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ZIMSEC Exams Under Threat As Teachers Agitate For A Full-blown Strike

2 years agoFri, 22 Oct 2021 04:51:09 GMT
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ZIMSEC Exams Under Threat As Teachers Agitate For A Full-blown Strike

The Zimbabwe School Examinations Council (ZIMSEC) 2021 examinations are under threat after several teacher unions revealed that their members are agitating for a full-blown strike over poor working conditions.

Teachers are reportedly currently earning the equivalent of between US$115 and US$130, which was way below the US$520 they are demanding from their employer.

Union leaders who spoke to NewsDay on Wednesday said that they would convene meetings to deliberate on the impending strike.

Amalgamated Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (ARTUZ) president Obert Masaraure warned that if their salaries are not reviewed as a matter of urgency, this year’s public examinations will be aborted. He said:

Teachers are calling for a school shutdown. We are holding salaries indabas beginning tomorrow (Thursday) to map the way forward.

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A union position will be announced at the conclusion of the consultation process. We warned that if salaries are not reviewed by October, examinations will be aborted.

The failure by the government to resolve the salary crisis has collapsed the education sector.

Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) secretary-general Raymond Majongwe said their members were agitating for job action. He said:

Teachers are very agitated and bitter. The life of a teacher is now very miserable. Teachers can’t make ends meet.

These past two years have seen teachers going through the worst experience since independence.

Zimbabwe National Teachers Union (ZNTU) chief executive officer Manuel Nyawo said:

As representatives of the teachers, we do not act on our own, but we speak with the voice of our members. We do not command them.

Of late, we had seen a divided reaction among teachers on calling for better wages, but this time around, they are speaking with a very loud voice.

They are tired. They can’t cope up with the economic crisis anymore. Prices are going up, but salaries are stagnant.

ZUPCO has hiked fares and prices for several commodities are skyrocketing, but the government has not yet reviewed its workers’ salaries, neither has it announced a plan to ensure that its workers are well catered for.

Meanwhile, Primary and Secondary Education ministry spokesperson Taungana Ndoro said there were ongoing consultations to address teachers’ grievances. Said Ndoro:

The attendance of teachers is well above average in schools nationwide for both non-examination and examination classes. We are looking at around 95% of teachers reporting for duty.

The only plausible reasons for less than 100% attendance range from transport challenges to calls for incapacitation instigated by some teachers’ unions that are being heeded by 2,5% of the almost 150 000 teachers across the country.

There is nothing overwhelming about calls for job action that would be heeded by about 3 000 members.

ZIMSEC examinations were scheduled to start on 22 November for “O” Level candidates, while the “A” Level and Grade 7 examinations will commence on 29 November.

More: NewsDay

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