Teachers plan massive strike

Source: Teachers plan massive strike – DailyNews Live

Mugove Tafirenyika      29 May 2017

HARARE – President Robert Mugabe’s under pressure government is facing a
fresh crisis after teachers warned yesterday that they would stage a
crippling strike if authorities go ahead with their plans to close more
than 40 schools in Matabeleland South.

Their mass action threats come as fed up nurses have also given the
government notice that they will soon start toyi-toying to press for
improved working conditions and the dismissal of the Health Services Board
(HSB) secretariat, which they accuse of failing to act on their
long-standing grievances.

Various teachers’ representatives told the Daily News yesterday that they
had already put in motion the process of mobilising their members, civic
groups FROM P1

and community leaders to confront the government over the school closure
debacle.

This comes after the government announced last week that it was planning
to shut down 40 schools in Matabeleland South – on account of low pupil
and student enrolments.

A fuming Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) secretary general,
Raymond Majongwe, did not mince his words yesterday, telling the Daily
News that they would go on strike if the government went ahead with their
plans.

“The response from various groups is overwhelming because we are all
agreed that we must speak with one voice to pressure authorities.

“Several CSOs (civil society organisations) and activists are willing to
join the communities that are being punished by government for being
located away from schools.

“The policy is that an examination centre can be established where six
people have registered for examinations, yet here we are talking about 100
or more pupils who will be disadvantaged by the plans at some schools.

“So, after consultations, we greed that we will take whatever action will
be necessary, including demonstrating,” Majongwe said.

The chief executive officer of the Zimbabwe Teachers Association (Zimta),
Sifiso Ndlovu also said his organisation would not countenance any schools
being closed by “a rigid ministry that lacks dynamism”.

“We will continue to engage government on this and put pressure on them,
encouraging the authorities to abandon the plans as we also want to tell
the permanent secretary to stop all this nonsense of wanting to run the
ministry as if it were her private company.

“This ministry is not organised, it is rigid and lacks dynamism. Imagine a
ministry in which the average age of virtually its entire education
officers from district to province is 55 years.

“Obviously, their thinking is not in tandem with that of the younger
generation because of the rigidity which may not bring transformation in a
manner that the young minds can,” Ndlovu thundered.

The plan to close down the schools has also not gone down well with local
residents and civil society groups, who both accuse the government of
being insensitive to the plight of the poor, and the people of
Matabeleland in particular, who have long felt marginalised by the State.

Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition spokesperson, Dumisani Nkomo, is also on
record saying the move will be challenged vigorously.

“This move smacks of further alienation, discrimination and
marginalisation of an already exploited region.

“We reiterate our position that we are vehemently opposed to the closing
of schools to the already historical disadvantaged regions of
Matabeleland.

“We will not stand by idly as the rights of children are violated. We call
upon our members to resist this insane move.

“It is frivolous and vexatious for the government to claim that these
schools are not viable when the government is presiding over more than 50
loss-making parastatals and yet these loss-making entities are still dear
to government,” Nkomo said.

He also said the government’s decision was a flagrant violation of section
75 of the Constitution, which ensured the right to education, as well as
section 81 which upheld children’s rights.

The Community Development Trust (CDT) also described the decision to close
the schools as “totally unacceptable as it violates the children’s right
to education”.

“This is based on a flawed, outdated and ill-conceived policy of one
teacher to 40 students, which is a `one-size-fits-all’ policy that does
not consider differences in settlement patterns and population sizes of
various communities of Zimbabwe and in Matabeleland.

“In this policy directive, the ministry … did not consider the best
interests of the children but its own administrative interests, which is
wrong,” CDT director Nkululeko Tshuma said.

Human rights lawyer, Dewa Mavhinga, also told the Daily News yesterday
that teachers would be “totally justified” to go on strike, as the closure
of schools was a very important matter.

“The threat to close over 40 schools in Matabeleland is a matter of
national importance that justifies strike action by teachers, and which
parents, civil society, and progressive political movements should join to
condemn this blatant attack on the right to education.

“The government should not purport to address low enrolment by creating
problems. Any necessary interventions must also involve the communities
themselves,” Mavhinga told the Daily News.

Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC also said it was time for “all
progressive forces to join hands and resist the government’s ruinous
policies such as the threat to close schools”.

“The decision to close 40 schools in Matabeleland is absolutely
nauseating. The Zanu PF regime has now gone bonkers.

“Of course, the MDC, as a labour backed political party, is very much in
support of the decision by teachers to embark on a nationwide strike to
protest the unconstitutional and vindictive government decision to close
40 schools in Matabeleland South.

“The people of Matabeleland have continued to suffer badly since the
Gukurahundi genocide … Minister Lazarus Dokora and his team at the
ministry of Education must surely be smoking some hazardous substance.

“Otherwise, how on earth could they arrive at this shocking decision to
close 40 schools in this historically marginalised region?” MDC
spokesperson Obert Gutu said.

Meanwhile, nurses gave notice last week to strike, over poor working
conditions which they blame on the HSB “clueless” board.

“We feel the HSB does not understand us and how we operate. We have been
raising our grievances since 2010 and up to nowthey have not yet addressed
those issues.

“The purpose of the HSB is to address the conditions of service for health
workers, but this is not happening,” Zimbabwe Nurses Association
secretary-general, Enock Dongo, told the Daily News on Friday.

“Even when you have been working as a nurse for 10 years, and when you
should be considered to be a senior, you get the lowest salary of about
$285. It’s all because your grade doesn’t change. You remain grade D1,
instead of maybe D3.

“Someone can also have three or four diplomas on top of a nursing degree
and still be in that low grade. We have specialities in midwifery,
intensive care and physiotherapy, but all that is not being recognised.

“We want the HSB secretariat to be removed … and we will not stop
demonstrating until they are removed. They are non-medical people and they
don’t even know how we operate as health workers,” Dongo said.

“When we discuss our issues with the board, they appear to understand, but
the problem comes with implementation … that’s where the problem is. We
cannot have the lives and professions of over 35 000 people suffer because
of a few people, and we are saying we are fed up,” he added.

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