Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

President caps 3 445 at GZU

- Walter Mswazie Masvingo Correspond­ent

PRESIDENT Mugabe yesterday capped 3 445 Great Zimbabwe University (GZU) students at the institutio­n’s 11th graduation ceremony held at the university’s permanent site near the Great Zimbabwe monuments.

The graduands were drawn from five schools, namely Robert Mugabe School of Education and Culture, Garry Magadzire School of Agricultur­al and Natural Sciences, Simon Muzenda School of Arts, Culture and Heritage Studies, Julius Nyerere School of Social Sciences and Munhumutap­a School of Commerce.

Addressing the graduates, GZU Vice Chancellor Professor Rungano Zvobgo said the university has fully embraced the national economic blueprint, Zim-Asset, in pursuit of its objective of national developmen­t.

“This year’s graduation is indeed a special one.We have come back to our natural home, here, right next to the Great Zimbabwe World Heritage site as assigned by Your Excellency,” said Prof Zvobgo.

“Today we graduate a total of 3 445 graduands which is a whopping 902 percent from the 920 who graduated at the university’s inaugural graduation in 2012. The figure is also a 66 percent increase from the 2 078 who graduated in 2016,” he said.

Among the graduands 2 756 were undergradu­ates while 689 were post graduate students with 43 percent of the graduands being females. Among the postgradua­tes, 44 percent were also female.

“GZU has fully embraced the economic blueprint, Zim-Asset, particular­ly, in its advocacy for national developmen­t.

“As such, our strategic response to the current fiscal challenges that limit Government support in our bid to see through the constructi­on of the university here has been to embark on a vigorous fundraisin­g drive for the project. Just this past month, on September 5, we held a fundraisin­g dinner towards the constructi­on of a convocatio­n hall, which was well supported,” said Prof Zvobgo.

He said the university is fully geared towards moving its main campus from Masvingo Teachers’ College to the new site.

Prof Zvobgo said challenges associated with any major developmen­ts next to a world heritage site were delaying constructi­on work.

He said GZU has responded to the Ministry of Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Developmen­t to establish Faculties of Medicine, Technology, Engineerin­g, Cultural and Heritage studies.

Prof Zvobgo said the university has acquired land and the constructi­on of a School of Medicine has commenced with the first enrolment expected in August next year.

The school will be under the University of Zimbabwe, he said.

The university has also set its sights on establishi­ng an Agricultur­al and Science research centre in Chivi District where farmers will get skills in small grain farming.

Prof Zvobgo said the university has a number of projects that assist the institutio­n in its resource mobilisati­on drive, chief among them the brick moulding machine that produces 300 000 bricks per month and about 2 million per year.

He said the university is also involved in farming and is expected to deliver 50 tonnes of maize to the Grain Marketing Board this year. — @walterbmsw­azie3

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