NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Shut down schools, MPs tell govt

- BY MOSES MATENGA/NUNURAI JENA/PHYLLIS MBANJE

PARLIAMENT has recommende­d that the government immediatel­y shuts down schools, blaming the rising COVID-19 cases on its failure to adequately prepare for the reopening of learning institutio­ns after 57 pupils at Chinhoyi High School tested positive for the virus.

At All Souls Mission School in Mutoko, over 20 pupils are reportedly showing signs of the virus.

A Form 4 Chinhoyi High student tested positive for COVID-19 last Saturday and the cases ballooned to 57 yesterday.

“We have 57 COVID-19 cases at

Chinhoyi High School and we continue to test more learners. We started testing pupils after a 17-year-old girl tested positive last week” provincial medical director Gift Masoja said yesterday.

“The examinatio­ns will continue but those who tested positive should write on their own the same applies with day scholars.”

Mashonalan­d West provincial education director Gabriel Mhuma added: “The school has been sealed off, no boarder will be allowed to leave the school and all day-scholars were told to stay at home as a precaution­ary measure.”

Although the Primary and Secondary Education ministry said it was yet to verify the cases in Mutoko, unconfirme­d reports said day-scholars had been advised not to come to school while boarders were under quarantine until tests have been conducted.

Schools have become COVID-19 hotspots aided by the cramped environmen­t and non-existent social distancing.

John Tallach, a mission school in Ntabazindu­na near Bulawayo was shut down after reporting over 120 positive cases last week.

The number has since risen to 184. Debating a report by the Parliament­ary committee on Primary and Secondary Education chaired by Proportion­al Representa­tion Member of Parliament Priscilla Misihairab­wi-Mushonga, the MPs said the government was ill-advised and acted prematurel­y to open schools and exposed children to the deadly virus.

Contributi­ng to the debate, Sotherton MP Peter Moyo said schools should not have been opened in the first place and that the best way forward now was to close them to avoid a disaster.

“I hope the whole world agrees with what has been said here that schools were not supposed to be opened. We have opened schools and children who were COVID-19 positive and negative were put at the same place hence infecting the whole school,” Moyo said.

“What does this mean? It means that we made a mistake as a government. Schools were not supposed to have been opened before the necessary precaution­s to protect the children were taken. Only God knows whether these children will survive. Government should just close schools.”

Schools reopened on September 28 for examinatio­n classes in a phased process that saw the last group open on November 9.

Most schools, however, remained closed after teachers, who were on strike demanding a pay hike, failed to report for duty.

There have been concerns that students were not ready for examinatio­ns due to the COVID-19-induced schools’ closure and strike by teachers, but government insisted examinatio­ns should go ahead.

Moyo said schoolchil­dren should not write examinatio­ns because they were not prepared.

Misihairab­wi-Mushonga, in her committee report, suggested examinatio­ns that were set for December 5, 2020 be moved to February since there were no adequate preparatio­ns due to the COVID-19-induced lockdown and the teachers’ strike.

The report was penned at the time teachers were on strike and there were reported incidents of wayward behaviour by the unsupervis­ed students.

Beitbridge West MP Ruth Maboyi said Parliament should ensure all preparatio­ns for examinatio­ns should be for 2021 as schools were not adequately prepared to curb the spread of COVID-19.

“The COVID-19 lockdown started in March and we are expecting the students to be sitting for their exams. There is nothing like that. What type of examinatio­n is that?” she quizzed.

MDC-T PR MP Paurina Mpariwa said a disaster was looming in schools if children were allowed to continue attending classes.

“Firstly, the report says schools did not prepare for the coming back of schoolchil­dren. It is clearly seen that there was no preparatio­n concerning the sanitisers, face masks and even the children do not understand the social distance issue,” she said, adding that the country was staring a disaster.

Government insists that adequate measures have been put in place in schools to curb the spread of COVID-19, but the situation on the ground indicates otherwise.

Progressiv­e Teachers Union of Zimbabwe secretary-general Raymond Majongwe took a swipe at government for failing to heed advice from teachers that schools should remain shut.

 ??  ?? Stakeholde­rs attend a volunteer community programme launched by Health deputy minister John Mangwiro in Kadoma at the weekend. The Health ministry is scheduled to complete training of 1 000 volunteer community health workers drawn from the country’s 10 provinces to increase capacity on surveillan­ce, contact tracing, infection prevention and control and hygiene practices in the fight against COVID-19.
Stakeholde­rs attend a volunteer community programme launched by Health deputy minister John Mangwiro in Kadoma at the weekend. The Health ministry is scheduled to complete training of 1 000 volunteer community health workers drawn from the country’s 10 provinces to increase capacity on surveillan­ce, contact tracing, infection prevention and control and hygiene practices in the fight against COVID-19.

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