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Old
wine in new wineskins
Students
Solidarity Trust
August 29, 2012
The importance
of education to progress and development of a country can never
be over emphasized. Indeed, the then Zimbabwean government of the
early 80s recognized this. Schools, colleges and other educational
institutions were constructed amid pomp and fanfare. Slogans such
as "education for all" were adopted and products of
the era of investment are there for all to see, not only within
the geographical confines of Zimbabwe but the world over. Products
of Zimbabwe's education system are sought after the world
over epitomising the quality of education Zimbabweans enjoyed during
this period.
However, this
proved to be a false start as Zimbabwe regressed into a state intent
on being a stumbling block to the fledgling academia. Demonstrations
at colleges were violently and heavy-handedly broken up, student
leaders were arrested, suspended and expelled and college authorities
waded in with inexplicable decisions against students. As the need
to preserve and protect political turf grew, resources were diverted
from education to defence. The net result was a privatisation of
education and a system unable to sustain itself due to no resources.
Even the human resource capital built over time has been decimated
by the uncaring attitude exhibited by the government.
Zimbabwe's
political circus has meant that very little effort has been put
towards resuscitation of the higher education system. The Minister
of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture, Senator David Coltart has
tried his best to restore education to its rightful place. However,
he has received very little if any complement from his counterpart
in the higher and tertiary education ministry Dr Isack Stanslus
Gorerazvo Mudenge.
A myriad of
problems currently bedevil the higher education system including
the high fees, an unfriendly learning environment and a lack of
qualified lecturers in many of the institutions under the doctor's
ambit. Faced with these realities, the Minister has been conspicuously
silent as students have been roughed up left, right and centre.
Instead of complementing
efforts by the finance ministry, the Higher and Tertiary Education
ministry has been busy castigating their colleagues, attacking them
for not releasing money and for not consulting. As students continue
being chased away from colleges and universities for being poor,
the ministry remains aloof and has not stamped its foot to condemn
such an abominable act by those college authorities under them.
Despite Minister
Tendai Biti's assurances that money will come through, functionaries
of colleges and universities continue to stone heartedly bar students
from accessing this basic human right.
The coming in
of the inclusive government promised to usher in hope and prosperity
for Zimbabweans. However, as long as we have old wine in the form
of incompetent elements in the ministry of higher and tertiary education
and their functionaries who see themselves as irreplaceable in the
colleges and universities, the new wineskins in the form of the
transition and reformed institutions will not be able to hold. It
is now high time that we introduce new wine into these new wineskins
to ensure Zimbabwe's sustained development. The old wine and
the pedantic old wineskins must now leave the Zimbabwean stage.
Visit the Students
Solidarity Trust fact
sheet
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