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Chaos
at UZ as services dwindle
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
May 31, 2007
Zimbabwe's
largest institution of higher learning, the University
of Zimbabwe (UZ) is on the verge of collapse. The institution
has been experiencing a myriad of administrative and financial problems
leading to the postponement of examinations originally penciled
for June to July 2007.
Apparently, four faculties
at the campus, namely Law, Medicine, Engineering and Social Work
departments are writing exams while the other 7 faculties had their
semester extended to the 22nd of July. However, the students in
the faculties which are writing examinations did not get adequate
lectures due to a strike for better salaries and working conditions.
Furthermore, students
at the university are living in squalid conditions. Zwelithini Viki,
an outgoing member of the Students Executive Council (SEC) informed
The Catalyst team that the sanitary conditions at the UZ are unbefitting
for a university. Raw sewage is reportedly flowing freely near dining
halls and student hostels while lavatories in the residence are
overflowing due to poor water supplies to the university.
In addition to the problems
being faced by students, the food being served at the institution
is substandard. Some students have resorted to eating food from
private caterers which costs between $30 000 and $35 000. This means
that an average student taking two meals a day will require Z$455
000 per week an amount that is well beyond the reach of the majority
students.
This situation
is not unique to the UZ as other state institutions are experiencing
similar problems. Students at the Midlands
State University (MSU) are going for days with no electricity,
a predicament of national electricity blackouts currently facing
the nation. The situation for students is made worse by poor water
supplies, due to incompetence by the Zimbabwe National Water Authority
(ZINWA).
The collapse of the country's
education delivery system is linked to the governance crisis that
Zimbabwe is grappling with. Due to economic hardships, the majority
poor can no longer afford to send or maintain their children at
school or university, rendering education merely a preserve of the
elite.
Visit the Crisis
in Zimbabwe fact
sheet
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