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WOZA
women march to demand their children's right to education
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
May 03, 2006
Hundreds of Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) members will be marching in Bulawayo today to
demand that their children be allowed to go to school. They will insist
on seeing the Provincial Governor and will deliver a set of demands. Recent
fee increases of up to 1000% have meant that many families across the
country can no longer afford the exorbitant rates now imposed. As a result,
many children will not be returning to school next week.
"Every child
in Zimbabwe shall have the right to school education".1
The right to education is a fundamental human right, both under
international norms and Zimbabwean law. The
Education Act clearly states that children have a right to schooling
and that primary education is compulsory and that parents have a
duty to send their children to school. And yet these fee increases
are effectively denying children that basic right. Their long suffering
parents, many affected by Operation
'Restore Order', are unable to cope with daily survival, never
mind skyrocketing school fees. Parents deprived of the opportunity
to earn an honest day's wages will now be unable to secure a future
for their children. Education is the key to breaking the cycle of
poverty but Government has thrown away the keys. This is the same
Government whose arsenal to suppress the nation has been prioritised
in the budget over the needs of educating the nation.
As Mother's Day approaches,
mothers across Zimbabwe are faced with the stark choice of either feeding
their children or educating them. Most cannot afford to do both. With
the poverty datum line for a family of five at $35 million Zimbabwe dollars,
and the minimum wage just set at $7 million, parents earning this wage
would have to spend their entire salary sending one child to school with
nothing left over for any other basic needs. However, with unemployment
currently at 80 per cent, those earning a minimum wage are amongst the
lucky few.
As a result, the women
of WOZA are saying to the government: NO more buying weapons to oppress
us - YES to educating our children NO more poor and starving children
- YES to educated and healthy children NO more lies and empty promises
- YES to leaders who care and tell us the truth NO more massive school
fee increases - YES to affordable education for all
As many schools have
also threatened to exclude children who cannot produce receipts, WOZA
is also calling on all teaching staff and school administrations not to
turn away children because their parents are unable to pay these high
fees.
The movement to reverse
the fee increases is part of WOZA's continuing social justice campaign.
Initial consultations across the country have made it clear that Zimbabweans
consider education to be a vital component of a socially just Zimbabwe.
This Mothers' Day,
therefore WOZA is asking Zimbabweans to choose. To either remain silent
and passively allow their children to be denied their fundamental right
to an education or to join WOZA in demanding an end to these increases.
Visit
the WOZA fact
sheet
1. Education
Act, Chapter 25:04 (1)
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