This has been a depressing week.
It started
with the ill-advised decision to shut all schools that operate under
local curriculum. Thereafter, everything went downhill with the special
pleading that passed for a televised presidential address to the nation
regarding the teachers’ strike.
The address may have been necessary, but was utterly unremarkable. The speech raised more questions but provided no answers.
Its
mode of delivery was suspect and the data presented was of questionable
accuracy. The resolve the President intended to communicate flopped
before a perceptive, conscious and undeterred public.
INACCURATE INFORMATION
The state has already lost the moral war against teachers. It long ago lost its credibility in the eyes of the little ones.
The state has already lost the moral war against teachers. It long ago lost its credibility in the eyes of the little ones.
Why?
This is the first government to make and break a direct electoral
promise to children. It is the first administration in Kenya to teargas
school children on the school playground in broad daylight.
It
has now closed schools and is edging closer to keeping students home
for a long time. Its objective is to fully undermine the little
remaining morale that sustains teachers in our debilitating teaching
environment.
Jubilee is working overdrive to bury the morale of teachers for the foreseeable future.
The
televised address did not help matters. The President aimed, but
failed, to shift the blame for the current crises in the education
sector to teachers.
A perceptive journalist, Alphonce
Shiundu, demonstrated that the President had wrong figures in some
places, made conclusions that are not statistically feasible in other
places and engaged in scare mongering in ways that do not befit his
office.
RAVENOUS APPETITE
Some have argued that instead of critiquing the President, we should provide solutions. If I had solutions, I would have run for the presidency. Am I wrong to assume that the president read his job description?
Some have argued that instead of critiquing the President, we should provide solutions. If I had solutions, I would have run for the presidency. Am I wrong to assume that the president read his job description?
Presidents
are elected to find solutions to tough challenges, to unravel complex
situations and give a way forward. We reject any attempt to shift the
onus of solving the problem.
To be clear, teachers are
not responsible for the wage bill that is consuming our taxes. The
President presides over an unfair arrangement, in which a gluttonous
class demands frugality from everyone but themselves.
A
significant amount of the huge wage bill is consumed by a few in the
high offices who use our money to satisfy their ravenous appetite.
Thus,
it is all well for the President to remind us to live within our means.
The President might not know this, but we already live within our
means. He, however, might wish to address himself to those in his
government.
SCARE-MONGERING TACTIC
Many Kenyans might not know that the Central Planning and Monitoring Unit was represented at the court case that TSC filed against Knut and lost.
Many Kenyans might not know that the Central Planning and Monitoring Unit was represented at the court case that TSC filed against Knut and lost.
Why
should we believe the new statistics the President canvassed at a press
address if able government institutions failed to provide them to a
competent court for proper scrutiny?
This is why the
attempt to associate salary increment for teachers with VAT is not only
diversionary, but a scare-mongering tactic that Kenyans must dismiss.
Teachers
deserve their salary increment. They have earned it and we should
afford it. What Kenyans expect from the President is a candid discussion
on fairness and equity in the allocation and use of wages.
IRRATIONAL SYSTEM
Mr President, we are unhappy about the unfairness of most Kenyans shouldering the excessive greed of a minority.
If
the President had spoken about eliminating corruption and sharing wages
proportionately, and outlined a strategy of securing enough money for
teachers through a rationalised system of expenditure, I doubt that too
many Kenyans would disagree or be too skeptical.
But the President came to justify why an irrational system must remain.
He forgot that nations across the world invest inordinately in education
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