Mali: Transporting school supplies to students in conflict-affected areas
April 30, 2024 by GPE Secretariat, and World Bank |
4 minutes read

In Mali, a GPE grant, managed by the World Bank, is helping the ministry of education distribute school kits to children to ensure they can continue learning even in times of conflict.

Mali has been facing a security crisis since 2012. A peace agreement was signed between the government and two rebel coalitions in 2015, but violence continued to escalate and social unrest led to a coup d’état in 2020.

In early 2020, 12% of schools were closed due to conflict and insecurity, disrupting the education of 338,700 students, primarily in the central and northern regions of the country.

More recently, there has been an improvement in security conditions, leading to the return of some refugees and internally displaced persons, and schools are gradually reopening. However, the children in these areas face multiple challenges.

The distribution of school kits is one incentive to help students continue their education even in places where education was severely disrupted.

Over 312,000 students from more than 1,600 schools have received a school kit thanks to this GPE-supported initiative.

The kits also provide much-needed supplies to schools and communities that are struggling with a lack of resources.

Transporting the school kits

Getting the school supplies to the large number of students in need is a complex logistical operation.

Hundreds of packages of bags, notebooks, stationery and other materials, such as math compasses, are kept in a storage room in the capital city of Bamako. From there, administrative staff from the education ministry sort and pack the kits, ensuring each child receives the same set of supplies.

The kits are then loaded onto trucks for delivery to the conflict-affected regions, where education offices help facilitate the distribution of supplies to schools within their district.

Preparation of school kits in Bamako, Mali. Credit: GPE/Infinitee!
Preparation of school kits in Bamako, Mali.
Credit:
GPE/Infinitee!

Delivering supplies to schools in remote regions such as Timbuktu poses significant challenges, and even areas like Banamba, situated in the Koulikoro region adjacent to Bamako, encounter difficulties. Banamba has experienced sporadic school closures due to security concerns in the past.

Banamba city, which experienced an attack in 2016 where armed groups broke into the main prison of the city to free multiple detainees, still grapples with insecurity on the main roads that lead to the city.

In December 2023, three schools in the district were closed by armed groups. In such a context, educational kits containing essential learning materials help students continue their studies even in times of crisis.

“The Banamba area is a red zone, and its inhabitants are unable to work properly. These school kits will be a great relief to the parents and to the students, many of whom stay home because they don't have school supplies. The kits will considerably improve learning here.”
Alassane Maiga
Director, Banamba Center for Pedagogic Animation

In this case, the truck delivered kits to the Koulikoro Teaching Academy, about 60 kilometers northeast of Bamako, where delegates from Banamba district communities met to collect the supplies for their respective schools.

They loaded boxes onto their motorbikes and made the 90-kilometer drive to the Banamba district. As is traditional in the Malian culture, the kits were presented to school officials as an honor, before the final journey toward the schools.

The director of the Koulikoro Teaching Academy hands school kits over to the director of the Banamba Center for Pedagogic Animation. Credit: GPE/Infinitee!
The director of the Koulikoro Teaching Academy hands school kits over to the director of the Banamba Center for Pedagogic Animation.
Credit:
GPE/Infinitee!

Delivering the school kits

“I received a school kit consisting of a bag, two 100-page notebooks, two pens and mathematical materials. This is very welcome as we had a lot of difficulty accessing school supplies. The materials will help me a lot in my learning. At school, I like reading, math and sports.”
Masitan Simpara
Grade 6 student, Hamdallaye Primary School, Banamba

Students at Hamdallaye Primary School in Banamba, Mali, receive school kits. Credit: GPE/Infinitee!

Students at Hamdallaye Primary School in Banamba, Mali, receive school kits.

Credit: GPE/Infinitee!
Primary school students unpack their school kits in Banamba, Mali. Credit: GPE/Infinitee!

Primary school students unpack their school kits in Banamba, Mali.

Credit: GPE/Infinitee!
A student explores her new school supplies in Banamba, Mali. Credit: GPE/Infinitee!

A student explores her new school supplies in Banamba, Mali.

Credit: GPE/Infinitee!
01 03
“Hamdallaye Primary School has 412 students. We encounter many difficulties in accessing school supplies, as most children come to school empty-handed. These supplies go a long way to alleviating our difficulties.”
Doussoussala Traore Sissoko
Director of Hamdallaye Primary School, Banamba
Students with their new school kits at Hamdallaye Primary School, Banamba, Mali. Credit: GPE/Infinitee!
Students with their new school kits at Hamdallaye Primary School, Banamba, Mali.
Credit:
GPE/Infinitee!

Keeping education going when schools close

A GPE grant of $45.7 million for the period 2021-2027, managed by the World Bank, is helping Mali’s Ministry of Education continue service delivery in this time of crisis and improve the resilience of the education system.

A teacher shows a student how to use the supplies included in the school kit delivered to conflict-affected areas like Banamba, Mali. Credit: GPE/Infinitee!
A teacher shows a student how to use the supplies included in the school kit delivered to conflict-affected areas like Banamba, Mali.
Credit:
GPE/Infinitee!
“The challenges are many: not having access to appropriate learning materials prevents students from studying and discourages them from working at school like other students. Many people think that Banamba is a prosperous place, when in reality it is often the teachers who buy supplies for certain students.”
Boubacar Bagayogo
Teacher, Fofanana primary school, Banamba

These school kits play an important role in supporting children to continue learning during times of conflict. In parallel, the Ministry of Education is producing digital content for remote learning programs aimed at education continuity and training teachers in distance learning methods.

Teachers are also being trained to provide accelerated programs to mitigate learning loss due to school closure.

Related blogs