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Students
under siege
Zimbabwe National
Students Union (ZINASU)
August 29, 2004
Greetings to
you all from the National Executive Secretariat, we present to you
an analytical assessment of our challenges, aspirations as intellectuals,
revolutionaries and more importantly the political discourse of
our struggles.
As a point of
departure, it is imperative that students understand their rights
so that they are in a position to appreciate programmes of action
that serve common interest within their various institutions.
The Right
to Education
The
right to education is a socio-economic right. It is one of the most
important rights any student, child or youth can claim from the
government. It will however be noted that this right is not granted
in its entirely in the Bill of rights of our national constitution.
This has resulted in the government of Zimbabwe through higher education
authorities, arguing that students should not claim government funding
as it is a privilege. To this date tertiary education is privatized.
But the government should know that the right to education involves
the right to its sponsorship thereof, without which, the right is
meaningless as most of us are poor and cannot afford.
Our challenge
therefore is to campaign for a constitutional entrenchment of the
right to education in it's entirely as a way of guaranteeing that
the government of Zimbabwe invests in education. It is important
to point out that investment in sectors like education and health
by a government is not a recurrent expenditure, but investment in
human resources which are a prerequisite for the development of
our nation. The government of Zimbabwe has failed to provide this
fundamental right in its entirely.
The Right
to Academic Freedom
The
right to academic freedom is the right which students as scholars
have to discover and disseminate knowledge of without any hindrance.
The moving spirit behind the emergence of universities and tertiary
institutions of learning was the need to advance scholarly and scientific
interests and the desire to learn and know. Tertiary institutions
and academic freedom are essential to the legitimacy of the political
process and to answer the needs of society. A tertiary institution
is a social institution and its curricula are largely governed by
the needs of the society. It is also the only agency channeling
political ideas to society in a rational manner because political
sanity supposedly prevails at such an institution. To this date,
student gatherings/meetings have been banned; student leaders and
activists have been suspended and expelled in pursuance of academic
freedom.
Students should
know that when they are engaging in reasoned scholarly discourse
in their various institutions, they will be exercising their right
to academic freedom as provided in the lima Declaration on Academic
Freedom and Autonomy of Tertiary Institutions of Learning to which
Zimbabwe is a signatory. They should not be persecuted by anyone
for reason of having engaged in this academic enterprise, even if
the results may not be pleasing to the authorities. It will however
be noted that the government of Zimbabwe continues to blatantly
brutalize and victimize student leaders in pursuance of this fundamental
right.
The Right
to Freedom of Expression and Assembly
Freedom
of expression serves truth by creating a market place of ideas,
protects democracy, maintains social stability, protects social
fulfillment, which encourages self autonomy and identity.
To this date,
freedoms of expression and assembly have been relegated into history
of the past. There are derogations which have been put in our national
constitution. The derogations are so wide that they amount to a
total regation of the right in question- the right is given with
the left hand and taken away with the right hand.
In the case
of academic freedom, the government suppresses this by enactment
which directly gives them power to control institutions of higher
learning.
The Recondite
In
all tertiary institutions, the political atmosphere is not sympathetic
to academic freedom. Students and lecturers have been targets of
repression by the government. Attempts to get legitimate avenues
to air independents thoughts have been thwarted student demonstrations
have been met with acute and violent reprisals.
The intellectual
climate necessary for a fruitful academic discourse has been curtailed
by the council for Higher Education Act (1990), STI of 1990 which
gives exorbitant powers to teacher college authorities to arbitrarily
suspend and expel student teachers for sundry minor offences and
the Universities Amendment Act (1990). The later Act effectively
reduces Universities into departments of the Ministry of Higher
Education. This piece of legislation gives the president of Zimbabwe
the right to appoint himself chancellor of all state universities
and also to appoint his Vice Chancellors. Throughout the Ministry
of Higher Education, the President (R.G. Mugabe) appoints 65% of
the members of the University Council which is the supreme decision
making body of the university.
Such a state
of affairs is an affront to academic freedom. The University is
supposed to be political neutral and autonomous. Its chief executive,
the Vice Chancellor is not supposed to a political animal. By the
same token it applies to polytechnics and teachers colleges; the
Principal is a political appointee.
Way forward
The
Zimbabwe National Students' Union is gallantly committed to the
liberation and emancipation of all students, to this end, students
must keep abreast and agitated to confront the source of neurosis,
as it is the vanguard of it all. ZINASU will continue to mobilize
students across board to participate in national collective action
for the realization of an enabling environment, socially, economically
and politically for students to utilize their full potential. If
the Mutambaras won in 1989 what can stop us from winning today.
If students in Indonesia succeed against Suharto in 1998 why cant
us?
Great spirits
have always found violent opposition from mediocre minds the later
can not understand it when men does not thoughtlessly submit himself
to hereditary prejudices "Albert Einstein"
Fear is a state
of nervousness fit for children not men if men fear men he offends
God the image through which he was created "Mahatma Gandhi"
We demand
- The reintroduction
of government provided catering services.
- The review
of students payout to at least $3 000 000.00 per year across polytechnics,
teachers colleges and universities.
- The repeal
of the STI of 1990 and draconian ordinances governing teachers
colleges, polytechnics and universities.
- The repeal
of the joint meal and accommodation policy.
- The abrogation
of the partisan National Strategic Studies and militia training
under the pretext of National Youth Service.
- The disbandment
of the Boarder Gezi certification as a pre-requisite for college
enrollment . The cessation of all forms of torture, harassment
and victimization of student leaders and activists. .
- Urgent reinstatement
of all suspended and expelled student leaders and activists as
their cause is justified.
- The upgrading
and renovation of facilities in all tertiary institutions of learning.
For and on behalf
of ZINASU
Jabusile M. Shumba Vice President
Visit the ZINASU
fact sheet
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