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Letter to the President of the Republic of Zimbabwe, Mr. Robert
Mugabe
Zimbabwe
National Students Union (ZINASU)
July 10, 2007
To: The Chancellor
His Excellency President R. G. Mugabe
Munhumutapa Building Harare
Cc: The UZ Vice Chancellor
Minister of Higher & Tertiary Education
Minister of Justice Legal & Parliamentary Affairs
Minister of Gender, Women's Affairs & Community Dev.
Diplomats Accredited to Zimbabwe
The President of the All Africa Students Union
RE:
Letter to the President of the Republic of Zimbabwe, Mr. Robert
Mugabe
The Zimbabwe
National Students Union (ZINASU) writes to yourself as the Chancellor
of the University
of Zimbabwe to express its outrage and serious concern at the
humanitarian disaster ensuing at the University of Zimbabwe, where
5000 students were evicted from halls of residence late in the afternoon
of 9 July resulting in thousands of them sleeping in the open.
The mass eviction,
reminiscent of Operation
Murambatsvina of 2005, was brutally carried out by armed riot
police at 2:30 pm following a notice by the University of Zimbabwe
Vice Chancellor Professor Levy Nyagura evicting students with immediate
effect. In his notice sent out at 2 pm on 9 July, Professor Nyagura
said that students had destroyed University property on the 3rd
and 7th of July 2007 and that all students should leave halls of
residence by 3pm of that day. At 2:30 hrs, armed riot police had
started violently evicting students from halls of residence. In
the process hundreds of students were beaten and injured by the
riot police. Two students were critically injured and received medical
attention at the Avenues clinic last night. Apart from stating that
the halls of residence have been closed, Professor Nyagura did not
give any indication of what would happen to the 5000 students evicted
from halls of residence. Many students staying on campus are not
residents of Harare and many come from far way cities including
Bulawayo, Mutare, and Masvingo among other places. The Vice Chancellor
stated that normal academic business would continue. This is despite
5000 students still stranded in the open.
ZINASU managed to organize
accommodation for a few students at churches in the vicinity of
Mount Pleasant area.
While the UZ administration
used the destruction of property at the University of Zimbabwe on
the 3rd and 7th of July as a justification to evict students from
campus, ZINASU argues that the demonstration on the dates mentioned
were as a result of the invasion of the University campus by riot
police who randomly fired teargas canisters and beat up students
indiscriminately. Students who were in halls of residence had to
break windows to escape the beating and tear smoke.
ZINASU further puts it
to yourself that the events of the 3rd and 7th of July were legitimate
and peaceful demonstrations by students expressing concern over
the ever increasing university fees, especially following another
demand from administration that students top up fees by 1 million
Zimbabwe dollars. The demand for the top up was, according to the
University administration, caused by the extension of the semester
owing to a strike by lecturers which resulted in lectures being
suspended. In this regard, student reject to pay for an issue which
is not of their making, that is the strike by lecturers. The events
of 9 July which have resulted in a serious humanitarian disaster
are a further indication of the deteriorating situation at the University
of Zimbabwe and further testimony to the lack of care and concern
on the welfare of students by the administration.
ZINASU expresses its
serious concern and condemnation that the use of brutal force and
impulse judgment is becoming 'policy' and practice at
the University of Zimbabwe. ZINASU notes that students are now politically
targeted by the administration which fears that the general collapse
of the economy and a political situation characterized by fear,
intimidation, harassment and torture might be resisted by University
students. ZINASU notes that students affairs are now seen in political
terms by security agents and administration who are prepared to
beat, shoot and kill in defence of corruption and autocracy at the
UZ.
ZINASU is deeply concerned
with the recent developments which are part of the administration's
war of attrition to silence students and brow beat us into submission.
ZINASU is concerned that the UZ administration is increasingly being
run, not by academics but by the Central Intelligence Organisation
(CIO) and riot police. This is sad for an institution which is purportedly
a learning hub. ZINASU, therefore, calls on the Chancellor to cause
the reopening of halls of residence so that students can attend
lectures normally. ZINASU reiterates that as a legitimate student
body it will maintain its position of representing students and
organizing any form of free expression to bring attention to concerns
of students on their general welfare.
Yours faithfully
Promise Mkwananzi
President
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fact
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