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Statement on the Day of the African Child
Zimbabwe
National Students Union (ZINASU)
(Mugwadi)
June 16, 2010
The Zimbabwe
National Students Union (ZINASU) joins the world and millions of
students across the globe in the full name of active solidarity
in commemorating the Anniversary of the Day of the African Child.
On this historic day, the courageous black students in South Africa
stood up to defend their identity in the face of an oppressive apartheid
regime and its racial legislations such as the Afrikaans Decree
of 1974 which purported to impose Afrikaans and English as languages
of instruction in African Bantu schools created under the unpopular
Bantu Education Act of 1953. Despite resistance by the young Sowetans,
the then ruthless government proceeded with its intention, culminating
into the popular uprising that came to be known as 'The Soweto
Massacre' in 1976. This resulted in the death of bravery young
men and women notably Hector Peterson.
ZINASU therefore
gives respect and honor to those that stood up in defense of the
African cause and most importantly, the ability of the African youth
to organize themselves and fight repression in pursuit of their
destiny. As we celebrate this day, ZINASU mourns the pathetic state
of the young people in Zimbabwe and Africa as a whole in the face
of a plethora of challenges manifesting in dictatorship and governance
crisis in countries like Zimbabwe, Somalia, Madagascar, and Sudan
among many others.
It is in this
regard that ZINASU calls upon the government of Zimbabwe to begin
to think about the future of the young people and students in particular,
whose daily life has been turned into a torture base of hunger,
unbearable toil and anxiety in the face of rampant unemployment
nearing 80%, poverty and many other challenges.
Amidst all this crisis facing the youth in Zimbabwe and Africa as
a whole ZINASU celebrate and salute the strength and resilient fighting
spirit of the young people of Zimbabwe and the students, in a true
revolutionary mood blended by class-consciousness and the determination
to reinvigorate the people's struggle for the political, social
and economic transformation of Zimbabwe that will usher in a free
prospect of young people struggle for self determination.
The 2010 commemoration
of the day of the African child also takes place at a time when
the students are mourning the demise of the once vibrant education
system in the country. The students in Zimbabwe continue to face
multifaceted serious challenges that manifests in astronomical and
restrictive tuition fees, brutality against students activists incessant
closure of halls of residence by the University
of Zimbabwe authorities, the arbitrary suspensions and expulsion
of students' leaders and the general deterioration of the
state of the whole sector.
The celebrations
are also taking place at a time when the majority of the students
at the, National University of Science Education, Midlands State
University, Harare Poly, University of Zimbabwe and many others
have been endangered of their future by being prohibited to sit
for their end of semester examinations by the brutal and ruthless
policies of the notorious Vice Chancellors.
The celebrations
also come in the work of a stage-managed but doomed parliamentary
driven process of constitutional reform which has undermined the
students and fellow young people's call for a genuine people
driven constitution reform process that underpins fundamental human
rights, particularly the right to education. ZINASU will reject
any outcome of this default process as it cannot be trusted as a
guarantor of the right to education.
ZINASU urges the government of Zimbabwe to heed to the call of the
suffering young people and take drastic and appropriate measures
to address the plight of the students of Zimbabwe and fellow young
people.
Finally, ZINASU
wishes, the young people of Africa and African soccer teams a wonderful
World Cup.
Visit the ZINASU
fact
sheet
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