PRIMARY and Secondary Education minister Cain Mathema was last week grilled in Parliament by Zengeza West MP Job Sikhala (MDC Alliance) over alleged sex orgies and drug abuse in schools across the country in the absence of teachers who are on strike.
Sikhala said government should explain its position
regarding pictures and videos circulating on social media showing
schoolchildren engaging in mischief, which includes sex orgies and abuse of
drugs.
He said the unruly behaviour was putting children’s lives
in danger. Sikhala asked: “I want to understand the reason why the government
requested the opening of schools before solving the problems of teachers’
strike first. Mr Speaker Sir, I wonder whether the Minister of Primary and
Secondary Education knows the level of moral decadence that is currently
prevailing in boarding schools throughout the country where students are not
going to school.”
Mathema initially evaded the question before he was pressed
by MPs to address it. “At schools, we do not expect any children or teachers to
act or behave in an immoral way. All schools have school heads, the school
administration is there, and the inspectors are there. We will do everything we
can to protect the children. I am ready, and if any MP has that evidence, let
them come to my office and show me and we will do the investigation.
“We will go out of our way to stop every criminal activity
that may be taking place in schools. We are ready to listen to everybody, every
parent, every guardian or community member; or adult and if you see any
indecent activity by any child, please bring that information to my office,”
Mathema said.
He then claimed that teachers were not on strike, despite
numerous pronouncements by labour unions that they embarked on an industrial
action citing incapacitation.
“Schools in the first place were closed not because
somebody sat down and decided to close schools. Schools were closed like
everywhere else in the world because of the COVID-19 pandemic, none of us
created COVID-19.
“There was no teacher on strike before we opened schools.
That is why we opened schools and we are doing it like any other country.
Zimbabwe does not exist alone; it exists in the region and in the world. We did
not instruct any teachers not to go to work,” Mathema responded much to the
chagrin of Sikhala.
The Zengeza West MP then charged: “What I asked the
minister is; what are government measures to control moral decadence currently
happening in the schools? I want the answer on that one. We have got children
at school.”
Mathema did not respond as the government continues to deny
what it is happening in the countrys’ schools.
Earlier in the week, chairperson of the Parliamentary
Portfolio committee on Primary and Secondary Education, Priscillah
Misihairabwi-Mushonga interrogated secretary in the Primary and Secondary
Education ministry, Tumisang Thabela over the same reports. Newsday
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