Jan Raath in Harare
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The class of 2008 will not receive an education. Since the school year began in January, Zimbabwe's 4.5 million pupils have had a total of 23 days uninterrupted in the classroom, teaching unions say - a sorry state for a country that once had the highest standard of education in Africa.
President Mugabe became an African hero of rare distinction when he carried out a big expansion of the education system in the early years of his rule. As with most of the country's infrastructure, that system is now in the process of total collapse.
In the mid-1990s there was a national O-level pass rate of 72 per cent. Last year it crashed to 11 per cent. Many schools recorded zero passes.
To avoid the humiliation of total failure in 2008 the Government has cancelled the academic year. “It would be criminal if the Government allows examinations to go ahead,” Raymond Majongwe, the secretary-general of the Progressive Teachers' Union of Zimbabwe, said.
In January teachers went on a prolonged strike over their salaries. In April, Mr Mugabe's Zanu (PF) party accused them of supporting the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) during the March elections and blamed them for the President's first-round defeat.
Six teachers were murdered and thousands assaulted by Zanu (PF) militia in the violence that marred the second-round presidential election on June 27.
Schools were looted and turned into torture centres. Teachers disappeared. Many are still unable to return for fear of being disciplined.
Now the coup de grace to the education system is being delivered by hyperinflation. Teachers had their salaries doubled last week to the equivalent of £5.70 a month — barely enough for bus fares and bread for four days.
The handful of private and state schools where parents can pay large supplements to teachers' salaries are the only ones operating. In most schools where teachers do turn up pupil attendance is dwindling.
“We come to school and we entertain the kids until 10am, then we send them home,” Amos Musoni, from Sengwe primary school in the south of the country, said. “There were ten teachers last week, out of 32. They are there because they have no money to leave. We don't even have chalk, or red pens, never mind books.”
At one of Harare's government boys' high schools, benches are being sawn up to provide wood for O-level woodwork examinations - not that anyone knows when they will happen.
"O and A-level pupils go home next week to study for their finals,” the headmaster said. “But there is no timetable. Nor do we have their June mid-year results.”
Urban schools have been overwhelmed by water and power cuts. One primary school in Mabvuku township, Harare, has not had water for five years. A Harare girls' school has been seeking an axe to chop down trees for firewood to cook food.
Providing school food at a time of comprehensive agricultural failure is a struggle. Mr Majongwe said hundreds of rural schools had sent their boarders home because they could no longer feed them.
Mr Musoni, from Sengwe, is pathetically thin. “There is no food,” he said. “People are starving.” Students at Harare Polytechnic rioted last week after they were served sadza, the stiff maize porridge that is the national staple, without salt or cabbage.
The country's four leading universities have failed to open since the start of their first term in mid-August. At the University of Zimbabwe, the country's leading tertiary institute, a notice with last Friday's date on a faculty building tells students that lectures will begin “on a date to be advised”.
Levy Nyagura, the Vice-Chancellor, said that the university had “no water, no electricity and no funds”.
Ellen Murogodo, a would-be first-year social work student, keeps returning to the campus to register only to be told to try again a week later. To pay for her journey she sets up a stand outside the university's Great Hall where she sells popcorn and cigarettes.
“Mugabe was a teacher himself [in the 1950s],” Mr Majongwe said. “He knows the potential of teachers as agents for change. That is why he has deliberately destroyed education.”
New talks on a power-sharing government in Zimbabwe failed yesterday to end a stalemate over Cabinet posts, the opposition MDC said.
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There is just one Mugabe and several million Zimbabweans. Democracy is dead as all elections are rigged. If the population accepts the risks of rebellion they could dispose of him permanently though doubtless there would be casualties. If not, their country will die until recolonised by China.
Mark, Leicester, UK
I have one message for Zimbabweans, god is up there and he is listening, one day Mugabe will be removed and Zimbabwe will prosper once more as it did after Rhodesia.
Ian Smith was right that Mugabe is not fit to run the country. Mugabe himself will be ousted one way or another.
Robert McNulty, Brooklyn, NY, USA
My message to Zimbabweans, God will help you in the same way he helped you in 1979 through talks at Lancaster House this time being facilitated by our South African Brothers. Zimbabwe`s problems are deep-rooted we can`t blame Mugabe alone, what about the sanctions. Zimbabwe can not borrow money .
Mercy Masenda, London, UK
My god! This is...bad, How could Mugabe, a teacher by trade let this happen?
James McCullough, Manhattan, New York, USA
How can one man's crusade preside over 12 million lives? Why is this happeninig to my beloved Zimbabwe? How and when will it end? Will Zimbabwe ever be the same again? This is the tragic plight of a nation brought to its knees by a self-indulgent, blood thirsty regime. My tears will not dry!!
Tichatonga Pfupajena, London, UK
As a former teacher in Zimbabwe, it pains my heart to see how the retrogressive policies of the Mugabe regime have destroyed one of the key pillars of Zimbawean nation, its education system.
It beggars belief that the despotic Mugabe regime remains impervious to calls for change.
Chris Ncube, Rotherham, UK
At this rate they will be asking for us to take over Zimbabwe again. Still even if we did overthrow Mugabe we would gain no thanks for it - we would be accused of being imperialists - we tried to help Africa in the 19th and 20th centuries and look what that has done to our reputation.
Dan , Winchester, England
Dont worry Mugabe's daughter is been taught in London .Phew. And most ministers children ,are all educated in the USA. All paid for by looting the country.
Dully, London, UK
Having been one of the lucky recipients of an excellent education in Zimbabwe, my heartfelt sympanthy goes out to those students who are now being deprived of their basic human rights. The demise of Mugabe is long overdue.
Lyn Harris, Eastbourne, UK
"But we leave our former colonies to rot.
Shame on us!!!!"
-------------------------------------------------------
You got to be kidding. They wanted this. They don't want us there (the man said so himself). Thay said they want to solve this the African way. Now let them!
Jules, Cape Town, South Africa
It is disgusting to learn that a country that was once the leading education nation has been destroyed by a man who has no heart sympathy.
Their chioldren are learning overseas while we the youth are starving and facing a tough time.
Now we are saying to Mugabe and his now is the time
Tapiwa, harare, zimbabwe
And if you think we are suffering with the credit crunch!
Its only going to get worse in Zimbabwe!
It seems we can go to war at the drop of a hat for a bit of oil.
But we leave our former colonies to rot.
Shame on us!!!!
Simon, Bristol, England
A salient lesson to us all, of what harm and murderous permanent damage psychopathic personalities like Mugabe will do with sufficient power. He has no conscience, no restraint, no empathy for others. The age old habit of tribalism does the rest. Tell me again: How is this better than colonialism?
Donald McMiken, Canberra, Australia
I can hardly believe that on the same world people in some countries can live such a miserable life!
Michael Zhu, wannian, China
As a high school teacher in California, I am both saddened and encouraged. I am saddened by my colleague's plight in Zimbabwe. But I am inspired by their heroic efforts to stay true to their calling. If they can do that, then how much more can I, with all the resources at my disposal!
Narcis , La Mirada, California, USA
What a terrible tragedy. Mugabe is destroying his people. Having visited Zimbabwe I have seen the potential, the love of, and the desire for, education which exists among Zimbabweans. Education alone can help them rise above the circumstances the Zanu-PF dictatorship has created. Tragic!
Paul Freeman, London, England
I cannot believe what I am reading here. Once the best education in Africa, now nothing.
maggi, NSW, Australia
Man, this is catastrophic. Mugabe let the education in his country go down the drain.
Stewie O' Riordan, Boston, Massachusetts, USA