Somali education minister praises opening of Turkish school

Somali students on Monday filled the classrooms of the country’s first Turkish high school in Mogadishu.
Somali students on Monday filled the classrooms of the country’s first Turkish high school in Mogadishu.


Date posted: October 26, 2011

25 October 2011, Tuesday / ALYSON NEEL, İSTANBUL

The Somali Education Minister expressed his happiness at the opening of the first Turkish high school in Somalia on Monday.

“It has been wonderful — the students and parents are very happy to have access to quality education,” Somali Education Minister Ahmet Aidid Ibrahim shared in an exclusive interview with Today’s Zaman on Tuesday.

Somali students on Monday filled the classrooms of the famine-stricken country’s first Turkish high school, which the Turkish charity the Nile Organization established in the Somali capital, Mogadishu. Ibrahim noted that “cities other than Mogadishu are also seeking to have similar Turkish schools.”

Ibrahim pointed out the vast number of Somali youth who jumped at the opportunity for a brighter future: “Many students applied and took the admission exam, but the capacity is limited to around 250 students.”

School principal Bülent Ergüneş told Anatolia news agency on Tuesday that the principal language of instruction is English, but students are also learning Turkish as well as other regional languages. In the school’s first year of operation, students will receive 16 hours of English instruction per week as well as instruction in the Turkish, Arabic and Somali languages.

Mathematics, biology, computer skills, chemistry and physics lessons will begin four months after the start of the school year.

Ergüneş explained that classes will move to another building one year from now: “Poor families coming from outside the city currently reside in the former technical college building the government has assigned us. We are making do with our current location until they can be moved to another residence. We will transfer classes to the technical college next year when it is empty and renovations are completed. It is a very nice, large building.”

Though Somali youth have understandably fallen behind academically due to years of civil war, Ergüneş stressed that the “students are intelligent and catch on quickly. They have already begun to hold basic conservations in Turkish.”

English teacher Alper Kılıç told Anatolia that even though he has 12 years of teaching experience, he is excited for the opportunity to teach in Somalia.

The opening of the Turkish high school in Mogadishu is only the most recent example of Turkey’s dedication to education in Somalia, which has been a priority for Turkey since it began reaching out to the conflict-ridden, impoverished country. Turkey also has provided scholarships for a few hundred Somali students to study in Turkey.

Turkey has contributed a higher percent of its national income to Somalia than any other country has contributed to Somalia, as it continues efforts to help the nation recover from its worst drought in 60 years. According to the latest evaluation by the Prime Ministry’s Disaster and Emergency Management Directorate (AFAD), the total Turkish aid collected through campaigns launched by AFAD, the Religious Affairs Directorate and other organizations has surpassed TL 500 million.

Source: Today’s Zaman http://www.todayszaman.com/news-260942-somali-education-minister-praises-opening-of-turkish-school.html


Related News

Draft law on prep schools

The first adverse effect is related to unemployment. The AKP did not keep its promise to provide jobs at public institutions to all the prep school teachers who are not hired by the new private schools. Only teachers with six years of experience will have the chance of being hired at public schools. Thus, tens of thousands of prep school teachers will definitely lose their jobs since only the large, well-established prep schools can take the financial risks of re-establishing themselves as a new private school.

The tragic echoes of Turkey’s anti-Gülen campaign in Turkmenistan

Ahmet, 27, agrees. He says that, when studying at a Gülen school, “for the first time we saw teachers caring for us. They were prepared to do more than to teach. They were making an extra effort for us, showing exemplary behaviour, such as rushing to help when a school boy got sick, finding medicine for him.

Turkish Cultural Center honours several Senegalese women

Several Senegalese women, including former Prime Minister Aminata Touré, the Minister of Women’s Affairs, Mariama Sarr and a reporter Amy Sarr Fall, were on Thursday honored in Dakar by the Turkish Centre for Scientific and Cultural Dialogue (ATSA), APA observed here.

Turkish entrepreneurs open eye hospital in Senegal

An eye hospital that was built and equipped by Turkish entrepreneurs in Senegal was opened with a ceremony on Wednesday attended by Senegalese Prime Minister Aminata Touré.

Gülen appeals for steadfastness against gov’t ban on prep schools [in Turkey]

Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen has asked his followers to be resolute and not yield to despair in the face of a government attempt to shut down private educational institutions [in Turkey] that assist students to prepare for high school and university admission examinations, which was interpreted as a major blow to the right to an education and to free enterprise in the EU-candidate country.

Islamabad High Court: Pak-Turk Schools will not be handed over to Turkish Government

Justice Aamer Farooq of the Islamabad High Court on Friday disposed of a petition filed by Pak-Turk Educational Foundation against the possible handover of its schools to another Turkish educational network, the Maarif Foundation.

Latest News

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

Erdoğan’s Civil Death Project’ : The ‘politicide’ spanning more than a decade

Fethullah Gülen’s Vision and the Purpose of Hizmet

In Case You Missed It

Fethullah Gulen Criticizes Gaza Flotilla

Ethio-Turkish Schools receive “Certificate of Appreciation’ from African Union

Exhibit lets Iraqi women tell stories of heartbreak and hope

Vocational training center for the women in Albany

Hate Crime: Lists of “Gulen pupils” circulating in Amsterdam

Police waiting at hospital to detain Kayseri woman after childbirth

A bridge from the US to the Turkic world

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News