THE NGO NETWORK ALLIANCE PROJECT - an online community for Zimbabwean activists  
 View archive by sector
 
 
    HOME THE PROJECT DIRECTORYJOINARCHIVESEARCH E:ACTIVISMBLOGSMSFREEDOM FONELINKS CONTACT US
 

 


Back to Index

SST on the Day of the African Child
Students Solidarity Trust
June 16, 2010

The Students Solidarity Trust (SST) community and its partners join the African community in commemorating the Day of the African Child. As we commemorate this important day we reflect on the justified South Western Townships or in short Soweto uprising in protest against repressive and suppressive conditions of learning largely similar to contemporary Zimbabwe's own 34 years after. 12 year old Hector Zolile Pietorson and 62 others lost their lives due to heavy-handedness reaction by white supremacist police on June 16, 1976. By August 1976, 575 people had been killed after the unrests spread throughout Apartheid South Africa and over 2 000 people had been arrested and tortured.

Zimbabwe's contemporary and Apartheid South Africa's conditions of learning

A striking resemblance of 1976 Apartheid South Africa and contemporary Zimbabwe's conditions of learning can be drawn. Then in 1976 black students did not have enough teachers and textbooks and other equipment. Teachers were not being properly trained and they earned little money. The schools were overcrowded and poor. Students lived with their parents and guardians in poor conditions and in two or four roomed "match-box" houses. Their parents were afraid of police and the white government to press for a dignified life. The apartheid government wanted to force the students to have half of their subjects taught in Afrikaans. There was separate quality education for children of rich parents. The corrupt West Rand Administration Board (WRAB) charged exorbitant fees for services which were never improved and got worse each day. Repressive laws such as the 1952 Group Areas Act were in place.

In contemporary independent Zimbabwe 34 years on, there is a glaring shortage of teachers, textbooks and other equipment. In most schools ten students share one text book. A significant number of teachers left the profession either going abroad or into the informal sector in search of greener pastures. Teacher training colleges are not getting enough government support. Teachers earn as little as US$150 which is far below the poverty datum line. Schools are overcrowded and the teacher workload is high. Most students are living in poor conditions. The majority of teachers are living in squalid conditions in "match-box" houses or rooms divided by curtains sharing. There is separate elite education for those children of richer parents in most cases top-government officials in A-schools or abroad. The government is charging for services which are not improving and in most instances getting worse. Repressive Public Order and Security Act and other laws that infringe on the students' freedoms of association, movement and speech are in place. The heavy handedness of police in reacting to unarmed students in contemporary Zimbabwe is a common phenomenon.

Throughout the country a record number of more than 10 600 students have been expelled, suspended, deregistered, barred from writing examinations, dropped out from schools and colleges, evicted from campus residence, hauled before kangaroo students disciplinary hearings or arrested and tortured by law enforcement agents from year 2000. Professor Levi Nyagura Vice Chancellor at the University of Zimbabwe (UZ) has expelled or suspended more than 104 student activists since year 2000 and evicted more than 4500 students from halls of residence on July 9, 2007 after issuing out a 30 minutes notice. Students who are not fully paid up are not being allowed into libraries and examinations. Batanai Hadzizi just like Zolile Hector Pietorson was allegedly gunned downed during UZ June 2, 2003 "Final Push" march to President Mugabe's state house. Student activist Lameck Chemvura was allegedly thrown out of a moving train while on the run from UZ trying to evade central intelligence officers and died instantly.

Comprehending the ageless role of students

Students' struggles the world over and from time immemorial have not always necessarily been about their own interests, but the interests of the masses. Students have been the voice of the voiceless, the vanguards of democracy and the most courageous and articulate on issues affecting the masses. South African students initiated a revolution in June 1976 that later saw learners who became known as the "class of 76" leaving apartheid South Africa for military training in other countries. The only notable victories against the occupying Israel forces have always come from non-violent student activities, beginning with the earlier attempt [1980] by Israel to put universities curricula under civil administration and relatively recent Intifada. Most of Zimbabwe's ex-freedom fighters were school children who left classes for military training in other countries. Another striking example is the famous struggle that began on April 17, 1989 when students flocked to lay wreaths in the Monument of the Martyrs of the People, in memory of ex-Secretary General of the communists Hu Yaobang. He had supported students call for reform. The ruling communists were shaken as pamphlets littered the city calling for democracy and as days turned into weeks the students were relatively triumphant. The struggle of Mongolian students on International Human Rights Day of 1989 - where students marched to the capital Ulaanbaatar as a rock band khonk (bell) played music speaks also to the unchanging role of students.

In post-independent Zimbabwe in the 1990s, students dared challenge the ruling nationalist bourgeoisie by exposing the treachery and betrayal of this elite that had appropriated the national liberation gains for its self-entrenchment and aggrandizement. The students had seen that the revolution had lost its way and the then professed socialist transformation was a mere gimmick to bring about the dictatorship of the ruling oligarchy. The students were therefore speaking and agitating on behalf of the masses and workers whose interests were being sacrificed. To this day students are playing a watchdog role in making sure that Zimbabwe's inclusive government realises key deliverables of enunciated in the September 15, 2008 Inclusive Political Agreement document which are economic recovery, new constitution, fresh free and fair elections and national healing, reconciliation and integration. With this year's theme, "Planning and budgeting for children: our collective responsibility", the Zimbabwe's inclusive government and all African governments are enjoined to increase funding of their education sectors.

The contemporary demands of the students are guided by Article 28 and 29 of The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and other International conventions and covenants on the right to education and are as follows:

1. States Parties recognise the right of the child to education, and with a view to achieving this right progressively and on the basis of equal opportunity, they shall, in particular:

(a) Make primary education compulsory and available free to all;
(b) Encourage the development of different forms of secondary education, including general and vocational education, make them available and accessible to every child, and take appropriate measures such as the introduction of free education and offering financial assistance in case of need;
(c) Make higher education accessible to all on the basis of capacity by every appropriate means;
(d) Make educational and vocational information and guidance available and accessible to all children;
(e) Take measures to encourage regular attendance at schools and the reduction of drop-out rates.

Visit the Students Solidarity Trust fact sheet

Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.

TOP