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Riot police threaten Bulawayo poly students
Students Solidarity Trust
February 22, 2006

Students at the Bulawayo Polytechnic, who engaged in massive demonstrations last week against the new exorbitant fees regime announced by the government this month, have been forced to go back to the lecture rooms. The students had been on an indefinite class boycott since last week.

The College administration is citing a sinister law which students at the College have professed ignorance of – which states that the college has a right to indefinitely close the college if students boycott classes for 5 consecutive days.

There is a heavy presence of riot police at the campus, who are interfering in the normal operations of the College. The Chief CID Officer in Bulawayo threatened students to go back to school or face unspecified action if they fail to comply with the order.

Interestingly however, is the fact that the majority of the students have not paid school fees.

The students have vowed to resume the boycotts next week on Monday.

The Students Solidarity Trust unreservedly condemns the interference of state security agents in the operations of Colleges. It is a threat to academic freedom and autonomy of institutions and serves to show that our country is a police state.

Autonomy fosters academic freedom. And the search for autonomy requires both an autonomous studying environment, free from interference by the police, and independent semantic tools that avoid both dictatorial values masquerading as universal truths and anthropological sentimentalism that glorifies mediocrity and institutions sliding into ruin.

Meanwhile, Masvingo Teachers College students are failing to attend school because of the astronomic fee increases. The majority of students are failing to raise the amount required by the administration, clearly illustrating that education in Zimbabwe is now the preserve of the elite. The poor, who constitute the majority, will not be able to access education.

Visit the Students Solidarity Trust fact sheet

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