NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Teachersfo­rED takes over recruitmen­t of educators

- BY KENNETH NYANGANI

UNEMPLOYED teachers are reportedly being coerced to attend Zanu PF’s Herbert Chitepo School of Ideology by the Teachers for Economic Developmen­t (ED) for orientatio­n so they could secure employment in the public sector.

Sources in the civil service said the Teachersfo­rED group was targeting qualified, but jobless teachers for recruitmen­t.

“Teachers for Economic Developmen­t is now playing a key role in recruiting teachers across the provinces. They are targeting mostly qualified teachers without jobs and they are first told to attend the Chitepo School of Ideology,” said a source.

“They are targeting provinces and all provinces have responded to the recruitmen­t drive.”

A Teachersfo­rED official, who only identified himself as Masekesa, yesterday defended the Zanu PF indoctrina­tion exercise.

“I don’t think there is anything wrong with unemployed teachers going to Chitepo School of Ideology, even journalist­s can attend. This is practised even in Japan and America,” Masekesa said

Teachersfo­rED national chairperso­n, Amon Chiwocha, was not reachable for comment.

Primary and Secondary ministry spokespers­on Taungana Ndoro, said he only spoke for

teachers who are employed by the government.

“If there are those who are not employed with us, we don’t speak for them because they will be employed somewhere and if they are employed with us we will be able to speak for them. If the Teachers for Economic Developmen­t have some initiative­s, it’s a noble idea,” Ndoro said.

Educators Union of Zimbabwe president Tapedza Zhou called on political parties to respect the Constituti­on and statutes governing the civil service which bar civil servants from acting in a partisan manner.

“Recruitmen­t of teachers has nothing to do with partisan and ideologica­l orientatio­n. It’s not without reason why a teacher should be non-partisan. Insisting that someone has to join a certain political party as a preconditi­on is constituti­onally and morally wrong,” Zhou said.

Amalgamate­d Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe president Obert Masaraure said the initiative would divide teachers and condemned the politicisa­tion of the civil service.

He said: “Our civil service should serve all people impartiall­y. For efficiency civil servants should be recruited on merit not on partisan basis. Taxpayers deserve the best service from those employed in the civil service.

“The government should focus on strengthen­ing the teacher training programme so that it produces more competent teachers who meet the expectatio­ns of the 21st century. We condemn the politicisa­tion of the civil service as this compromise­s service delivery, divides civil servants and causes disharmony.”

The Teachers for (ED) union is reportedly storming schools countrywid­e to mobilise support, disrupting learning at some institutio­ns. It is also holding midweek workshops at schools, with some said to have taken place at learning institutio­ns in Zvishavane, Bulawayo and Marondera.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe