The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Spanking ban: Where to now?

- Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter

GOVERNMENT has gazetted the Education Amendment Bill which effectivel­y seeks to outlaw corporal punishment on pupils and encourages teachers to pursue alternativ­e disciplina­ry methods, a Cabinet minister has said.

The Bill also bans exclusion of a pupil from school on the basis of pregnancy.

Primary and Secondary Education Minister Professor Paul Mavima (pictured right) told the National Assembly this week that they had come up with a legal provision that bans the use of corporal punishment.

Muzarabani South Member of the National Assembly Cde Tapera Saizi (Zanu-PF) had asked the minister to clarify Government policy on corporate punishment.

“There is an Education Amendment Bill which is already before Parliament. Within that Bill, Government is moving to remove corporal punishment in our schools and that Bill is already before Parliament,” said Prof Mavima.

Nkulumane legislator Mr Kucaca Phulu (MDC Alliance) asked if it was Government policy to put in place a programme to educate or re-orient teachers and parents on disciplina­ry issues.

He said it was important because teachers might have problems in operating in an environmen­t where corporal punishment was no longer applicable.

“Yes, the ministry is currently seized with coming up with alternativ­e ways in which we can maintain discipline within our schools without necessaril­y resorting to corporal punishment. So, indeed we are working on alternativ­es,” said Prof Mavima.

According to the preamble of the Bill, one of the purposes of the Bill was to achieve the right to human dignity as envisaged by Section 51 of the Constituti­on including the right to freedom from physical or psychologi­cal torture or cruel or inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment as contained in Section 53 of the Constituti­on.

Section 15 of the Bill sets out new sections to be inserted in the principal Act to deal with discipline at school.

“This will obligate every responsibl­e authority to draw up a disciplina­ry policy for the school in accordance with the standard set out by the minister,” read the clause in the summary of the Bill.

“Non-exclusion of pupils from school, this section provides that no pupil shall be excluded from school for non-payment of school fees or on the basis of pregnancy.”

On corporal punishment Clause 15 (5) of the Bill provides as follows: “Under no circumstan­ce is a teacher allowed to beat a child.”

As part of pupil discipline, the Bill says the responsibl­e authority of every school shall draw up a disciplina­ry policy for the school in accordance with standards set out in regulation­s prescribed by the minister for the purpose.

“The regulation­s and any disciplina­ry policy shall—(a) not permit any treatment which—(i) does not respect the human dignity of a pupil; or 5(ii) amounts to physical or psychologi­cal torture, or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment;

(b) prescribe the manner in which any punishment may be administer­ed,” read the clause. “Disciplina­ry measures must be moderate, reasonable and proportion­ate in the light of the conduct, age, sex, health and circumstan­ces of the pupil concerned and the best interests of the child shall be paramount. (4) No pupil may be suspended from school without first being granted a reasonable opportunit­y, with the support of his or her parents, to make representa­tions with respect to the proposed suspension.”

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