News / National
Mugabe petitioned
13 Feb 2014 at 05:53hrs | Views
THE Zimbabwe Open University (ZOU) has petitioned President Robert Mugabe to order the Civil Service Commission to employ graduates with a diploma in primary education offered by the institution.
This follows reports that the CSC had turned down holders of the diploma programme, saying it was not a legitimate qualification.
The university wants Mugabe as chancellor of all State universities to stamp his authority and order the CSC as the majority employer to recognise the qualification as genuine.
Part of the petition, dated February 7, reads: "The action by the CSC seems to undermine the Chancellor's power of having conferred ZOU graduates with Diploma in Education qualification.
"Therefore we seek your intervention with regards to this crisis. This whole scenario has resulted in the former students suffering socially, economically and emotionally. They are suffering broken families and lives."
ZOU started offering the diploma programme in 2006 with the first group of students graduating in 2010.
"The first group was duly employed by the then Public Service Commission for the period covering eight months, from February 2010 to September 2010 when they got dismissed for want of "proper" qualifications," the university said.
"One year later, Zimche (Zimbabwe Council for Higher Education) put up a notice in the print media suspending ZOU diploma in education primary course until further notice."
ZOU said even after Zimche had suspended the diploma, they continued to offer the programme in 2011 where another group graduated with Mugabe presiding over the graduation ceremony.
"The ZOU diploma in education primary has been stigmatized to such an extent that the Civil Service Commission has refused to employ anyone not even as a relief teacher in preference to people with non-teaching certificates," the university added.
"The whole situation with regards to the diploma in education is now seeming to take the form of some retribution from the government under which ZOU institution has trained over hundred graduates and yet they clearly do not want to offer them employment or regularise this qualification."
This follows reports that the CSC had turned down holders of the diploma programme, saying it was not a legitimate qualification.
The university wants Mugabe as chancellor of all State universities to stamp his authority and order the CSC as the majority employer to recognise the qualification as genuine.
Part of the petition, dated February 7, reads: "The action by the CSC seems to undermine the Chancellor's power of having conferred ZOU graduates with Diploma in Education qualification.
"Therefore we seek your intervention with regards to this crisis. This whole scenario has resulted in the former students suffering socially, economically and emotionally. They are suffering broken families and lives."
"The first group was duly employed by the then Public Service Commission for the period covering eight months, from February 2010 to September 2010 when they got dismissed for want of "proper" qualifications," the university said.
"One year later, Zimche (Zimbabwe Council for Higher Education) put up a notice in the print media suspending ZOU diploma in education primary course until further notice."
ZOU said even after Zimche had suspended the diploma, they continued to offer the programme in 2011 where another group graduated with Mugabe presiding over the graduation ceremony.
"The ZOU diploma in education primary has been stigmatized to such an extent that the Civil Service Commission has refused to employ anyone not even as a relief teacher in preference to people with non-teaching certificates," the university added.
"The whole situation with regards to the diploma in education is now seeming to take the form of some retribution from the government under which ZOU institution has trained over hundred graduates and yet they clearly do not want to offer them employment or regularise this qualification."
Source - Southern Eye