When 11-year-old Venezuelan refugee Astrid Saavedra walked into her fourth-grade classroom in Trinidad and Tobago for her first day of faculty in September, she was keen to start classes in her favorite topic, arithmetic. However the prospect of educating fellow college students about her homeland Venezuela was equally thrilling.
Astrid is without doubt one of the first refugee and migrant kids from Venezuela to be allowed to enter the Trinidadian nationwide public schooling system, following a change within the nation’s immigration guidelines.

IOM/Gema Cortés
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She was a part of the primary cohort of 60 kids to fulfill the admission standards, which included possession of a licensed, translated start certificates and immunization document, and be assigned a faculty, marking an necessary milestone in fulfilling Trinidad and Tobago’s dedication to completely assembly its obligations below the Conference on the Rights of the Youngster, a world UN human rights treaty.
“These younger folks, ought to they keep in Trinidad and Tobago, could be adequately ready to enter the workforce of this nation, filling gaps within the labour market and contributing to innovation and sustainability,” stated senior UN migration company (IOM) official, Desery Jordan-Whiskey. “It’s additionally a possibility for these kids, who’re principally Spanish talking, to contribute simply as a lot as they’d achieve, by serving to their friends study a second language.”
An funding sooner or later
The adjustments in laws that allowed kids like Astrid to go to highschool happened in July 2023, throughout a gathering of UN officers and politicians, at which Trinidad’s Minister of Overseas Affairs formally introduced the Authorities’s determination.
UN companies agree that the precise to obtain an schooling is an instance of the way in which human rights overlaps with sustainable growth.
“Advocating for entry to schooling is essential to bridging the hole between rapid humanitarian wants and long-term growth objectives,” stated Amanda Solano, head of the UN refugee company (UNHCR) in Trinidad and Tobago. “By offering schooling to refugee and migrant kids, we’re not simply assembly their rapid wants, we’re investing of their future and the way forward for Trinidad and Tobago.”

UNHCR Trinidad and Tobago
Over 2,000 refugee and migrant kids stay excluded from the college system. The UN has made efforts to supply them with various studying alternatives, or to position them in non-public faculties however has expressed a desire for wider admission to the state college system.
A committee of UN companies and companions, the Schooling Working Group (EWG), is working with the Authorities of Trinidad and Tobago to raised perceive the coaching and logistical assist that may be required to accommodate bigger numbers of refugee and migrant kids into native faculties.
The hope is that many extra college students like Astrid will have the ability to stroll into the nation’s school rooms to start out the 2025-2026 educational 12 months.