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Can
‘Not In My Country’ help fight corruption at Zim universities
& colleges
L.S.M Kabweza, Technology Zimbabwe
April 28, 2013
View
this article on the Technology Zimbabwe website
“We
focus on universities because students are the future leaders. Corruption
is so pervasive in Kenya that it has created a generation that is
unable to change. The values and life of university students, on
the other hand, are still forming. If students learn at university
that they can buy their grades and bypass bureaucracy by selling
their bodies, the resulting cynicism will persist into their future
careers.” - Not in My Country Kenya
First learnt
about notinmycountry.org last year and immediately knew it’d
be an absolute need for Zim colleges & universities. I remember
even back 12 years ago when I was in college corruption had settled
in already. People would pay lecturers to get the paper in advance.
They’d pay for invigilators to look the other way or leave
the room. They’d pay to have lecturers provide software projects
from previous years (the software on floppy disc as well as the
documentation, proposals and all) for the young corrupt minds to
copy and paste!
Guys would just
pay cash (or buy beer) but I wonder how bad it was for the female
students…
Now everyday
business in Zimbabwe is openly corrupt. I spent some two years as
head of the tech department at an NGO where I was offered kickbacks
by all sorts to influence procurement decisions. Criminals pay to
be let go by the police. Ordinary people pay to get their driver’s
license and the result is (predictably) more accidents on the roads,
and the otherwise avoidable traffic logjams. The municipal workers
openly expect a bribe to not disconnect you for unpaid water bills.
Thank god for the prepaid electricity!
Digressing because
there’s so much to say on this… Point is with so much
open corruption in society, how bad is it now at colleges? What
kind of graduates is this system producing? And not to forget that
corruption is a two party transaction where both parties willingly
decide to take a shortcut to a desired end. Can notinmycountry.org
give a voice to those that would otherwise have nowhere to report
in country that’s normalizing this disease?
I was reminded
of notinmycountry.org after reading on Kenya’s Sunday Nation
that a group of 15 graduates in Kenya have localised the whistle-blowing
website to help students report indecent activities by university
lecturers and administrative personnel. And to do it anonymously.
Of course there’s
the reality that, like anything that opens up the opportunity of
anonymous communication to everyone, it can be abused. Without knowing
how they take care of that possibility, I wonder if they could use
some of the methods employed by Deloitte in their Tip-offs Anonymous
initiative so it’s a fusion of the power of grassroots crowdsourced
reports that tech avails, and the ‘integrity’ of a good
old auditing process.
Either way,
I wish we could bring something like this to Zimbabwe. It, or our
own flavor of it that’s sensitive to local nuances so the
net effect is not in the negative. We need it.
Will it help?
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