The Prague Post - Bleak future for West Bank pupils as budget cuts bite

EUR -
AED 4.305195
AFN 72.681647
ALL 95.422252
AMD 435.827436
ANG 2.098242
AOA 1076.151323
ARS 1630.008661
AUD 1.642996
AWG 2.1101
AZN 1.997526
BAM 1.958653
BBD 2.357256
BDT 143.807031
BGN 1.955479
BHD 0.44221
BIF 3481.282142
BMD 1.172278
BND 1.495035
BOB 8.098659
BRL 5.838651
BSD 1.170328
BTN 110.242601
BWP 15.852374
BYN 3.315378
BYR 22976.642144
BZD 2.353856
CAD 1.603618
CDF 2713.823208
CHF 0.92276
CLF 0.026706
CLP 1051.074801
CNY 8.014047
CNH 8.011674
COP 4178.1617
CRC 532.612567
CUC 1.172278
CUP 31.065358
CVE 110.633752
CZK 24.357004
DJF 208.414918
DKK 7.473392
DOP 69.721645
DZD 155.165661
EGP 61.629454
ERN 17.584165
ETB 180.927869
FJD 2.584462
FKP 0.868692
GBP 0.868643
GEL 3.142162
GGP 0.868692
GHS 13.016802
GIP 0.868692
GMD 86.166922
GNF 10273.242401
GTQ 8.959899
GYD 245.201957
HKD 9.185323
HNL 31.099734
HRK 7.537164
HTG 153.223615
HUF 365.188391
IDR 20224.954791
ILS 3.50048
IMP 0.868692
INR 110.48776
IQD 1533.136175
IRR 1543889.679138
ISK 143.780307
JEP 0.868692
JMD 184.694358
JOD 0.831191
JPY 186.820076
KES 151.611121
KGS 102.460824
KHR 4689.111052
KMF 492.357028
KPW 1055.080305
KRW 1731.032534
KWD 0.360781
KYD 0.975323
KZT 543.652828
LAK 25645.605119
LBP 104805.07292
LKR 373.058802
LRD 214.755067
LSL 19.461359
LTL 3.461432
LVL 0.7091
LYD 7.426175
MAD 10.844014
MDL 20.35248
MGA 4863.114747
MKD 61.636454
MMK 2461.622702
MNT 4197.266044
MOP 9.444723
MRU 46.711102
MUR 54.945098
MVR 18.112133
MWK 2029.447886
MXN 20.373721
MYR 4.648126
MZN 74.920708
NAD 19.461359
NGN 1590.781188
NIO 43.071016
NOK 10.922156
NPR 176.388162
NZD 2.000304
OMR 0.450331
PAB 1.171982
PEN 4.087777
PGK 5.08012
PHP 71.151438
PKR 326.265098
PLN 4.243587
PYG 7421.175106
QAR 4.273543
RON 5.088276
RSD 117.422771
RUB 88.13868
RWF 1710.640363
SAR 4.39724
SBD 9.431334
SCR 17.347409
SDG 703.957044
SEK 10.808811
SGD 1.495948
SHP 0.875224
SLE 28.867382
SLL 24582.071905
SOS 668.815781
SRD 43.917629
STD 24263.780751
STN 24.500578
SVC 10.240242
SYP 129.609818
SZL 19.453459
THB 37.905643
TJS 11.00136
TMT 4.108833
TND 3.377376
TOP 2.822563
TRY 52.770123
TTD 7.948188
TWD 36.907408
TZS 3045.871869
UAH 51.571617
UGX 4360.258615
USD 1.172278
UYU 46.426838
UZS 14128.880742
VES 566.403138
VND 30901.239128
VUV 138.129285
WST 3.179532
XAF 655.972478
XAG 0.015467
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.168139
XCG 2.10925
XDR 0.815819
XOF 655.972478
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.764489
ZAR 19.382861
ZMK 10551.909878
ZMW 22.148523
ZWL 377.472928
  • RIO

    0.7600

    99.61

    +0.76%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.32

    +0.39%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.95

    +0.17%

  • BCE

    -0.2200

    23.88

    -0.92%

  • NGG

    0.4600

    87.42

    +0.53%

  • BCC

    0.3300

    84.15

    +0.39%

  • BTI

    0.8100

    58.09

    +1.39%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1200

    15.3

    -0.78%

  • GSK

    -1.1900

    54.44

    -2.19%

  • BP

    -0.1000

    46.25

    -0.22%

  • RBGPF

    64.0000

    64

    +100%

  • RELX

    0.4000

    36.53

    +1.09%

  • AZN

    -2.5500

    189.75

    -1.34%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.89

    +0.08%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    15.63

    +0.06%

Bleak future for West Bank pupils as budget cuts bite
Bleak future for West Bank pupils as budget cuts bite / Photo: JAAFAR ASHTIYEH - AFP

Bleak future for West Bank pupils as budget cuts bite

At an hour when Ahmad and Mohammed should have been in the classroom, the two brothers sat idle at home in the northern West Bank city of Nablus.

Text size:

The 10-year-old twins are part of a generation abruptly cut adrift by a fiscal crisis that has slashed public schooling from five days a week to three across the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territory.

The Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority's deepening budget shortfall is cutting through every layer of society across the West Bank.

But nowhere are the consequences more stark than in its schools, where reduced salaries for teachers, shortened weeks and mounting uncertainty are reshaping the future of around 630,000 pupils.

Unable to meet its wage bill in full, the Palestinian Authority has cut teachers' pay to 60 percent, with public schools now operating at less than two-thirds capacity.

"Without proper education, there is no university. That means their future could be lost," Ibrahim al-Hajj, father of the twins, told AFP.

The budget shortfall stems in part from Israel's decision to withhold customs tax revenues it collects on the Palestinian Authority's behalf, a measure taken after the war in Gaza erupted in October 2023.

The West Bank's economy has also been hammered by a halt to permits for Palestinians seeking work in Israel and the proliferation of checkpoints and other movement controls.

- 'No foundation' for learning -

"Educational opportunities we had were much better than what this generation has today," said Aisha Khatib, 57, headmistress of the brothers' school in Nablus.

"Salaries are cut, working days are reduced, and students are not receiving enough education to become properly educated adults," she said, adding that many teachers had left for other work, while some students had begun working to help support their families during prolonged school closures.

Hajj said he worried about the time his sons were losing.

When classes are cancelled, he and his wife must leave the boys alone at home, where they spend much of the day on their phones or watching television.

Part of the time, the brothers attend private tutoring.

"We go downstairs to the teacher and she teaches us. Then we go back home," said Mohammad, who enjoys English lessons and hopes to become a carpenter.

But the extra lessons are costly, and Hajj, a farmer, said he cannot indefinitely compensate for what he sees as a steady academic decline.

Tamara Shtayyeh, a teacher in Nablus, said she had seen the impact firsthand in her own household.

Her 16-year-old daughter Zeena, who is due to sit the Palestinian high school exam, Tawjihi, next year, has seen her average grades drop by six percentage points since classroom hours were reduced, Shtayyeh said.

Younger pupils, however, may face the gravest consequences.

"In the basic stage, there is no proper foundation," she said. "Especially from first to fourth grade, there is no solid grounding in writing or reading."

Irregular attendance, with pupils out of school more often than in, has eroded attention spans and discipline, she added.

"There is a clear decline in students' levels -- lower grades, tension, laziness," Shtayyeh said.

- 'Systemic emergency' -

For UN-run schools teaching around 48,000 students in refugee camps across the West Bank, the picture is equally bleak.

The territory has shifted from "a learning poverty crisis to a full-scale systemic emergency," said Jonathan Fowler, spokesman for the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA.

UNRWA schools are widely regarded as offering comparatively high educational standards.

But Fowler said proficiency in Arabic and mathematics had plummeted in recent years, driven not only by the budget crisis but also by Israeli military incursions and the lingering effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.

"The combination of hybrid schooling, trauma and over 2,000 documented incidents of military or settler interference in 2024-25 has resulted in a landscape of lost learning for thousands of Palestinian refugee students," he said.

UNRWA itself is weighing a shorter school week as it grapples with its own funding shortfall, after key donor countries — including the United States under President Donald Trump — halted contributions to the agency, the main provider of health and education services in West Bank refugee camps.

In the northern West Bank, where Israeli military operations in refugee camps displaced around 35,000 people in 2025, some pupils have lost up to 45 percent of learning days, Fowler said.

Elsewhere, schools face demolition orders from Israeli authorities or outright closure, including six UNRWA schools in annexed east Jerusalem.

Teachers say the cumulative toll is profound.

"We are supposed to look toward a bright and successful future," Shtayyeh said. "But what we are seeing is things getting worse and worse."

I.Horak--TPP