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ZIMBABWE:
Travel costs force students to stay home
IRIN
News
February 27, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=51930
BULAWAYO - Mthatheni
Sibanda scribbles in an untidy notebook as he watches over his family's
vegetable stand at a mini-market in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second
city.
The 19-year-old is a final year advanced-level student trying to
balance the needs of school work with finding the money for his
transport to school.
Like several Zimbabwean students, Sibanda can only afford to attend
class twice a week. "I really would love to be at school with other
children, especially since I am preparing for my final examinations,"
he said.
Sibanda's teachers initially accused him of truancy, but escalating
transport costs soon made them wiser, he explained.
Transport fares have been rising steadily since last year. This
week the cost of a single trip to Bulawayo city centre nearly doubled
to 50 US cents. Five round trips a week could add up to $20 a month
in a country where average salaries range between $50 to $100 a
month.
Transport costs are yet another burden for students and parents
already struggling to keep up with a 150 to 500 percent hike in
fees for missionary and private schools. Even public school fees
of about $151 per term is beyond the reach of many Zimbabweans.
Collin Chibango, a student leader at the University of Zimbabwe,
has urged the government to intervene, "because where does a student
get a dollar everyday for their transport costs?"
The Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) has also petitioned the government
to enforce a law that will compel minibus operators to charge pupils
half the normal fare.
"Classes are empty; in most cases we find ourselves having to teach
only a fraction of the whole class after students fail to turn up.
It is a sad development that is unfolding at national level that
should be addressed as a matter of urgency," said Raymond Majongwe,
PTUZ secretary-general.
Escalating transport costs have also made girl pupils vulnerable
to exploitation by taxi drivers and some motorists who ask for sexual
favours in exchange for a free lift to school, said Majongwe, citing
a PTUZ survey.
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