Zimbabwe Gets $9 Million For Writing Minority Language Readers

Voice of America

By Gibbs Dube

16 November 2012

Education Minister David Coltart says the Education Transition Fund has a budget of $9 million from international donors for the writing of language readers, including those in minority indigenous languages, for schools as the nation inches closer towards introducing various languages from Grade One to Grade 7.

In a Facebook message, Coltart said the money will be administered under the Education Transition Fund, launched soon after the inception of the unity government in 2009 to revive the education sector.

He said indications are that there are few readers or texbooks written in minority languages for use in primary schools.

According to Coltart, there are also few texbooks even in languages like shona and sindebele, a situation not conducive for Curriculum Development in Zimbabwe.

He said writers should contact his ministry in finding ways of ensuring that readers written in any Zimbabwean language can be published.

Difa Dube of the Kalanga Language Development Committee said this move is a
step in the right direction.

Meanwhile, the Zimbabwe Schools Examination Council (ZIMSEC) is yet to assign dates for marking Grade 7 exams as the early December results deadline fast approaches.

Teachers expected to mark exams taken at the end of October say they haven’t  been called by ZIMSEC officials to start the marking period.

Grade 7 results are expected to be made public between the first and second weeks of December to allow parents and students time to seek schools for Form One placement.

ZIMSEC faced criticism following a number of problems ranging from disputes between the teachers, parents and pupils.

The exam body hasn’t indicated a reason for current the delay.

Secretary general Raymond Majongwe of the Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe confirmed the reports to Studio 7 saying teachers in his organization are in the dark about the way forward.

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Education Minister says government spending priorities misplaced

SW Radio Africa

By Tererai Karimakwenda

15 November 2012

Education Minister David Coltart has strongly criticized the coalition government’s spending, saying their priorities are completely misplaced.

The comments came after Coltart compared the total budget for his Education Ministry for 2012, which was $8 million, to the exorbitant $100 million recently spent on the military college. The funds to build this college came from a $98 million loan granted by China, in exchange for diamonds from Marange.

Coltart also pointed to the fact that $6 million is being spent on the construction of a new conference hall for ZANU PF in Gweru, which is to be completed by the beginning of December, in time for their annual convention.

It is believed that money being spent on these projects accounts for the diamond revenue that is not being submitted to the national coffers by the ZANU PF and the military elite who control the Marange diamond fields.

“It’s not just the diamonds. This year so far we have imported something like $8.4 billion worth of goods. But we have only managed to raise customs duty of around, about $200 million, which indicates we are losing a vast amount of revenue at the border posts,” Coltart explained. He added: “It is very clear to many of us that because of corruption at the border posts, we are getting insufficient revenue coming into the system.”

Minister Coltart explained that only 39 pence per child had been spent in  the education sector, and this was unacceptable. He said more money needs to be channeled toward rehabilitating schools that have deteriorated.

Coltart also complained about government spending on foreign travel, which was exposed last year by the Finance Minister Tendai Biti. He also criticized the principals in government for spending too much on foreign travel, saying they had blown at least $20 million last year.

It appears government is determined to spend fortunes on unnecessary construction. The Minister for Local Government, Ignatius Chombo, recently confirmed plans by government to move the capital city from Harare to Mt. Hampden, in Robert Mugabe’s rural home of Zvimba. A new parliament building is already being built at the site, with shopping malls and a posh residential area to follow.

Meanwhile, desperate civil continue to plead with government for a decent wage, as most are earning salaries below the poverty datum line. It is the ordinary Zimbabweans that continue to suffer while the few elite pursue lavish lifestyles.

$8 million on education, $20 million on foreign travel. Who in their right mind could think that was a good idea?

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David Coltart interview with ATV News 15-11-12

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Diamond conference ends with questions

Huffington Post

By Gillian Gotora

14 November 2012

VICTORIA FALLS, Zimbabwe — The Zimbabwe Diamond Conference, which wound up here Wednesday, was sponsored by President Robert Mugabe’s government to highlight its emergence as a major player in the world diamond trade.

The conference was held to “shed light” on Zimbabwe’s diamond mining and to allay widely-held concerns of corruption and looting of the gems, said organizers.

But the conference raised more questions than answers.

Delegates spoke of the amazing potential Zimbabwe has as a diamond producer. Zimbabwe allegedly has the capacity to produce between 110 million to 160 million carats of diamonds annually, making it one of the top five diamond producers by volume in the world.

But where the diamond money is going is not clear. The Mugabe government seemed unconcerned about providing clarity on how much is mined or earned at the country’s eastern Marange diamond fields. Mines Minister Obert Mpofu dismissed calls for transparency.

“How then are you expected to be transparent when there are hyenas chasing you?” said Mpofu to conference delegates, referring to diamond watchdog groups. “They want to know what car you drive, which house you are living in and what plane you are flying.”

Mpofu was named as having amassed “unexplained wealth” from illegal diamond deals, in a report released at the start of the conference by a Canadian group campaigning against conflict diamonds, Partnership Africa Canada. The report described Mpofu as “the chief guardian of Marange” because of his role in awarding “opaque” concessions beyond the scrutiny of government ministers and the public.

Mpofu denied the accusations and dismissed the report as being funded by the Canadian government to “vilify and lie” about Zimbabwe.

“You think Africans can believe that nonsense? We are very emotional about it and we have suffered enough,” Mpofu said.

At least $2 billion from diamond sales was allegedly stolen from the Marange diamond fields and enriched President Robert Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party loyalists and military hierarchy, the report said.

The funds from diamond sales could have turned around the country’s embattled economy, but they have not shown up in the national coffers.

After years of political and economic meltdown, Zimbabwe’s health and education services remain broke.

Finance Minister Biti said in his budget speech he had been promised $600 million from diamond sales but the head of state-run Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation, Goodwills Masimirembwa said that figure had to be revised downwards to $150 million due to poor performance of diamond sales affected by Western sanctions.

While Zimbabwe’s entire budget for education for 2012 was $8 million, Mugabe’s party is constructing a $6 million conference hall in the provincial city of Gweru for its annual convention in December.

Education Minister David Coltart criticizes the government’s spending. Coltart said last week that the number of children dropping out of school has risen by 10 percent because of increased school fees. Coltart said his ministry must rely on the goodwill of donors to assist in its programs.

He accused Mugabe’s party of having misplaced priorities.

“We have a warped system in Zimbabwe, a history of misplaced priorities; this hall in Gweru and the military college constructed for $100 million,” Coltart said.

“If that money had been channeled toward the rehabilitation of schools, then we would have improved the learning institutions.”

Zimbabwe received a $98 million loan from China to build a sprawling military training college. China wants the loan repaid over 13 years from proceeds from the Marange diamond fields.

However, the Mugabe government complains that sanctions by Europe, Australia and the U.S. are “denying the people of Zimbabwe a chance to benefit from diamond sales.”

Former South African President Thabo Mbeki told Zimbabwe that it must ensure the “greatest possible transparency” in the mining and sales of its diamonds and guard the diamond industry against “a predatory elite which uses its access to state power to enrich itself, against the interests of the people as a whole, acting in collusion with the mining companies.”

Mbeki said the country’s political leadership “owes a sacred obligation to the peoples of Zimbabwe to ensure that the country’s diamonds serve as the people’s best friend.”

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Zimbabwe, Donors Meet to Revive Education Sector

Voice of America 

By Gibbs Dube

14 November 2012

Representatives of the Ministry of Education, the World Bank and United Nations Children’s Education Fund held a crucial meeting Wednesday in Kadoma, Mashonaland West Province, to find ways of funding Zimbabwe’s $4.5 billion five-year Education Medium Term Plan launched in May this year.

Education Minister David Coltart said there are high hopes that these organizations will fund the plan designed to fully stabilise Zimbabwe’s education sector crippled over the years by lack of money.

Coltart said the World Bank and UNICEF are assisting his ministry in formulating a proposal for funding to be submitted to the Global Partnership for Africa, a coalition of international donors.

Zimbabwe’s Education Medium Term Plan will lead to the construction of 750 secondary schools, refurbishment of 24,000 classrooms by the year 2015, restoration of the professional status of teachers and promotion of electronic learning, among other issues.

Coltart said this can be achieved with the help of the World Bank and UNICEF. “Once the Global Partnership for Africa meets next year, we expect that line of funding to start flowing into Zimbabwe,” he said.

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Why David Coltart Should Learn Gangnam Style

Deck Live: For the Urban Trendsetter

By Chris Nqoe

14 November 2012

Gangnam style has swept up the world in a euphoria  of South Korean induced pop music craze. The sound ofteens in  Nkulumane  singing along to Psy’s tongue in cheek worldwide hit is perhaps an indication of the power of the web to dictate popular culture & how young people are rapidly influenced by their peers, not just next door but a continent away. Admittedly Zimbabwe has a miniscule impression on the over 100million You Tube views of the Gangnam Style video but, its catchy lyrics have nevertheless reached  Bulawayo’s urban youth.

At face value, sceptics and old, boring people will be quick to dismiss  things young people are interested in. Sadly for them they are not viewing the bigger (HD) picture. Admittedly our interest as young people is temporary and fleeting, only lasting until the next pop craze or tending topic.

However, there is a whole sustainable aspect to pop culture that could benefit a country’s GDP if not its economic vibrancy.

Its not just Gangnam style and Soap operas that have South Korea on our lips and business technocrats in that part of the world smiling all the way to the bank ,making it rain so to speak. This brings me to my next point. A vibrant pop culture is good for good business. Zimbabwe  could learn immensely from our Asian friends but if only the old dinosaurs would give young people with innovation and new ideas a chance. I digress.

Lets speak numbers for a bit. You Tube users in  countries across the globe generated 2.35 billion hits, guess what they were watching?  Korean Pop videos. All that traffic just to view cheesy pop videos by young people in a far flung Asian country, speaking a language most viewers have no clue about. This can’t just be the fear of missing out (FOMO). This is global attention and a very valuable form of attention.

South Korea is exporting its  pop culture to the world and with it comes  good money. We are talking numbers that will make Biti & Gono salivate. Six years ago South Korea  was 33rd in the global music market. This year the rise of K-pop has taken the Koreans to the worlds 11th largest music market, all this from a digital demand much of which is emanating from popular culture largely driven by young people. Like Naija music  Nigeria and  K pop in South Korea, Zimbabwe should be taking lessons. The nutty professor was onto something with his 100% local content policy at ZBC. He just did it wrongly.

There is a whole industry behind pop culture, its not a shallow way of life, its big business. Remember the  2011 MTV Europe Music Awards? Particularly Best Worldwide Act. Google will show  you now that Big Bang a South Korean group scooped that award. Its been a long time coming but we can safely say the world has received the K Pop sound.

$31.3million to $84million is the official figure for South Korean  music industry exports from 2009 to 2010 respectively, Korea Chamber of Commerce & industry reports that 53% of 300 SK companies say the oversee operations have benefited from the global popularity of K-Pop. The Korea Tourism Organisation is expecting  1million Hallyu (SK music, movies& soaps) loving tourists. Zimbabwe would build a nuclear bomb to get such numbers of tourists, but that’s what a vibrant pop culture industry can do for an economy. These are the hard facts and numbers from a K-pop induced craze.

Before you dismiss Gangnam style as an isolated run of luck, take a look at another proud Korean export, Samsung. We live in a world split into those that love Apple & those that adore Samsung.

What are the facts? The later obliterated Apple in global smart phone exports in the last quarter. I’m sure Psy uses a Samsung but these numbers are not connected to  the popularity of Gangnam style. However,you  and I can bet on how many of the 100million views were mad on Apple devices #AsYouWere.

Young people are all too familiar with Korean brands like Hyundai and Samsung, in fact one can say these names are not too foreign to us.Imagine what would happen if Zimbabwe had home grown brands like these. I would totally buy a Mango Smart phone or tablet powered by Telecel just to download Gangnam Style.

It matters not that the average boy from Nkulumane can’t understand a word of Korean lyrics, the song is catchy and that the globe is bouncing along Gangnam style is no tribute to mere hype. K-pop is irresistible and business is booming for Korea. Imagine such a scenario playing out in Zimbabwe. It can, only if the players are willing to make it happen.

This is where you come in Minister Coltart.

Its a challenge to artists, to take their trade seriously and decision makers to provide an enabling environment for art to prosper. Only then will Zimbabwe witness thriving popular culture driving an economic boom. Pop culture can’t b dismissed by technocrats in Government as just silly young people engaging the latest fleeting craze. The impact of the global popularity of Gangnam style and particularly the leap achieved by K-pop has left a valuable imprint on the Korean economy. The same can be replicated in Zimbabwe but only if we realise the economic value of a home grown and cultivated Pop culture. As South Korea has shown the world, so should you Mr Coltart LEARN Gangnam style.

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Coltart pledges help to restore Kunonga destroyed schools

The Zimbabwean

by Edgar Gweshe

12 November 2012

ZIMBABWE’S Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture, David Coltart, has pledged to help restore sanity and improving learning conditions Anglican schools that had been seized by renegade bishop, Nolbert Kunonga.

Kunonga on Monday lost a battle at the Supreme Court to keep control of the church’s property in the Harare Diocese on Monday.

Deputy Chief Justice, Luke Malaba, ruled that Kunonga and his followers were no longer part of the Anglican Church as they broke away from the main church in 2007 and, resultantly, they were not entitled to its property. Malaba said Kunonga was wrongly in control of the church’s property since 2007.

Speaking after the Supreme Court judgment which reversed an earlier ruling by the High Court realising Kunonga as the rightful owner of Anglican Church property in the diocese of Harare, Coltart said: “Our prayers have been answered for the Anglican Church in Zimbabwe. I now look forward to working with them to restore sanity in their schools which have suffered so much during this period of insanity.

As usual my door is open if they need help in this regard.” Coltart, like many other Anglican worshippers, expressed delight at the Supreme Court judgement which he said would help restore order in the Anglican schools.

Soon after the judgement, social media such as Facebook were awash with congratulatory messages for Bishop Gandiya who leads the Church of Central Province of Africa while Kunonga was heavily attacked by jubilant parishioners.

In an interview with The Zimbabwean, Gandiya admitted that standards in schools which had been seized by Kunonga had drastically fallen. He admitted they were facing an uphill task to restore order at the schools.

“The standards were falling. We realise we have a big task ahead of us. Our Education Committee will be meeting this week to look into the issue and map out strategies on how best to improve the standards at the schools,” said Gandiya.


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Poor Quality Chinese Products Being Smuggled Into Zim

RadioVop Zimbabwe

12 November 2012

Bulawayo, November 11, 2012– The leader of the smaller faction of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), Welshman Ncube, said ‘Zhing Zhongs’  (referring to poor quality Chinese products) are flooding Zimbabwe market because of corruption at the border posts where importers are evading duty.

“We have people now selling these …Chinese products here for US$1 per two items because there are not paying duty…”said Ncube, who is also Industry and Trade Minister.

Ncube told a Bulawayo Progressive Residents Association (BPRA) conference held here over the weekend that it was a surprise that Zimbabwe was receiving a large number of Chinese nationals despite stringent visa restrictions against China.

Chinese nationals have been making spirited attempts to make their presence felt in Zimbabwe after President Robert Mugabe extended an open invitation for them to invest in the country as part of his ‘Look East’ policy after being snubbed by America and Europe.

The Minister also said it was no secret that the reason for so many road blocks on Zimbabwe’s roads was that police want bribes.

“Even in government we know about this, because we talk about it every week and it is clear that road blocks are meant for bribes,” he said.

Early this year clashes between traffic police and commuter omnibus operators erupted in Harare over roadblocks. Police claimed they were enforcing traffic laws while operators claim they are being fleeced in broad daylight.

Speaking at the same occasion, Education Minister, David Coltart, urged Zimbabwean parents to prioritise payment of school fees over beer and cell phones.

“Parents must spend less time talking over the cell phones and drinking beer and make sure fees are paid because as the government we have no enough money to fund education, and I am very serious about this,” Coltart said.

He also said the unity government should invest more in education than in the Defence Ministry.

Zimbabwe’s education system has been among the best in Africa, although for the past decade it has suffered due to decline public funding. In 2008 the country’s education system was also hit due by combination of low salaries, poor attendance by both teachers and students, and transport problems.

The 2008 education crisis crippled schools across the country crippling most schools’ operations. Teachers embarked on crippling strikes with examinations failed to be marked on time.

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Catholic priest who exposed Zim massacre

The Sunday Independent

By Peta Thornycroft

11 November 2012

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe once called former Archbishop Henry Karlen a “sanctimonious prelate,” after he and other Catholic bishops had protested about the massacres by Mugabe’s troops of thousands of opposition supporters in Zimbabwe shortly after independence.

Unsurprisingly, Mugabe, an occasional Catholic, did not show up for Karlen’s funeral in Bulawayo last week, as Swiss born Karlen, was the first to gather information about a notorious brigade of soldiers sent to the Matabeleland and Midlands provinces to kill mostly Ndebele-speaking people who were supporters of liberation war hero, Joshua Nkomo.

Karlen died aged 90 in a Bulawayo hospital after a short illness. Karlen had seen his predecessor and dozens of Catholic missionaries murdered in the Rhodesian civil war and was devastated when he learned, two years after 1980 independence, that another, more secret war had begun. Reports filtered in to him from colleagues at rural churches, hospitals and mission stations in the two Matabeleland provinces, of which Bulawayo was the capital, about the slaughter of opposition supporters loyal to the flamboyant struggle leader, Nkomo, also widely known at that time as ‘Father Zimbabwe.’

Karlen knew who was doing the killing. It was a new, North Korean-trained brigade, formed outside of the Zimbabwe National Army, which was ordered into Matabeleland by Mugabe and two cabinet ministers, Sidney Sekeramayi, in charge of defence, and Emmerson Mnangagwa, who held the security portfolio. Shaken but courageous Catholic clergy, and medical staff from a key mission hospital, St Lukes, along the road to Victoria Falls, reported to Karlen about this new war, which was in many ways even more devastating than the war to end white rule. He made notes of what he was told and his ghastly file grew with each harrowing account. Like many at that time, Karlen presumed Mugabe did not know what was going on and that if he did know, he would stop it. So he tried to contact the prime minister, as he then was, but his calls were not returned. In anguish Karlen decided, in February 1983, to call Garfield Todd, the former liberal prime minster of what was then called Southern Rhodesia.

Todd had lived most of his life in Matabeleland and had many close friends and colleagues in the new Zimbabwe government.He was reviled by most whites, and his movements were restricted by Ian Smith during the civil war, but Todd, the man who had a non-racial vision for Rhodesia, was honoured by Mugabe after independence, and made a senator. (Mugabe revoked Todd’s Zimbabwe citizenship in 2001.) Karlen told Todd that “the state was perpetrating atrocities….that people were being terrorised, starved, and butchered, and their property destroyed,” his daughter Judith Todd recalled in her 2007 post-independence history, ‘“Through the Darkness”. Karlen asked Todd to secure an appointment for him with Mugabe. Garfield Todd was aghast at what he heard. At Todd’s request Karlen sent  his file to Judith in Harare who read it and forwarded it to senior members of Mugabe’s government.

In March 1983, Karlen and Mike Auret, director of the Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace met Mugabe for several hours ahead of the Bishop’s Conference and handed him a report largely based on Karlen’s notes. In his report to Mugabe on the atrocities Karlen wrote: “Your own soldiers are saying, ‘We are sent by Mugabe to kill.’’ The bishops then issued a strongly worded pastoral letter headlined, “Peace is still possible,” which estimated that “tens of hundreds” had been killed. This was a difficult moment for the bishops. Some senior Catholic clergy had opposed white minority rule, and came to know and respect Mugabe when he went into exile in Mozambique to become president of Zanu, and commander of its military wing.

Karlen and his colleagues had celebrated when the civil war ended and had gone out of their way to support the new government. The shock of learning about state-ordered massacres and the torture of Nkomo’s supporters profoundly affected Karlen and his fellow bishops. News of the atrocities broke in The Star and other newspapers of its group in South Africa and in the Guardian in London later in 1983. With increasing domestic and international outrage at what many believed was a genocide against Nkomo’s supporters, and following statements by Zimbabwe’s Bishops Conference, Mugabe retaliated by issuing the words “sanctimonious prelates” to describe Karlen and his colleagues.

But he did appoint a commission of inquiry into the deaths, estimated by Mugabe’s officials at “1500 people.’” The commission was chaired by Harare lawyer, Simplicius Chihambakwe, still in practice in Harare, Karlen was relieved that the commission had been formed and went to give evidence using the mass of information he had collected. The commission completed its work in 1984 but Mugabe withheld its findings. The Legal Resources Foundation, a non-governmental organisation, went to court seeking its release, but its application was refused.With no public document available, the Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace and the Legal Resources Foundation began a long and difficult investigation into the appalling events in Matabeleland, and the origins of the enmity between Mugabe’s wartime forces and those loyal to Nkomo. Karlen’s file and his memory were a starting point for the investigators. Mugabe’s intelligence agents hindered their work at every level, and the investigators were also hampered by lack of resources and fear among
survivors about coming forward to give information. And many eye witnesses to the horrors had fled to South Africa during the height of the slaughter.

Eventually the two organisations produced a long, detailed report called “Breaking the Silence – Building true peace” which estimated that about 20 000 people had been killed in Matabeleland and in parts of the Midlands province from late 1982 until Nkomo, by then exhausted, went into an inclusive government with Mugabe in 1987. When Auret released the report in 1997 only Karlen and a second bishop endorsed its publication for general distribution. For the rest of his life Karlen, who became Archbishop in 1994, would say he  could never understand why the new government chose to murder its citizens. Henry Karlen was born in Torbel,Switzerland in 1922, joined the Mariannhill Missionaries at 20 and was ordained in 1947. Four years later he was sent on his first mission to St Peter’s Seminary in Kwa Zulu Natal and became Bishop of Umtata in 1968. He moved to his new position, Bishop of Bulawayo in 1974 and retired as Archbishop in 1998. In 2007 Karlen was given the freedom of the City of Bulawayo by a Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) city government, then still in opposition to Mugabe’s ZanuPF nationally but now working with it in a very uneasy coalition government. Thousands turned up at his funeral including three MDC cabinet ministers, Moses Mzila, Gordon Moyo, and David Coltart.

Mzila, a liberation war veteran who was jailed by the Rhodesian administration was arrested last year for attending a memorial service for the victims of the 1980s massacres which Mugabe once called a “moment of madness.” As a child, Gordon Moyo watched one of Mugabe’s inner circle burn down his  parents’ home. Education minister David Coltart, a lawyer by profession, was a director of the operational arm of the Legal Resources Foundation in Bulawayo and one of the main movers and authors of the “Breaking the Silence” report. Retired Archbishop Karlen was buried at Bulawayo’s Athlone Cemetery. Independent Foreign Service

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Maranatha Prize Giving Day a Success

The Herald

By Swagga T and Winstone Antonio

9 November 2012

A good school is measured by its ability to adapt to change and fostering compliance to global economic trends. Well Cool Lifestyle last week was invited to the inaugural Maranatha Christian High School speech and prize giving day.

The event saw 16 excelling students scooping awards such as certificates and individualised shields, with the best student receiving a Lenovo laptop sponsored by ZB Bank.

The awards ranged academic excellence, music, smartness, sports, entrepreneurship and best behaviour.

The programme opened with the smartly dressed school choir in their uniform leading the national anthem.

Interestingly to note, the school choir composed the Maranatha theme song which talks about the school and Christian setting.

“It was an exhilarating performance as these youngsters ensemble with guitars and drums chanting the tune,” said Tapiwa from Westgate, an attendee at the event.

Denis Mareya (16), a lower student was voted as the best outstanding student of the year and was very happy.

“I am excited that I was voted the best student award. Indeed hard work pays. My secret is being principled and focused,” Denis said joyfully.

Speaking at the speech and prize giving day, Minister of Education, Sports, Arts and Culture Senator David Coltart said schools’ nature is to sculptor personalities.

“Teachers’ role cannot be over emphasised as they are role models. They are tasked with the critical job of moulding the children socially, academically and spiritually all in line with the ideals of the school’s value,” he said.

The minister said schools should also move with time.

“Schools of this day and age have a big challenge to fight redundancy and stay relevant in a technologically vibrant era. I am glad that the school has emerged at a time when the order of the day is ever changing technological environment. If you don’t adapt to change you become irrelevant and obsolete,” he said.

Senator Coltart also urged pupils to make use of the exposure they get and to discover their talents.

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