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Zimbabwe
schools order children to bring own food
Farisai Gonye and Nqobizitha Khumalo, Zim Online
January 16, 2008
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=2559
Harare - Zimbabwean
schools, hit by severe food shortages, are demanding that children
bring along their own supplies, while a teachers' union said no
learning will take place at most schools that opened for the new
term yesterday because of a serious shortage of teachers.
The Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) said some boarding schools
- several of which cut short the last term after running out of
food - may have to delay opening because they did not have food
to feed students.
PTUZ secretary general
Raymond Majongwe said nearly all the schools across the country
would have to start the new term with less than adequate teachers
after thousands of teachers left the country over the past five
years to look for better paying jobs abroad.
He said poor salaries
paid school-teachers have only helped worsen the situation with
hundreds of teachers unable to travel to schools for the new term
because they do not have money for bus fare despite the government
last week advancing loans to teachers and all civil servants to
ensure they were able to report for work.
"Our reports indicate
that many schools will not open. These are clearly signs of the
virtual collapse of (the) education (sector)," said Majongwe,
whose union has warned teachers may go on strike to press for more
pay and better working conditions.
Education Minister Aeneas
Chigwedere confirmed the difficulties that schools and teachers
were facing but said all schools should open for the new term while
the government looked into the myriad problems affecting the education
sector.
"They are saying
they have problems with budgets and food but we are saying they
should open while the problems are being looked at," said Chigwedere,
a former headmaster himself.
Neither the PTUZ nor
the Ministry of Education were able to provide statistics of schools,
if any, that were unable to begin lessons yesterday because of a
shortage of teachers or boarding schools that had delayed beginning
the new term, with the situation expected to be much clearer during
the course of the week.
Zimbabwe is in the grip
of a debilitating political and economic crisis - blamed on repression
and wrong policies by President Robert Mugabe - and seen in hyperinflation,
a rapidly contracting GDP, the fastest for a country not at war
according to the World Bank and shortages of foreign currency, food
and fuel.
The public education
sector has not been spared. Once the pride of Africa, Zimbabwe's
schools have crumbled in step with the spectacular economic collapse.
School administrators
have appealed to the government's National Incomes and Pricing Commission
to be allowed to hike fees to raise cash to maintain schools, buy
food and learning equipment for students.
The commission allowed
schools to provisionally raise fees by 600 percent, which school
authorities say is not enough given Zimbabwe's runaway inflation
officially estimated at more than 8 000 percent as at end of last
September but which some independent analysts say could be more
than 24 000 percent.
This has left schools
with no option but to ask children to bring their own food supplies
or they would starve.
A snap survey by ZimOnline
reporters in Matabeleland North and South provinces showed most
schools were asking children to bring along groceries such as maize-meal,
cooking oil, beans, salt, rice and sugar.
Most school heads would
not answer questions on the matter, saying they were not authorised
to speak to the press but parents confirmed to reporters that they
were being asked to buy groceries for their children.
"The goods demanded
at my child's school include 4kg packet of rice, 10kg bag of maize-meal,
2kg sugar, and 4kg of beans," said Thamsanqa Moyo, who has
a child attending Empandeni secondary school near Plumtree in Matabeleland
South province.
Moyo said the groceries
were on top of the $24 million required as tuition fee for the term.
As parents battled to
buy groceries for their kids, they also worried about school uniforms
that are in short supply after a controversial government price
freeze that it said was meant to bring down inflation resulted in
shortages of commodities.
"I have not been
able to buy the complete uniform for my boy, one because I can't
get it from the uniforms supplier and two because I no longer have
cash after all the other expenses," said a Bulawayo man who
said his child attended Mpopoma high school in Zimbabwe's second
largest city.
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