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Too
scared for school: the plight of Zimbabwe's teachers
Catherine
Philp, The Times (UK)
May 02, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3857348.ece
It was May Day and the
schools were out for the holiday but Tatenda Makura had come to
St Peter's Secondary School anyway, looking for the headmaster.
He joined the queue of other boys in the corridor, hoping to win
a place at the sought-after church school. "This is the only
one that has enough teachers," Tatenda explained. When the
new term began this week at his own school, Harare High, only two
out of eight of his teachers turned up. "Maths, science, geography,
accounts, history," the earnest 17-year-old reeled off - "we
are not getting any of these. I need to learn these but the teachers
are not there." As Zimbabwe's new school term began
after a six-week election break, thousands of teachers failed to
turn up, kept away by violence, intimidation or simply poverty caused
by the hyperinflation that has soared even higher since March's
disputed elections.
Teachers'
unions declared that 9,000 teachers failed to report for work on
Tuesday, exacerbating the woes of an education system already crippled
by a national brain drain and chronic underfunding, Hundreds of
rural schools are struggling to reopen at all after teachers fled
a campaign of violence against local activists for the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and officers for the Zimbabwe
election commission. Thousands of teachers took employment as election
officers during the school break to supplement their shrinking incomes.
In the past week at least 100 teachers, including several school
principals, have been arrested on suspicion of electoral fraud.
The main trade union federation announced yesterday that two teachers
had been beaten to death at their school in the northwestern Guruve
region, apparently by ruling party militia. "These are being
accused of rigging the elections in favour of MDC," Raymond
Majongwe, secretary-general of the Progressive
Teachers' Union of Zimbabwe, said.
Others who worked as
presiding officers have been the subject of violence from militias
terrorising the opposition in rural strongholds, such as Mudzi and
Mutoko, where schools have been hit hardest. Arthur, a secondary
school English teacher, was asleep at home in Kumburai village,
Mudzi, two weeks ago when 40 Zanu PF militiamen smashed into his
home. "They asked me: 'Where are your colleagues?'
I said I didn't know and they began to beat me. They said:
'If you don't tell us, we will kill you.' "
He fled to Harare with two other teachers for medical treatment.
One of them, Harold, was tortured for seven hours before he escaped.
All are in hiding. "Hate speeches are being uttered against
teachers. Some are being systematically assaulted," Mr Majongwe
said. "There is no way that they can go back to such dangerous
areas."
Tatenda has little idea
why his teachers did not turn up at the start of term. He has seen
dozens leave for other countries and two die "from tuberculosis"
- most likely Aids-related - over the past five years. St Peter's
has been less affected than some other schools: teachers say the
faith-based ethos has kept them loyal to the profession despite
their own crushing economic needs. Joseph Magorimbo, 18, had arrived
from Kwekwe, 100km southwest of Harare, to seek a place at St Peter's,
after a handful of teachers turned up at his own school the start
of term. His mother was a teacher there but she died four years
ago from Aids. "My granny brought me up here because she said
my mother would want me to have an education above anything,"
he said.
Education is
highly prized in Zimbabwe, not least because of President Mugabe,
a former teacher himself, who prioritised school building and teacher
training in the early years of his rule. Every morning, from the
slums of Mbare, children emerge in a rainbow of coloured uniforms,
heading off to lessons. "Even if the uniforms are torn, they
all have them," Lucy, a secondary teacher, said. "The
parents make sure of that." She did not return to work this
week because she can no longer survive on her salary, Z$5 billion
a month, shrinking every day through hyperinflation at 165,000 per
cent. The schools themselves are struggling too, and not just from
lack of teachers. At St Peter's, as the prospective pupils
waited, a parent-teacher committee had given up a day's holiday
to hammer out a rise in school fees. Last term they were Z$80 million;
they had done their sums and worked out that this term would need
Z$4 billion per pupil just to keep running.
"This school is
a good one and even it is nearly bankrupt," Gilbert Musintonga,
a teacher from the primary department, said. But this will put a
severe strain on parents struggling to pay off last term's
debts. "That is the situation," Grace, a committee member
shrugged. "They will try their best because they want education
for their children. Without education, they can do nothing. Some
will refuse. It will be tough for them." The Government, anxious
to keep up appearances, has stuffed schools full of relief teachers,
unqualified for the job, so even when they do show up the teaching
is a far removed from what it used to be. Zimbabwe's trained
teachers, meanwhile, wait in their thousands on the restaurant tables
of Johannesburg and elsewhere. "I am worried for the future
of these children," Mr Musintonga sighed. "We don't
have books, we don't have equipment, we don't even have
chalk. We only have our teachers but without them, the children
cannot learn anything. This term, we have five classes without teachers
and we don't know where they are, or whether they will come
back."
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