ZAMBOANGA, Philippines - Dozens of dirt-poor children in a Philippines mangrove village off bustling Zamboanga city no longer have to swim to school while straining to hold their books above the water.
A blogger who learned how children from Layag-layag village struggled to reach school, raised money through Facebook to provide boats to the community in the southern Philippines.
A bright-yellow, donated motorboat carried Layag-layag children to their elementary school Monday as the country's 26 million students returned to school after a two-month break.
Source: Agency, photo-Manila Watch
A blogger who learned how children from Layag-layag village struggled to reach school, raised money through Facebook to provide boats to the community in the southern Philippines.
A bright-yellow, donated motorboat carried Layag-layag children to their elementary school Monday as the country's 26 million students returned to school after a two-month break.
- The new school year refocuses the nation's attention to the ills of its educational system congested classrooms, dilapidated buildings and a huge number of dropouts due to poverty.
- But school opened with a piece of good news for the village, whose youngsters for years had to swim and wade through about a mile of mostly chest-deep water and cross sandbars to reach school.
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