At the Chinderi SDA School, the clouds start gathering. Soon it begins to drizzle. There’s a storm that’s whistling through the school, carrying with it pieces of the thatched roof.
The classrooms built of clay, bear deep cracks and are on the verge of splitting apart. They are death traps! Suddenly, school closes and everyone is set to a confused, disorderly haste.
Children, from kindergarten to junior high school, are seen running helter skelter. Their books splatter the compound in their rush for shelter. This is no fiction; it’s a reality and a norm in a rural school in Ghana.
The protagonist in this piece is 13-year-old Emmanuel Ofosu.
After the downpour at the Chinderi SDA Junior High School, all lessons for the day are called off. A pupil, Emmanuel Ofosu, goes home after being beaten by the rain. He picks up his notebook and now he tells our reporters this:“As at now, I’m trying to get something into my head and I’m trying as much as possible to pass my BECE and then go to secondary school and eventually become a doctor. But if I don’t pass I know I have tried…I’ve done my best.”
The Hotline team travelled to schools in other districts including Sene East and Krachie Nchumuru, and discovered a lot more worrying realities:
- More than 20 schools in the district do not have textbooks.
- At least eight schools in the district have been marked as death traps and require urgent attention
- Many of the schools visited have never been renovated
- In some of the schools, three classes have been combined
Many of these children have no textbooks. Not even their teacher does.
Most of these schools were built through communal labour by residents seeking to have their children have their children go to school.
A building like this one (above) is a potential killer. The wooden pillars will soon give away. Disaster looms.
They feel set up to fail. They have no choice. They are troubled.
Latest Stories
-
Rebecca Akufo-Addo canvasses for votes for Okoe-Boye, Bawumia in Ledzekuku
8 mins -
Colombian navy intercepts narco-subs taking new route to Australia
41 mins -
Namibians await vote results as ruling party seeks to extend 34-year rule
53 mins -
Zimbabwe parliament hit by power cut during budget speech
1 hour -
Why Russia’s Africa propaganda warrior was sent home
1 hour -
Australia approves social media ban on under-16s
2 hours -
MasterChef’s Gregg Wallace steps aside after allegations
2 hours -
Chinese companies apologise for ‘shrunken’ sanitary pads
2 hours -
Paris’s Gothic jewel Notre-Dame to reopen five years after fire
2 hours -
First new asthma attack treatment in 50 years
2 hours -
Amorim enjoys ‘special’ first Man Utd win despite ‘anxiety’
2 hours -
Canada’s oil patch rattled by Trump’s tariff plan
3 hours -
It’s difficult not to cheat in marriage – Mr Macaroni
3 hours -
Caretaker jailed 10 years for manslaughter
3 hours -
Election 2024: Citizens’ action is key – Martin Amidu calls for resistance to electoral manipulation
5 hours