Stephen Mpofu Correspondent
This week Minister of Higher and Tertiary, Science and Technology Development, Professor Amon Murwira said that the ministry was abandoning the mass production of graduates and focusing on producing quality.
“What I can say is that we are abandoning the mass production way of doing things to focus on producing quality graduates,” the professor said.
That universities and tertiary institutions, numerous as Zimbabweans know them to be, have been mass producing misfits developmentally, as the minister suggested, makes one wonder where the authorities were when all this was happening with huge sums of the taxpayers’ money being spent in the process?
But a thorough exercise needs to be undertaken before the Government abandons the production of graduates ill-equipped to drive the economy.
First, the authorities must discover whether faulty ovens have been responsible for producing half-baked cakes that are no good to anyone or it is the bakers or the instructors at the institutions that lack the wherewithal to produce the desired products that the nation needs to move forward economically and socially into a brave new world.
A haphazard or change for change’s sake in the production of graduates at the institutions in point might worsen things and turn the country into a laughing stock globally, instead.
According to Professor Murwira, the mass production of graduates has seen higher and tertiary institutions producing an average of 2 000 graduates per university each year.
In the urgent need for Zimbabwe’s economic and social development in point it stands to reason that half-baked graduates from the country’s higher learning institutions are a tragic loss when they should instead be given the requisite skills to move mountains that stand as impediments to the country’s advancement.
It is in this regard that the Government’s move to end mass production of half-baked graduates from higher and tertiary institutions must be applauded and supported by all Zimbabweans with the goodwill to see the country move out from the current straitjackets in order to achieve President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s Vision 2030 under which the country should right now be poised to become a middle income state.
What this suggests is that now is the time for combative developmental, rather than disruptive, rhetorical politics that leaves things at a standstill and causes neighbour to hate neighbour instead of people holding hands as they set out to pull down stumbling blocks hindering social and economic emancipation for them and their children and their children’s children.
It is indeed another tragic irony that people, or so-called leaders who happened not to be on earth when this country, as former colonial Rhodesia, was experiencing birth pangs, and so have no inkling of where Zimbabwe came from.
Had these people any experiential knowledge of the suffering of blacks in the colonial era they would now be working hard to advocate the developmental cause of the people of this country instead of holding meaningless demonstrations to try to show the world who these leaders are politically — another tragic irony.
Development is today’s politics around the globe; for anyone to claim to have won elections that even courts of law and international observers know to have gone the other way is probably the worst political self de-campaigning exercise that anyone can embark on internationally — the worst act of imprudence.
In Zimbabwe’s case, outside countries, including our former colonial power, Britain, say they want to help us move the country forward developmentally, but that political demonstrations act as a hindrance in that way.
Now it remains for the people of Zimbabwe to decide whether they and their children and children’s children will feed and survive on political demonstrations that are inconsequential to the country’s economic and social development.
Or whether they will put their shoulder to the wheel in support of developmental programmes that will raise the motherland to the level of other nations in the global village so that our people may walk with their heads thrust in the air while cracking ear to ear smiles at their achieved development.



