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ZIMBABWE:
Education system sliding into ruin
IRIN
News
June 29, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=54314
HARARE - Standards
of learning and teaching in Zimbabwe, at one time the envy of the
African continent, have been plummeting, says a report by a cross-party
parliamentary committee.
The Portfolio Committee on Education painted a grim picture after
visiting institutions of higher learning, and in some cases finding
female students resorting to sex work or cohabiting with men to
pay for their fees at universities and colleges.
Tuition and examination fees, as well as accommodation costs, have
rocketed and students have to fork out as much as Zim$200 million
(US$2,000) per semester, while their grants have remained stagnant
at Zim$13 million (US$130) per term. An average worker earns about
US$150 a month.
"Education is now a preserve for the rich, some students have dropped
out of programmes, others will not be able to write examinations,
which they cannot afford, while others have had to defer their studies,"
the committee noted.
Promise Mkhwananzi, president of the Zimbabwe
National Students' Union (Zinasu), which represents students
at 38 higher learning institutions, told IRIN that some male students
had also turned to crime to pay for their tuition and other expenses.
"From the desperate situation that we find ourselves in, we can
understand why our comrades have had to resort to that."
He added: "When we factor in the fact that institutions of higher
learning cannot attract and retain staff, and that libraries have
no or outdated books, then that means the quality of our education
will be severely compromised."
Academic and non-academic staff at the University
of Zimbabwe in the capital, Harare, threatened to go on strike
last week after there were delays in salary payments.
Raymond Majongwe, secretary-general of the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe, commented, "The future of any country
lies in the hands of its youth; citizens of any country should hold
their governments accountable if they abandon their responsibilities."
He said the government would become more serious about addressing
problems in the education sector only when a decent education was
made a basic human right.
Zimbabwe has been in recession for six straight years. It is struggling
to cope with food shortages caused by erratic rainfall, the impact
of a chaotic fast-track land reform programme on the agricultural
sector and a critical lack of foreign currency to cover imports.
Inflation has climbed to 1,200 percent and unemployment is over
80 percent.
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