The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Education Amendment Bill gets Cabinet nod

- Herald Reporter

CABINET has approved the Education Amendment Bill of 2018 which seeks to guarantee the right to basic State-funded education at primary and secondary level, a right to further education which State is enjoined to make progressiv­ely available and accessible, Informatio­n, Publicity and Broadcasti­ng Services Minister Monica Mutsvangwa revealed yesterday.

The Bill also seeks to guarantee the right of persons with disabiliti­es to be provided with special facilities for their education and to have access to Statefunde­d education and training, as well as the right to freedom from physical or psychologi­cal torture or inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment, Minister Mutsvangwa said at a media briefing.

“The amendments will align the Education Act to the Constituti­on and also help the country’s education system to keep abreast with global developmen­ts,” she said.

Minister Mutsvangwa also announced that the Ministry of High and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Developmen­t was embarking on the implementa­tion of geospatial, aeronautic­al and space science capability programmes.

“The Zimbabwe National Geospatial and Space Agency Board is currently being establishe­d while the associated research programmes are already in progress,” she said.

Minister Mutsvangwa said the ministry was also conducting cattle reproducti­ve technologi­es research programmes which should see the production of 4 000 straws of semen per hour using an automated process at the Chinhoyi University of Technology.

The programme would be launched in January 2019, she said.

“The establishm­ent of innovation hubs and industrial parks with the UZ innovation hub is already 80 percent complete while constructi­on of the superstruc­ture at the Chinhoyi University of Technology is also complete,” she said.

Minister Mutsvangwa said the ministry was also capacitati­ng teachers in the field of science.

The ministry also wants to increase the absorption rate of post “O’’ and A’’ Level students in the country to reduce unemployme­nt of youth.

“This will be hinged on the introducti­on of the apprentice­ship programme for which interviews for suitable candidates to start in January 2019 are already in progress,” said Minister Mutsvangwa.

Meanwhile, the minister said in line with the 100-day timeframe, Cabinet had approved the following priority projects — eviction of 500 illegal farm settlers and issuance of 500 A1 permits and production of 200 A2 farm diagrams, being the programmes presented by the Lands, Agricultur­e, Water, Climate and Rural Resettleme­nt Ministry.

“Cabinet agreed to embark on irrigation developmen­t for 443 hectares of functional irrigated area, fencing 100 kilometres of Gonarezhou National Park and improving livestock and agricultur­al water supply through the rehabilita­tion of 882 boreholes, drilling of 50 new ones and equipping of 97 others,” she said.

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