|
 Sri Lankan school children go
back to school Monday after the devastating Tsunami disaster hit the
country two weeks ago. (Xinhua Photo) |
 The children and their parents are
busy cleaning desks and clearing up the piled garbage in a Tsunami-hit
school in Sri Lanka, Jan. 10. (Xinhua Photo) |
HIKKADUWA, Sri Lanka, Jan. 11 (Xinhuanet) -- Sri
Lankan school children went back to school Monday after the devastating Tsunami
disaster hit the country two weeks ago.
As many schools on the coastal
belt were damaged or destroyed by the marauding waves, many school children and
teachers are still taking refuge in schools and other
makeshift camps across the island.
"We have no lessons today, the students come and sign
their names," said W. Mendis, a teacher in Vidyalaya School in southerncity
Kosgoda.
The school has 2,000 students, but only a small
number of students have come today,"Mendis said, adding "the school principle
died in the disaster, and the Buddhist monk in nearby temple presides the school
now."
While the children and their parents are busy
cleaning desks and clearing up the piled garbage, a student told reporter that
they would likely have lessons Thursday.
According to the Center for National Operation, there
are 76,911 students in these partly and fully damaged schools in the
tsunami-affected areas. Of this, 59 schools have been completely destroyed and
the Sri Lankan government has already taken the initiatives to commence the
reconstruction of the destroyed schools within one month.
In Devannanda College in Ambalangoda city, a leading
national school in Sri Lanka, things are different. The campus is not damaged
and none of the students died in the disaster. More than 500 students, however,
are displaced. Enditem
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