Politicians from Matabeleland in Zimbabwe need to ‘break the deputy mentality’

Bulawayo 24 News

By Phithizela Ngcobo

22 November 2011

African politics and landscape is plagued by one disease: tribalism. This disease has brought untold misery and calamity to our motherland. Zimbabwe is no exception and what makes our situation interesting is that there are virtually ‘two tribes’ the Shona and Ndebele- yet the reality is that no one is a ‘Shona’ or ‘Ndebele’.

There are Zezurus, Khumalos, Karangas, Tongas, Manyikas, Ndaus, Kalangas, Vendas, Sothos, Nambyas, and Xhosas among others, yet we are all lumped into the Shona-Ndebele categories. However, I will also adopt the common, but wrong view that Zimbabwe is made up of Shonas and Ndebeles.

The Shonas are the majority making up almost 75% of the population or more while the Ndebeles make up about 20% of the population and the other 5% or so is of the Indian, White, mixed race and ‘others’ of mostly Zambian, Mozambican and Malawian origin. In terms of politics, Shonas dominate top leadership while Ndebeles have become the deputies, a title that they are so ‘honoured’ to hold.

It has become an acceptable norm that principals must be Shonas while Ndebeles deputise them. The assumption is that Shonas are so tribalistic that they will never vote for Ndebeles. It is my thesis that Ndebele politicians have a duty to rise above the ‘deputy mentality’ and become the presidents. No one will bestow this position on them unless they demand it.

The fallacy that Shonas will never vote for a Ndebele is not entirely true: Marvelous Khumalo (and you never become more Ndebele than a Khumalo) is a Member of Parliament for St. Mary’s in Chitungwiza where one Shona King Chaminuka was born. Then there is the MP for Chegutu West, Takalani Prince Matibe. Chegutu is in President Mugabe’s home province and the name Takalani meaning ‘Be Happy’ is Venda which falls under the Ndebele umbrella.

Yes, I do not deny that tribalism exist, but what about Marvelous and Takalani who are elected by Shonas to parliament? Maybe Ndebele leaders have given up without trying harder; there are so many decent Shonas who will vote for Ndebeles the same way as there are decent Ndebeles who will vote for Shonas. Matabeleland candidates have not even sought the nomination to be presidents of late, pointing to yesteryears when Shonas rebelled against Joshua Nkomo to form ZANU.

They queue to be deputies like Lovemore Moyo fighting Thokozani Khupe and Obert Mpofu fighting John Nkomo to be Tsvangirayi and Mugabe’s deputies respectively!

I know critics like Dr Brilliant Mhlanga may argue that this opinion is blaming victims, but victims must learn to set aside victimhood and take the bull by its horns.

Professor Jonathan Moyo​ is an interesting character, who lost his father to Gukurahundi and suffered the same trauma that some of us use as an excuse for accepting being the second best. An academic par excellence, Moyo is known for taking the bull by its horns than anyone else in Zimbabwean politics. He can criticise Mugabe and Zanu PF​, join them and save them from electoral defeat, leave them and defeat them in polls, criticise them and then rejoin them in a space of 5 years!

In Shona he does what is called “kuita madiro aGeorgina” while in Ndebele it’s called ‘ukwenza santando” (do-as-you-please). In a tribally-polarised country like ours, Moyo shows that if you are hardworking and capable, you don’t owe your political position to ‘he who appoints’. Whether Zanu PF likes it or not, they know that Moyo is an asset and his Ndebeleness does not count.

As a Tsholotsho native, I have seen the projects that Moyo initiated and know that he is assured of people’s support because of hard work.

Let me look at two deputies from Matabeleland, John Nkomo and Thokozani Khupe. In as much as Khupe was voted by the people of Makokoba, she has behaved like another appointee owing her position to ‘he who appoints’ than the people.

John Nkomo has no voice because he is not only unelected, but unelectable too, so not much is expected of him although he has pulled a surprise by helping to build a secondary school in her home area of Manqe in Tsholotsho.

Thokozani Khupe has been a disappointment; she is never there to speak for her constituency, let alone to initiate any development. Her deputy position is more of an honorary one than any substance. Her compatriot, Thabitha Khumalo, MP of Bulawayo East has outshone her as the female voice of Matabeleland in parliament dealing with the thorny issue of Gukurahundi.

In a recent interview with the Standard newspaper, about people being deported from South Africa, Khumalo spoke of their failure to obtain passports because they never had birth certificates in the first place. Some may not understand the link between Gukurahundi and failure to obtain birth certificates, I will give a background.

In the past, Zimbabweans tended not to obtain birth certificates until when children needed them in school for exams. This meant parents needed ‘witnesses’ to prove that their children were theirs. Falsified years and even registering children who are not yours was and may still be very common. If your parents died before those documents were obtained, it became a problem. Gukurahundi victims have suffered this fate hence Thabitha has been highlighting it.

As for Thokozani, a once vibrant trade unionist, she has been known for mourning the dead like the professional female Nigerian mourners in movies. When the late Mrs Susan Tsvangirai died, Thoko was shown crying louder than Tsvangirai’s children saying she had lost a mother and when Tongai Moyo died, she suddenly said she has lost a partner in fighting cancer. I googled her ‘cancer fighting partnership with Tongai’ and there is no public record of it. Unless they privately fought this cancer scourge, Thoko was not telling the truth about her initiative and she needs to be challenged to say what it is that she did with Tongai.

Politicians must be held accountable for their words whether they are at a funeral or wedding. Argubly, Makokoba constituency in Bulawayo is worse under her than it was under Sithembiso Nyoni who was known for her project development skills. Though unfortunate, her opponents have even lampooned her for ‘losing hair fighting to be Tsvangirai’s deputy’! If she can smell the coffee, she understands how much disappointed people are with her.

The current talk about succession in both Zanu PF and MDC T zeroes around Joice Mujuru, Emmerson Mnangagwa​, and Tendai Biti – nothing is said about John Nkomo, Simon Khaya Moyo or Thoko and Lovemore Moyo, who are all more senior than their Mashonaland counterparts. This gives observers the view that they are permanent deputies, waiting for the next president so that they can serve under them. If they are afraid that they can’t win votes, why don’t they push for the adoption of the South African-Zambian-Botswana style of having their parties’ constitution declare that a deputy becomes the president once the incumbent leave office?

That way, they can safely walk in if a chance arises than to wait there enjoying being deputies. Zanu PF or MDC supporters will definitely vote for whoever leads their party irrespective of their Ndebele or Kalanganess. These deputies are so relaxed and unaspiring!

Welshman Ncube suffered the same mentality until he realised that he can be the president of a party and to date MDC is much better than it was under Arthur O.G. Mutambara although this is yet to be proven on an electoral field.

The deputies from Matabeleland have been a total embarrassment at national level: Thamsanqa Mahlangu allegedly stole Chinotimba’s phone and brought ladies of the night into a hotel room, and Seiso Moyo from Nketa declared that she is ‘honoured’ to be made a deputy minister by Tsvangirai and then disappeared with her new title, never to be seen again. Ironically, those who hold full ministerial positions have performed extremely well: Senator David Coltart has been outstanding as a Minister of Education, Welshman Ncube has revived Zimbabwean industries, not to mention his effort towards curbing massive de-industrialisation of Bulawayo, and Gabuzza Joel Gabuza has done fairly well in the development of the Bubi-Lupane Dam, not forgetting Tabitha Khumalo, the MDC’s star in Matabeleland.

The people of Matabeleland have to act and stop complaining about marginalisation. The power is in our hands, we must vote out these under-performing permanent deputies, irrespective of party affiliations starting with Thokozani Khupe, Thamsanqa Mahlangu and other non-performers. We have done the same with the likes of John Nkomo, Simon Khaya Moyo and we can do it again.

On the other hand, rewarding hard workers irrespective of their political affiliation will send a powerful signal that days of playing games are over. Jonathan Moyo, Welshman Ncube, David Coltart, Thabitha Khumalo, Gabuzza Joel Gabuza, Sithembiso Nyoni, Moses Mzila Ndlovu and other hard workers, are the people who must represent us. They are MDC T/N, Zanu PF and ‘Independents’ yet they can perform. At national level, our leaders must lay aside the deputy mentality and fight their way up by either declaring their candidacy for presidency openly or fighting for a ‘fair representation constitution’ in their parties that guarantees them presidency once the incumbent leaves. Ndebeles are not there to serve Shonas, we can be the leaders of Zimbabwe if we put ourselves into the task.

On another note, my prayers go to Thokozani Khupe as she undergoes cancer treatment in South Africa.

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Mutambara ‘can hallucinate and dream’ he has MPs: MDC-N

Bulawayo 24 News

22 November 2011

State newspaper reports of tension in the MDC factions led by Professors Welshman Ncube and Arthur Mutambara over ownership of parliamentarians who were elected on the party ticket.

The two are already immersed in an acrimonious legal wrangle over control of the party with Prof Ncube seeking to replace Prof Mutambara as the Deputy Prime Minister in the inclusive Government on the strength of his election as party president at a congress held in Harare early this year.

Prof Mutambara, who disputes the congress, said he will be announcing his national executive council this week where names of legislators who are in the Prof Ncube faction’s national executive council and the national council will be included.

The faction’s chairman, Mr Joubert Mudzumwe, said all the MPs who were elected under the MDC ticket during the harmonised elections in 2008 were loyal to Prof Mutambara.

However, Mr Edwin Mushoriwa, who is vice president in Prof Ncube’s faction, dismissed the claims saying the legislators were loyal to Prof Ncube.

Said Mr Mudzumwe: “At the moment three House of Assembly Members out of seven and four senators out of six have confirmed that they are with us. The others are not yet clear of where they are but we suspect they will be coming out in the open very soon.

“Welshman and Priscilla Misihairabwi Mushonga have no people and they just want to protect their ministerial positions.”

Mr Mudzumwe said the nominations for NEC members had already been done and handed over to him to consult with the 38 nominated members.

He said the names would be announced after the NEC meeting to be held sometime this week.
Mr Mushoriwa said it was irregular that the Prof Mutambara faction would come up with an NEC without holding a congress.

“It is common knowledge that there are three parties in Zimbabwe led by President Mugabe (Zanu-PF), Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai (MDC-T) and Professor Welshman Ncube (MDC),” he said.

“They cannot claim to own our MPs because in areas where we have parliamentary seats, our structures are behind our leadership. If they were a party, they should address rallies so that we can see if they have people.

“We know people can hallucinate and dream and they are probably saying they have MPs because of MP Nomalanga Khumalo (Umzingwane) whom we know she has been siding with the MDC-T.”

Mrs Khumalo publicly expressed her allegiance to Prof Mutambara after Prof Ncube’s faction accused her of working with the MDC-T.

In separate interviews last week, some of the MPs from the two factions said they respected the leadership that was elected at the congress held early this year.

The Mutambara faction boycotted the congress except Prof Mutambara.

“There was a congress in January and I follow the decisions of that congress because it has a lawful structure,” said Khumalo Senator, David Coltart.

Tsholotsho Senator Believe Gaule said: “The party had a congress early this year and we respect the congress that chose the leadership that we have.”

Insiza South House of Assembly Member Siyabonga Ncube refused to disclose where his allegiance was.

Bulawayo High Court judge, Justice Lawrence Kamocha last week reserved judgment in the case in which Prof Ncube’s faction is seeking confirmation of a provisional order barring Prof Mutambara from presenting himself as president of MDC.

The applicants sought an amendment barring Prof Mutambara from continuing as a Global Political Agreement principal.

Justice Kamocha deferred the ruling saying he needed time to consider issues raised by both the applicants and the respondents counsel.

Prof Mutambara is opposing the granting of the final order.

The postponement means that the provisional order granted by Bulawayo senior High Court judge Justice Nicholas Ndou on 16 February this year, barring Prof Mutambara from exercising any function vested in the president of MDC, remains in force.

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Mat South wins Jikinya Dance Festival finals

Daily News

By Jeffrey Muvundusi

21 November 2011

Harare - Matjinge primary school from Matabeleland South province are the new 2011 Jikinya Dance Festival champions after they shrugged off the stiff competition from nine other contestants.

The win saw them pocket a whopping $1 500 at a colourful ceremony held at Large City Hall in the “Cultural City” of Bulawayo on Saturday.

The event, organised by the National Arts Council of Zimbabwe (NACZ) in conjunction with National Association of Primary Heads (NAPH) was this year unique in a number of ways.

Of note was the fact that it was the first time in 10 years that the event was held outside the capital.

In previous years each province would showcase an array of its own dances whereas this year there were two slots where all schools performed a set dance called amabhiza as well as a dance of own choice.

This year’s edition which happened to be the festival’s 10th anniversary ran under the theme “Expressing Zimbabwean Culture through Dance”

However, besides getting a hefty package Matjinge school, who also took with them a floating trophy, an award for a best costume as well as a participating prize of $200, seemed to have capitalised on the theme dance “Amabhiza” which is originally from their province.

The group gave a good account of themselves when they strutted out Intshomane dance as own choice dance.

It was a remarkable improvement for the Bulilima district-based school considering that the previous year at the Jikinya finals held in Harare came third position.

Speaking to the Daily News, Matjinge primary school dance coach Luscious Ncube who was on cloud nine attributed his victory to adequate research and proper demonstration to the children on how the traditional dances are carried out.

“It is because of enough research and proper demonstration to the kids how these dances are done. To assist us we also used to invite the elders in our area to further demonstrate and clarify on the originality of these dances,” said Ncube.

He however, advised other schools to stop using local commercial traditional dance group leaders saying “They knew nothing about our real traditional dance as they are only after money.”

Mashonaland Central’s Chifamba primary school who had proved popular from the onset after they showcased their dinhe dance which they did in such a sterling manner that left many concluding that they were already the victors but unfortunately they were pushed to the second position after they failed to convince the adjudicators on the most crucial theme dance.

For their effort the Guruve district based-group walked away $1 000 richer in the process providing the best drummer in the form of Freddy Ferendende.

They also got rewarded for becoming the most harmonious group and a floating trophy.

On third position were Zimburu Primary School of Mashonaland East in Goromonzi district who showcased their amazing skills in mbakumba dance,walking away with a prize money of $500.

Matabeleland North province known for their isitshikitsha dance had their representative Hlabangulo primary school in fourth position to collect $300 accompanied with a floating trophy.

However, most schools had a tough time on the theme dance which traditionally is from Matabeleland  South, a move that might have given the Matjinge pupils an edge over other participants.

According to the adjudicators the own choice dance slot had 40 marks while the theme dance had 60 marks.

Speaking during the event guest of honour, European Union ambassador Aldo Dell’ Ariccia urged the pupils to take dance seriously as it was also a source of livelihood.

“To participants, Zimbabwe’s future cultural icons and custodians, I wish to encourage you to take dance seriously. You need to take pride in your identity, your uniqueness and share with the rest of the world. Moreover, dance can also be a source of livelihood,” Ambassador Ariccia said.

Addressing the same gathering, NACZ director Elvas Mari said his organisation will ensure that the competition reaches to other provinces in the future.

“Staging the Jikinya Dance finals in Bulawayo is only the first step towards ensuring that every Zimbabwean has access to the diversity of our culture. NACZ will ensure that the arts and culture reaches all parts of the country even to the poorest of our people,” Mari said.

The Minister of Education, Sport and Culture David Coltart hailed the organisers and all the Jikinya Dance Festival stakeholders saying the move was a step ahead in preserving Zimbabwe’s culture and heritage adding that his ministry will do whatever in its capacity to safeguard the interest of cultural heritage.

Six other schools who unfortunately fell by the way side in the tightly contested event that was well coordinated and managed by Amakosi Arts Theatre included the host St Patrick’s Primary school, Tafadzwa Primary School (Mashonaland West), Matenda primary school (Midlands), Harare’s Glen View 8 Primary School, Matande primary school (Masvingo) Sakubva Primary School (Manicaland) Traditional partners, Delta Corporation and Culture Fund financially empowered the whole competition while the EU sponsored individual winners’ prizes.

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2011-11-20

  • #Zimbabwe Warriors beat South Africa's Bafana Bafana 2-1 in Harare tonight – well done lads. Zim sport is on the up! #
  • RIP Basil D'Oliveira. Thank you for your courageous struggle for justice through #cricket You exposed the insanity of apartheid in sport #
  • David Pocock wins WA Young Australian of the Year http://t.co/GLBTvNf6 Well done to our Gweru boy. Zimbabwe is proud of you David #

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Senator Coltart apologises to parents for teachers’ incentives

Sunday News

20 November 2011

The Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture, Senator David Coltart has apologised to parents and guardians for compelling them to pay teachers’ incentives.

Addressing a crowd of about 500 at a rally at Nketa Hall in Bulawayo, Senator Coltart said he was “deeply sorry” that parents were being asked to supplement teachers’ salaries due to the Government’s monetary constraints, that have seen it filing to hike salaries to decent levels.

Parents and guardians have since the introduction of the controversial incentives that are prone to abuse been incensed that they are being forced to take the position of employer regardless of the fact that teachers earn little like they do.

“I am sorry that as parents you have to pay incentives. I want to put an end to them but I should do so at a time that is responsible. I cannot do the thing that is popular and abolish incentives only to reverse the gains we have achieved since I became Minister of Education,” said Senator Coltart.

Senator Coltart defended the incentives and said that as much as they erode the spending powers of parents and guardians they were a necessary evil.

He said: “I am determined to restore respect to the teaching fraternity. I don’t want our teachers to do like what happens on roadblocks where we are solicited for bribes. We (Ministry of Education) now have a good relationship with teachers, I have an open door policy and I discuss with them their grievances and other important matters that affect education.

“This year we hardly had any strikes or stay-aways; this is not rocket science but a policy of respecting teachers. I respect teachers and I treat them has human beings with needs like every citizen of Zimbabwe. When I took over, ZIMSEC (Zimbabwe School Examination Council) had developed a habit of delaying the marking and release of the results bug I ended all that. I did not pour in the money that teachers wanted, I just showed them respect.”

Senator Coltart also revealed that he had managed to turn around the education sector by working tirelessly to ensure that students did not share textbooks.

“Eighteen months ago we promised that primary schoolchildren would have a textbook each in all subjects and we delivered on that promise. It was not because we had money but because we set our minds on accomplishing that task. Recently I launched the textbook project for secondary schools. Next, every secondary school student will have textbooks for English, Mathematics, Geography, History, Science and the vernacular language that they do,” he said.

On Wednesday, the senator reiterated his sentiments to Parliament that Government would soon roll out six secondary school textbooks worth over $8 million under his Ministry’s Education Trust Fund.

Senator Coltart said the programme was aimed at ensuring each student has unfettered access to study material and avoid sharing of textbooks.

“The tender was awarded to College Press which will do 42 percent of the textbooks, Longman 34 percent and Zimbabwe Publishing House (ZPH) 24 percent of the textbooks. These will be distributed to a total of 2 345 secondary schools throughout the country and the textbooks are currently in the warehouse and the distribution process will start in a few days, starting with the most remote areas due to the rainy season which might make it difficult to access the places,” said Senator Coltart.

This project comes hard on the heels of the launch of the US$85 million education fund by the Government, the United Nations and other Western donors, which is aimed at improving education in the country’s secondary schools.

The donation will pay for seven million textbooks, and follows a similar project last year in which UNICEF and other agencies donated 13 million to the country’s primary schools.

The programme also will target 200 000 absentee children from the most impoverished and vulnerable communities. On the issue of minority languages, Senator Coltart said he was working on a project to make all minority languages part of the education curriculum.

He said: “Every mother tongue is important as the next thus I want all languages to be examination subjects at Grade 7 and secondary school. We have managed to turn Tonga into an examination subject at primary school and we want to introduce other languages as well. I want the Kalanga language, Venda, Suthu and all other languages to be taught at schools because without vernacular languages we risk losing out identity.”

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Zimbabwe Teachers Union Warns of Escalating Violence Against Teachers

VOA

By Tatenda Gumbo

22 November 2011

Progressive Teachers Union President Takavafira Zhou said the PTUZ is telling schools and administrators facing violence to stop teaching to focus attention on the need for the government to protect them.

The Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe says violence against teachers and school administrators has escalated with alleged war veterans and ZANU-PF-aligned politicians attempting to take control of institutions around the country.

The PTUZ said the headmaster of Donsa Dam Primary Cchool in Kwekwe, Midlands province, narrowly escaped injury from a gasoline bomb thrown into his house after alleged war veterans had demanded his resignation.

The veterans were said to have told the headmaster to surrender the keys to the school accusing him of being aligned to the former opposition Movement for Democratic Change, which has shared power with ZANU-Pf since 2009.

PTUZ officials said the headmaster, awake at the time, bolted through a window and received minor burns. He sought refuge at a nearby secondary school.

In Gutu district, a ZANU-PF Ward 15 Chairman named Mododo was said to have written letters to eight schools instructing headmasters to make teachers attend ZANU-PF rallies.

The Ministry of Education has banned political and military rallies on school grounds, as Minister David Coltart says this undermines teaching and learning.

But the union charged that these recent incidents by politicians and war veterans aligned to ZANU-PF have become a threat to all teachers in the country.

Progressive Teachers Union President Takavafira Zhou said the PTUZ is telling schools and administrators facing violence to stop teaching as a way to focus attention on the need for the government to protect them.

Zhou said teachers must make a stand against violence since police failed to apply the law and the Education Ministry has failed teachers.

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No more sharing of textbooks in schools — Coltart

NewsDay

By Veneranda Langa

17 November 2011

Education, Sport, Arts and Culture minister David Coltart on Wednesday told Parliament government would soon roll out 6 711 462 secondary school textbooks worth $8 322 505 under its Educational Trust Fund.

Coltart said the programme was aimed at ensuring each student had unfettered access to study material and avoid sharing of textbooks.

“The tender was awarded to College Press which will do 42% of the textbooks, Longman 34% and Zimbabwe Publishing House (ZPH) 24% of the textbooks,” said Coltart.

“These will be distributed to a total of 2 345 secondary schools throughout the country and the textbooks are currently in the warehouse and the distribution process will start in a few days, starting with the most remote areas due to the rainy season which might make it difficult to access the places.”

Recently, primary schools got textbooks published by Longmans, courtesy of Unicef. While MPs from the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Education, Sport, Arts and Culture said the textbooks compromised the quality of education, Coltart argued the education system in Zimbabwe had been in dire straits and the books had gone a long way in alleviating the desperate situation.

Chitungwiza North MP Fidelis Mhashu alleged the primary school textbooks by Longmans, particularly Mathematics and Shona (Pindukai) were mediocre or sub-standard.

“These are some of the worst books in the country, but they are already in circulation,” said Mhashu.

Magwegwe MP Felix Magalela Sibanda alleged the committee had been ignored in making decisions on the procurement of textbooks and said this might compromise on quality.

However, Coltart said each textbook had been approved by the Curriculum Development Unit which fell under his ministry.

“Is it a greater mistake to provide children with Longmans textbooks or not have textbooks at all?” queried Coltart.

“The prices by other publishers were so high that one textbook was $5. Due to Longmans textbooks, Grade 7 results have picked up and I think it is directly related to the provision of these textbooks,” he said.

Coltart said Zimbabwe now had a pupil-book ration of 1:1, a remarkable achievement compared to the Sadc region’s ratio of 1:4.

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Too soon to rewrite history

The Zimbabwean

By Paul Ndlovu

15 November 2011

Changing the country’s history curriculum is not going to happen soon as there are many factors involved in the process, the Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture, Senator David Coltart, has said.

The statement comes amid criticism from Mafela Trust, a non-governmental organisation, that the recorded history of Zimbabwe is fragmented and incoherent.

“I have received many complaints that the history curriculum is biased and does not accurately record ZAPU and ZIPRA’S role in the liberation struggle. In the short term it is not easy to change the curriculum as textbooks need to be rewritten, and in the interim students need to pass history examinations to get their O and A levels,” said Coltart.

The call for a review of the curriculum is not new. Efforts have been made to change it since independence, with little effect or success.

“The ministry has committed itself to a comprehensive review of the entire curriculum, including history, and in terms of that process it will be necessary to draw in objective and professional academics to review and recommend changes to the History curriculum,” said Coltart.

The Secretary for Education in Zanu (PF), Sikhanyiso Ndlovu, said the change was long overdue, but the onus was on the writers to make a change.

“The change is long overdue. We should have done it ages ago, but the challenge is that the writers’ haven’t had enough time to sit and write the books with the new information,” said Ndlovu.

Dr Ndlovu agreed with Coltart that change was not going to happen overnight. He urged fellow revolutionaries to put pen to paper with information they have which will assist writers with the real facts of what happened in the past.

Historian and writer, Pathisa Nyathi, said that it was unfortunate that the ETF, which has been assisting primary schools with millions of books, recently launched phase two and did not manage to take into account the distortions.

Zephania Nkomo, the National Coordinator for Mafela Trust, said the exclusion of some of the events that ZPRA took part in was deliberate.

“The chronicles of ZAPU and its military wing ZPRA that have been distorted for selfish purposes will not find lasting space in the world of today,” said Nkomo. “The history school curriculum development is a matter that is overdue.”

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Teaching incentives divisive: ZTA

The Zimbabwewan

By Paul Ndlovu

15 November 2011

Incentives are causing divisions in the teaching fraternity and could likely lead to the demise of the high quality education standards in the country, an official has said.

Zimbabwe Teachers Association president, who is also chairperson of the civil servants representative body, the Apex council, Tendai Chikowore, said although incentives were key to remunerating teachers, in the long term there was a need to effectively abolish them.

She said it was unfair to the teachers in the rural areas who were not getting these incentives as the parents could not afford them, leaving them to rely on the paltry pay they got from the government.

“There is the issue of the rural teachers who are not getting these incentives because parents in the rural areas cannot afford them, this is highly unfair and is causing divisions among the teachers because the rural teachers are now feeling let down. It is also spilling over to the urban areas were teachers from the western areas are complaining that they are no longer at the same level as teachers in affluent schools,” said Chikowore.

She said the issue had been brought up in a number of their meetings and they had resolved to work closely with the Ministries of Finance and Education, Sports, Arts and Culture to come up with a lasting solution to this whole issue.

“We have held numerous meetings with Minister Tendai Biti, lobbying him to come up with salary levels that will effectively get rid of incentives. We are also lobbying for the introduction of an education levy that will not only see money being channelled to the teachers salaries, but also will see a significant improvement in infrastructure,” she said.

Chikowore said they were lobbying for the reintroduction of the rural allowance that would see more teachers being attracted to teaching in the rural areas.

The issue of incentives has in the past couple of months been a serious bone of contention with the Minister of Education, Sports, Arts and Culture, Senator David Coltart calling them a necessary ill.

“It’s about management and commitment to institutions and safeguarding the future of the children. What affects the government, affects the parents. Right now the government can’t afford to pay teachers a reasonable salary that is when the parents have to come in and help,” said Senator Coltart.

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Coltart investigates rot at Plumtree High

NewsDay

By Silas Nkala

15 November 2011

Government has said it will soon dispatch a probe team to investigate allegations of corruption and maladministration at Plumtree High School following reports the school had accumulated debts of over $75 000 to the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority (Zesa) and the Zimbabwe National Water Authority (Zinwa).

Parents recently clashed with Plumtree High School authorities over suspected mismanagement of funds, leading to the huge debts.

Irate parents last month allegedly confronted the headmaster Prince Mange and School Development Association chairperson Elson Shava after Zinwa cut off water supplies to the school over a $15 000 debt.

Mange and Shava declined to comment over the allegations, saying they were not at liberty to talk to the press. They referred NewsDay to the ministry for all details.

Acting provincial deputy director for secondary schools Francis Changwesha confirmed the ministry received the complaints from concerned parents.

“I confirm there was such a complaint from parents concerning the school. The person who sent the complaint was initially dealing with Minister David Coltart. The issue is being investigated and a team of investigators will be sent to the school,” said Changwesha.

“Water was disconnected for seven months over the debt. We engaged the Minister Coltart who intervened leading to the reconnection of water,” said an irate parent.

“We nearly beat up the SDC chairman over the issue and on October 8 we wanted to beat the headmaster over the crisis,” she said.

Coltart on Friday confirmed receiving the complaints from some parents.

“I have asked the provincial education director for Matabeleland South, Tumisang Thabela, to investigate the matter and am still awaiting her report. I have asked that the matter be dealt with urgently,” said Coltart.

The school has an enrolment of about 350 pupils who pay a levy of $485 and $160 tuition fees each.

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