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State
repression: students bear the brunt
Masimba Nyamanhindi
April 02, 2006
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/viewinfo.cfm?linkid=21&id=437
STUDENTS play
crucial and decisive roles in the political and socio-economic issues
in their respective societies.
This is especially
so because institutions of higher learning provide a platform for
students to form competent organised centres of opinion, which opinions
normally reflect the state of affairs of a given society.
In societies
that experience political, social and economic injustices, more
often than not, students have been at the forefront of demanding
social, economic and political justice.
History shows
that students have indeed lived up to their billing - voice of the
voiceless - and have acted as catalysts for change.
Zimbabwe is
no different.
The Zimbabwean
society has always been beset by morally incompetent leadership
that uses coercion as a form of governance.
Before independence,
Zimbabwe was a country bedevilled by political and economic injustices
where all forms of racial discrimination were operational.
But students
did not just watch when the country was burning; they echoed the
demands of a downtrodden nation, that is, restoration of people's
fundamental liberties and freedoms.
Many a times,
the consequences of their actions were fatal, often leaving in their
wake a trail of dead or injured student activists.
Some were expelled.
Zimbabweans recall the expulsion of the late Witness Mangwende,
Simba Makoni and the late prolific writer Dambudzo Marechera after
leading the famous "pots and pans" demonstration.
As Zimbabweans
were imbued with the euphoria of independence, signs that Zimbabwe
would be a failed nation were becoming apparent.
Soon after independence,
the country got embroiled in a bloody civil war that claimed the
lives of scores of thousands of innocent civilians in the Matabeleland
and the Midlands region.
This was genocide
in which more than 20 000 civilians perished in that dark era of
Zimbabwean history.
Unfortunately,
students and Zimbabweans from the other side of the road were silent
at a time when an inferno was engulfing Matabeleland and the Midlands.
Be that as it
may, when it was becoming increasingly clear that the political
leadership in Zimbabwe was driven by selfish agendas more than anything
else, students in Zimbabwe broke their silence.
They were at
the forefront of speaking out against corruption, a cancerous canker
that has continued to eat into the social fabric of the Zimbabwean
society.
Since that time
corruption has remained deeply endemic within Zimbabwe's society.
Students condemned
the high profile Willowgate Scandal.
As students
clamoured for transparency from the government, journalists and
musicians joined in the fray.
Thomas Mukanya
Mapfumo, a renowned protest musician released a blockbuster, titled
Corruption - a song that condemned corruption.
Student leaders
who led the sentiments against corruption were brutalised and suspended.
The then President
of the University of Zimbabwe students' union, Arthur Mutambara,
wrote his examinations from the cells.
He is now trying
to lead Zimbabweans.
The deliberate
and systematic attack on the liberties and freedoms of students'
activists in Zimbabwe has continued, unabated and if left unchecked
could be a cocktail for disaster.
During the last
two weeks alone, we have witnessed the suspension and expulsion
of 37 students at the country's institutions of higher learning.
The University
of Zimbabwe has expelled four student leaders.
The National
University of Science and Technology has suspended 29 student
activists and Masvingo Polytechnic has expelled one student leader.
Since 2000,
the Students Solidarity
Trust has documented at least 100 cases of victimisation of
student activists, which include suspensions and expulsions.
At a time when
the education sector is going through a turbulent crisis, universities
and colleges were thrown into disarray when the government unilaterally
increased tuition and accommodation fees for students.
The increment
was so sudden and exorbitant that it threatens the capacity of ordinary
students to attain tertiary education.
Yet every child
has a right to attain decent education so that they can have the
opportunity to earn a decent living and escape from the vicious
clutches of poverty.
There is now
a real danger that the majority of students will fail to attain
tertiary education.
Harare Polytechnic
has turned away thousands of students and NUST has given students
up until next week to pay up the fees or risk being expelled.
While students
en masse are faced with expulsions, the systematic victimisation
of those brave students fighting the increments has reached alarming
and unprecedented levels.
President Robert
Mugabe's regime continues to outflank the Ian Smith regime in almost
every aspect of oppression.
It seems oppression
is the only industry that is growing in Zimbabwe.
Until all these
ills are removed and true democratic order is restored, Zimbabwe's
independence will forever remain hollow and meaningless.
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