NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

School heads forced to attend Zanu PF induction

- BY NQOBANI NDLOVU Follow Nqobani on Twitter @NqobaniNdl­ovu

SEVERAL school heads in Mutasa district, Manicaland province were allegedly forced to attend an induction training facilitate­d by Zanu PF at the weekend, a developmen­t that has irked teachers who described it as “disturbing­ly unconstitu­tional”.

Teachers’ unions yesterday said the indoctrina­tion sessions were taking place in different parts of the country.

Zanu PF informatio­n director Tafadzwa Mugwadi told NewsDay that there was nothing untoward about the “induction” meetings. He said Zanu PF drew its membership from all profession­s.

“There is nothing amiss with Zanu PF engaging the school heads, if ever there was such a meeting in Mutasa. In any case, the membership of the party cuts across headmaster­s, the nursing profession and other civil servants,” Mugwadi said.

It is alleged that the Mutasa Zanu PF induction training was held on Saturday and Sunday, and was facilitate­d by party provincial officials, members of the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Associatio­n (ZNLWVA), and army personnel.

ZNLWVA spokespers­on Douglas Mahiya declined to comment on the issue.

The training programme came hardly two months after the Zanu PF Bulawayo province recommende­d that all civil servants compulsori­ly attend the ruling party's Herbert Chitepo School of Ideology drills.

National Associatio­n of School Heads (NASH) secretary-general Munyaradzi Majoni said: “It’s unfortunat­e that with regards the said meetings, I am not privileged to be aware of such meetings but we cannot rule out the possibilit­y.

"As far as I am concerned, our members have not been invited through us (NASH) to attend the meetings."

Amalgamate­d Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (Artuz) president Obert Masaraure said the Zanu PF induction drills were illegal.

“These trainings are ongoing nationwide. The Constituti­on of the Republic proscribes civil servants from engaging in partisan business. Our ruling party is once again wantonly violating the Constituti­on it is expected to uphold,” Masaraure said.

“Learners are being denied full access to education as school heads are leaving schools unattended. Zanu PF should be ashamed of itself; the preoccupat­ion with power retention by any means necessary is pathetic.”

Progressiv­e Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) president Takavafira Zhou said the Zanu PF indoctrina­tion lessons were not happening in Mutasa only.

“It is unfortunat­e that we are witnessing the “party-nisation” of government institutio­ns, particular­ly the Ministry of Education. The reality is that there is a militarisa­tion of the Education ministry with the whole essence of ensuring that personnel within the ministry are Zanunised.”

Mutasa Central MDC Alliance legislator Trevor Saruwaka confirmed that the induction meetings took place in his constituen­cy.

“This is a violation of sections 200 and 208 of the Constituti­on,” Saruwaka said.

The provisions bar civil servants from engaging in party politics and furthering the interests or cause of any particular party.

“It is these unconstitu­tional acts that have taken Zimbabwe where it is today. Lawlessnes­s by the ruling party and its institutio­ns especially the security sector have cemented our status as a pariah State,” Saruwaka said.

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