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State
failure to avert violation of the right to education deplorable
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
May 05, 2010
Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights (ZLHR) has noted with grave concern developments
reported in The Herald today about the victimisation and harassment
of our most vulnerable citizens, the children.
Although schools
opened on Tuesday 4 May 2010, many pupils were allegedly barred
from attending their classes by school authorities, more specifically
School Development Associations (SDAs), over non-payment of tuition
fees and levies. What is extremely disturbing is the report that
the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) were called in to certain schools
in unclear circumstances and for unclear purposes. It is not yet
apparent whether these actions were sanctioned by the Ministry of
Education, Sports & Culture.
The ZRP are
well-known for their heavy-handed and often unprocedural and unlawful
actions. ZRP members have been known in the past to have used excessive
and unjustifiable force on innocent citizens who are seeking to
peacefully advance their basic fundamental human rights. They have
no place in schools or anywhere near innocent children whose peace
of mind and security has already been disrupted by arbitrary action
to prevent them from attending classes.
The Minister
of Education Sports and Culture, Senator David Coltart, stated that
one of his broad policy goals is to restore basic education for
all Zimbabwean children. By allowing or failing to foresee and/or
prevent a situation in government schools whereby SDAs and other
dubious authorities are permitted to, or not stopped from, taking
such heavy-handed, unlawful and disruptive action in conjunction
with the Zimbabwe Republic Police, the Ministry is highlighting
the lack of clarity on how this policy is being implemented, and
its arbitrary nature. This is especially so, given the fact that
many children continue to be turned away from schools over non-payment
of tuition fees, although it is only the Ministry which has the
power to enforce such extreme action.
The right to
education is fundamental for all children and it directly impacts
on the exercise and enjoyment of all other rights. It also functions
as an early empowerment tool, as an educated person is armed with
knowledge to demand and assert their fundamental rights and freedoms.
The right finds expression in the United Nations Convention on the
Rights of the Child, the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare
of the Child, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights (ICESCR), and the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, amongst other regional and international
instruments.
Zimbabwe is
a state party to these instruments. As such, the government, through
the Ministry of Education, has an obligation to respect, promote,
protect and fulfill the right to education. Primary education has
two distinctive features: it must be compulsory and available free
for all. This position is reiterated in United Nations General Comment
No. 13. The ICESCR stipulates that the government has an obligation
to ensure that the right is progressively realised by all children.
The conduct
of the SDAs, seemingly condoned by the Ministry's inaction
and failure to prevent this unacceptable situation, is a blatant
violation of such obligations and must not be tolerated.
This appalling
conduct also departs from Millennium Development Goal No. 2 that
encourages states to ensure that by 2015 all primary school children
complete schooling.
ZLHR calls on
the Ministry of Education, Sports and Culture to urgently clarify
its position and to ensure that SDAs, the ZRP, and all other retrogressive
elements which have no authority to interfere with schooling, desist
from directly or indirectly interfering with the right to education
of all children. Those involved in the scandalous behaviour reported
at various schools yesterday must be held to account so that no
such further incidents are allowed to occur.
The Ministry
must urgently put into place concrete measures to ensure that all
children are allowed to continue to attend classes even in instances
where they have not yet paid fees. Further it must take measures
to progressively ensure that there is no requirement for tuition
fees at primary and secondary school level.
ZLHR will not
hesitate to take legal action to protect the rights of children
who have been exposed to such conduct and we are already taking
instructions from parents to seek redress against the authorities.
Visit the ZLHR
fact
sheet
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