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This article participates on the following special index pages:

  • Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles


  • 300 000 children drop out of schools in crackdown
    ZimOnline
    June 18, 2005

    http://www.zimonline.co.za/headdetail.asp?ID=9947

    HARARE - More than 300 000 children of informal traders and city squatter families in Zimbabwe have dropped out of school in the last four weeks alone after their homes were destroyed by the government, ZimOnline has learnt.

    Officials at the Ministry of Education head office in Harare said directors of education in the country’s 10 provinces were last week asked to compile figures of children under 13 years no longer coming to school because their families were evicted in the government’s highly unpopular urban clean-up operation.

    "The average figure of pupils no longer attending school because their family has been evicted is 100 per school and these are just primary school kids. But in secondary schools, it appears the effect of the evictions has not been that devastating," said one senior official, who spoke anonymously for fear of victimisation.

    The official said school authorities have not been able to establish the whereabouts of the children many of whom are now just roaming around urban areas with their families and sleeping in the open after the shanty homes were brunt down by the police.

    "It is not known whether these children will come back to school once things stabilise or they are out for good. What is clear is that they have been forced out of school because of the prevailing circumstances," said the official.

    Education Minister Aeneas Chigwedere yesterday acknowledged that school children who lived in squatter homes had been forced to drop out of school. But he said his ministry was only going to act on the matter after fully assessing the problem.

    Chigwedere said: "We are still assessing the situation. Any reactive measures will be taken thereafter." He did not say when exactly he plans to take the ‘reactive measures’.

    More than 22 000 informal traders have been arrested mostly for selling goods without licence while close to a million families have been left without shelter after armed soldiers and police razed down their shanty homes in an operation the government says is necessary to restore the beauty of urban areas, law and order.

    The United Nations, European Union, United States, Amnesty International, local churches and human rights groups have all condemned the operation as insensitive and a gross violation of poor people’s human rights.

    Zimbabwe’s main opposition Movement for Democratic Change party has accused the government of unleashing the campaign in urban and peri-urban areas to punish residents there for rejecting it in last March’s controversial parliamentary election. The government, which says it will now extend the clean-up operation to former white farms against illegal settlers, denies it is being motivated by politics.

    Commenting on the massive drop out of children from school, one retired educationist William Mupita said it was the first time since Zimbabwe’s 1970s independence war that such large numbers of children are quitting school within a month.

    "This is probably the first time since the days of the liberation war that such a high number of children drop out of school in such a short period of time. These figures should alarm anyone serious about this country's human development," said Mupita, who worked in the education sector for over 40 years.

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