NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Residents protest teachers’ withdrawal

- BY MIRIAM MANGWAYA ● Follow Miriam on Twitter @ FloMangway­a

RESIDENTS of Southlea Park in Harare yesterday stormed a local community school in protest over government’s threat to withdraw teachers from the institutio­n after landowners secretly registered the school under private ownership.

The residents claimed they built Southlea Park Primary School using their own funds, hence it could not be registered as a private entity.

They accused former Odar Housing Developmen­t Consortium (OHDC) administra­tors of registerin­g the school as a private institutio­n without their knowledge, which prompted government to transfer the 40 teachers.

When NewsDay visited the school, more than 300 parents were at the school gate, singing and chanting slogans accusing the former OHDC administra­tion chaired by Benny Matenga of fraudulent­ly registerin­g the school under private ownership.

The parents ordered their children to go back home saying they would resume schooling after the ownership wrangle has been resolved.

Acting head Memory Chivhima said she was not authorised to speak to the media.

But a teacher who spoke on condition of anonymity confirmed that they had been ordered by government to transfer from the school as the institutio­n was now under private ownership.

“We were in the midst of conducting lessons when parents stormed into the school premises and ordered their children to go back home,” the teacher said.

“They were demanding to know why the teachers had been ordered to transfer. We received a directive from the district schools inspector since the school is now a private entity. We are yet to be advised the new schools we will be assigned to.”

Highglen district schools inspector Joseph Kabasa refused to comment on the matter and referred question to ministry spokespers­on Taungana Ndoro.

Ndoro said: “If the parents do not have supporting documents that they are the rightful owners of the school such as a registrati­on certificat­e, they cannot control it.”

“Those who registered the school are the responsibl­e authority and the ministry cannot resolve that dispute. If there is a case, aggrieved parties can take the legal route.”

Matenga confirmed to NewsDay that the school had been registered as a private institutio­n because the land was owned by the consortium.

“The land was initially State land until 2017 when the consortium acquired the deeds for private ownership of the land. Even if the school is registered as a private ownership, the residents still own the school,” he said.

Parents, who spoke to NewsDay, called on government to stop a few individual­s from assuming ownership of the school as it disadvanta­ged pupils.

“We are against private ownership of the school. We want it to remain a public entity under government regulation,”

Esther Musukuma, a member of Southlea Park Residents Associatio­n, said.

“We are demanding answers from government on why they would allow some few selfish community members to change the school into a private property.”

Southlea Park is the only primary school in the residentia­l area. It has an enrolment of over 2 000 pupils.

 ??  ?? Parents protest against the withdrawal of teachers at Southlea Park Primary School in Harare yesterday
Pic: Shepherd Tozvireva
Parents protest against the withdrawal of teachers at Southlea Park Primary School in Harare yesterday Pic: Shepherd Tozvireva

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