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Renowned
university slips into decay
Institute
for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Ezekiel Ngoni (AR No. 115, 6-June-07)
June 06,
2007
http://iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=336106&apc_state=henh
Once one of the best
educational institutions in Africa, Zimbabwe's top university
is following the downward course once taken by its Ugandan counterpart.
In the Sixties and Seventies,
the University of Makerere in Uganda was regarded as the premier
African university, and the intellectual elite used to boast that
if you hadn't attended Makerere, you hadn't really gone
to university at all.
But under the brutal
rule of President Idi Amin, the institution was reduced to a pale
shadow of itself.
Sadly, the same
has now happened to the University
of Zimbabwe, the oldest in the country, originally established
as a college in the Fifties. At independence in 1980, it was the
country's only university.
A recent tour of the
university campus revealed an institution in an advanced state of
decay.
The campus grounds resemble
an abandoned industrial site, with dried yellow grass rising knee-high
around the halls of residence. A janitor at Manfred Hodson Hall
said there was no one to cut the grass. Piles of rubbish go uncollected
for days on end, posing a serious health hazard.
The window panes in the
main dining hall in the oldest student residential complex, Manfred
Hudson Hall, were shattered in recent student unrest over poor food,
and are unlikely to be replaced any time soon.
Students share overcrowded
rooms because there are simply too many of them on campus. In the
five residential complexes, facilities originally designed as television
rooms have been converted into dormitories shared by up to 14 students,
some of whom sleep on the floor.
Most of the toilet facilities
do not work or are blocked off with iron bars.
The decline of the university
has been slow and long. Some date the decline to an amendment to
the 1982 University Act which the authorities pushed through in
1990, removing much of the institution's autonomy by allowing
government to appoint non-academic staff onto the university council.
Objections from teaching
staff were simply overridden, and many left as a result. It was
during this period that Professor Walter Kamba, the university's
first black vice-chancellor, made his now famous complaint that
there were "too many unprofessional fingers" interfering
in academic affairs.
Interviewed by the Standard
newspaper in 2003, Professor Kamba - who died last month -
commented on the institution's collapsing infrastructure due
to lack of funding.
He said the government
was building too many universities without proper planning, and
warned that this would reduce the quality of higher education.
"If I were to do
anything," he said, "I would set up a commission to
look into the higher education system with a view to establishing
what we need, that we can afford, which will provide us with quality
education. Poor quality education can be very destructive."
Starting with the establishment
of the National University of Science and Technology in Bulawayo
in 1994, the government has gone on a university-building spree.
There are now seven state universities across the country, all at
various stages of construction, and their students are scattered
across different locations in the Zimbabwe's major cities
and towns.
Most lack adequate facilities
on campus, while teaching staff are often under-qualified or completely
uninterested in their work. Many have resigned because of the poor
salaries on offer.
The University of Zimbabwe
itself has experienced phenomenal expansion since independence,
with a student population that has has ballooned from just over
2,200 in 1980 to the current 11,700.
Here, too, the growth
in student numbers has been accompanied by a decline in teaching
staff, often as they leave for better jobs abroad.
Professor Levi Nyagura,
the current vice-chancellor - President Robert Mugabe is the
chancellor of all state universities - recently told the parliamentary
committee on education that the university was badly understaffed.
Instead of the 1,200 lecturers needed to run course, the institution
had just 627, he said. The faculty of medicine had 124 lecturers
rather than the 296 it needed, and the anatomy department had one
lecturer instead of 25.
Nyagura's diagnosis
was grim, "We are now faced with a situation whereby some
departments are nearly non-functional. I do not want to use the
word that they have closed."
Such staffing levels,
he said, pose "a major threat to the degree programmes we
offer".
Students complain that
they have not had lectures since the current semester began two
months ago because teaching staff have been on strike, demanding
better pay and improved conditions of service.
A recent university council
law, Ordinance 30, outlaws demonstrations by students, and they
are afraid even to speak to the media for fear of expulsion.
Students hang around
the campus doing virtually nothing. The young men often go into
town to guard cars - a job traditionally done by street children.
Some female students have been forced into prostitution, or are
in long-term relationships with married men who feed, dress and
fund them in return for sex.
Ezekiel Ngoni is an IWPR
contributor in Harare.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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