|
Back to Index
Fee ruling to destroy the best of Zimbabwe's schools
ZimOnline
December 06, 2006
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=583
HARARE - The government has capped school
fees for all private schools and dangled a prison term for institutions
refusing to fall in line, a move analysts said would knock a sector
that had anchored one of Africa’s best education systems.
Education Minister Aeneas Chigwedere
has pegged fees for private schools, in an unprecedented move which
highlights President Robert Mugabe’s government’s desperate bid
to control everything from prices of commodities to school fees.
Zimbabwe is in the throes of a severe
economic crisis that is mainly reflected in sky-high inflation of
1 070.2 percent, surging unemployment, grinding poverty and acute
shortages of foreign currency, fuel and food.
The seven-year recession has fanned political
tensions in the southern African state - a former model economy
in Africa - which has become a basket case relying for food on neighbours
it used to feed.
"What they are doing is trying to
legitimise mediocrity, the government has no business setting fees
for private schools because the next thing is they will take them
over and run them down like government schools," John Makumbe,
a political analyst and staunch critic of Mugabe said.
"The quality of education is essentially
going to deteriorate. Private schools had remained the cream of
Zimbabwe’s education," he added.
Chigwedere said come January, none of
the 61 private schools in Zimbabwe would increase fees beyond $509
858, a figure lower than what most of the schools charged pupils
for the last term of 2006.
Officials of schools which breach the
new fees structure could be jailed for up to six months, fined or
the government could just forfeit the overcharged fees, according
to Chigwedere.
Analysts said the move was meant to curry
favour among a restive population, which has watched helplessly
as the country’s economy slides.
But the move has set the government on
a collision course with the Association of Trust Schools, a grouping
of private schools, which will likely again take Chigwedere to court
to resolve the dispute.
"This is illegal, a directive cannot
supersede the law, which is very clear," the head of a top
private school in Harare told ZimOnline.
"But this is politics and if we
don’t resolve this issue we might just as well see many of these
schools closing down. There is no way they can operate on that sort
of budget. It is unsustainable," he added.
Zimbabwe’s education system is modelled
along that of former colonial power Britain and is rated among the
best in Africa but critics say state interference in the running
of private schools, coupled with its failure to adequately fund
government-run schools threatened that legacy.
Private schools have the best academic
and sporting facilities, with most of the students excelling in
both academia and sports.
Government schools, a victim of
state under-funding and mission schools enrol the highest number
of students and have recorded high pass rates irrespective of dwindling
resources, but analysts question whether this is sustainable.
Officials at some private schools accused
the government of populism saying its decision was being driven
by selfish politicians, who were now failing to cope with the high
fees.
"Members of the trust schools will
be guided in determining their fees by the law," said Jameson
Timba, the association’s chairman.
An official at another Harare private
school said: "This is grandstanding of the highest order. We
know some politicians have been lobbying the government on this
because they are failing to pay fees themselves."
Some schools had already sent circulars
to parents announcing new fees of more than $2 million for the first
term of 2007.
Private schools used to be a preserve
of minority whites but this has changed as the majority fled Mugabe’s
policies, especially the land reforms that displaced nearly all
white commercial farmers. The majority of students at the schools
are now black.
Private schools are the only remaining
institutions offering quality education in Zimbabwe.
"We are shooting ourselves in the
foot. These schools are sensitive to the reality on the ground.
The government is trying to keep a lid on the economic reality but
that will fail," said John Robertson, a Harare based private
economic consultant. - ZimOnline
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|