressive punishment
Many
of them came via a route established between CAR's capital Bangui and
N'Djamena and some of their trucks came under attack along the way.
40-year-old
Amin Idris said: 'I am a marketing director of an import-export
business in Bangui. We have been here for over a year now. I cannot go
back until the situation in Bangui is safe.'
But
it may be a while before it is safe to return, with many Muslims
trapped in isolated communities across the impoverished country and
threatened by the violence of Christian fighters.
CAR
comprises around 4.6 million citizens and was plunged into sectarian
conflict amid the violent rule of a Muslim rebel coalition that was
forced from power by the Christian anti-Balaka fighters.
Both
sides have committed human rights abuses and severe instability
threatens democratic elections due to take place this year, after they
were organised by a transitional government.
Threatened: Back in CAR, these children
made up were among 4.6 million of their countrymen before it was plunged
into sectarian conflictbetween a Muslim rebel coalition and Christian
anti-Balaka fighters
Ignorant: Officials from UNICEF who
maintain presence in the camp where these children play said they were
not aware the madrassa in which children are beaten existed
Many of the Chadian refugees in the camp
came via a route between CAR's capital Bangui and N'Djamena - and some
of their trucks came under attack along the way.
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