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ZINASU
Wins 2003 Student Peace Prize
Network for
Education and Academic Rights (NEAR)
February
10, 2003
To view this
article on the NEAR website, click
here
ZINASU’s (the
Zimbabwe National Student’s Union) fight for peace and human rights
in Zimbabwe has received international recognition. The organisation
has been awarded the Student Peace Prize 2003 by the International
Student Festival in Trondheim. The ISFiT awards the Peace Price
once every two years to a student or a student organization that
has done a particular effort for democracy and human rights.
It was felt
by the ISFiT’s committee that ZINASU had, since its funding in the
late 1980’s, promoted the rights of students in their own country
and, despite the constant threat faced by ZINASU members today,
continues to play a key role in the fight for democracy. Recognising
the broader social issues within Zimbabwe, ZINASU’s Secretary General,
Mr Tinashe Chimedza, notes: ‘One cannot isolate student policy with
other policies. As part of society, we have a common responsibility’.
Representatives from ZINASU have been invited to ISFiT to receive
the prize on Thursday 13 March 2003, but lack of resources and travel
restrictions imposed on ZINASU members are likely to make this impossible.
Mr Nkululeko Sibanda, President of ZINASU, observed: ‘For us it
is an achievement, and we hope that we can be able to use it as
a base to fight harder struggles for the improvement of people's
lives in the rest of the world’.
Background Information
ZINASU was founded in the late 1980s and is one of the key actors
in the fight against president Robert Mugabe's oppressive regime.
Replacing his regime with a democratically elected government is
one of their major visions. Mugabes increasing restrictions on human
rights is reflected in the country’s education policy, and has caused
major obstacles for students and opposition to this policy ahs met
with severe repression (see previous NEAR alerts). Tuition-fees
have doubled 30 times, prices on student accommodation have risen
and ‘patriotic’ subjects have been implemented as part of a compulsory
program for education. The students of ZINASU have been victims
of torture, violence and other sanctions imposed by the political
authorities of Zimbabwe. Before the election in 2002 many student
demonstrators who were part of the opposition wee arrested. Some
were killed and many were victims of violent abuse.
ISFiT organiser’s have commented that: ‘In addition to speaking
on the rights of all students, they have proved to be a dynamic
organisation speaking the rights of the people of Zimbabwe and fighting
the struggle against poverty and AIDS. By keeping up a dialogue
with other international student organizations, they have strengthened
their dynamic focus even more’.
ZINASU continues to seek support for their organisation’s activities
and funding for members who have been forced to undertake their
education in other countries.
Visit the ZINASU
fact sheet
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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