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With
no teachers schools fail to open for second term
Kholwani
Nyathi, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
May 27, 2007
BULAWAYO - Three
schools in Mangwe and Bulilima districts of Matabeleland South are
yet to open for the second term as most of their teachers have skipped
the border into South Africa.
Others are said to have
failed to turn up on opening day, claiming they had no money to
travel to the remote districts where their schools are located.
A number of
schools in Bulawayo and the two Matabeleland provinces have been
crippled by a massive teacher exodus amid revelations that most
of them now concentrate on providing tuition to examination classes
to mitigate their financial crisis.But reports that Butshe secondary
school
and Tsukulu and Mambale primary schools in Bulilima and Mangwe respectiverly
have remained closed because of a teacher shortage indicate the
situation has reached crisis levels.
Civil servants, including
teachers have reportedly rejected a 200% pay increase offered by
the government, citing galloping inflation which breached world
record levels a long time ago.
This comes a few weeks
after the government was forced to review upwards allowances for
nurses following complaints by the Minister of Health and Child
Welfare, David Parirenyatwa that the health workers were no longer
reporting for duty because they could not afford bus fare.
On 18 May education officers
visiting Mambale primary school to assess the situation were reportedly
chased away by angry parents.
"The headmaster
invited the education officers from Plumtree to come and assess
the situation for themselves, but after they suggested they would
look into the matter, the angry parents chased them away,"
said one parent.
Matabeleland South provincial
education director, Sipho Khumalo was not immediately available
for comment and the Minister of Education, Sport and Culture, Aeneas
Chigwedere said he had not received any report about the schools.
But he acknowledged that
teachers were running away from remote schools "because of
poor living conditions, lack of safe drinking water sources and
transport."
"We have no shortage
of teachers as a country but we have problems with teachers who
are running away from remote areas," said Chigwedere.
According to
a recent survey by the Progressive
Teachers' Union (PTUZ), 4 500 teachers had left the country
between January and April, fleeing from low salaries and poor working
conditions.
Most of them crossed
the border into South Africa and Botswana,where they are even prepared
to do menial jobs. Contrary to Chigwedere's assertion, even schools
in urban areas have been affected by the staff exodus.
Teachers earn
$500 000 a month but the Consumer
Council of Zimbabwe estimates that a family of five now needs
$1.7 million a month to survive.
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