Author Topic: government school teachers in Sindh protest  (Read 1134 times)

Offline AKBAR

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government school teachers in Sindh protest
« on: May 28, 2010, 03:27:28 PM »
government school teachers in Sindh protest

Karachi: A protest drive by government school teachers in Sindh has left educational activities in a number of the province's districts paralysed for the past several days. The teachers are demanding benefits and allowances granted to educators in the other three provinces which, they say, the Sindh government is not willing to extend to them. Teachers say a summary prepared by a government committee for the grant of benefits has been rejected by the chief minister. The government says the summary is under consideration.

Protests have been staged in various towns and cities across the province, including at the Bhutto mausoleum in Garhi Khuda Bakhsh. However, matters took a nasty turn when the protesting teachers clashed with police in Karachi on Thursday. The police resorted to tear-gas shelling and a baton charge to keep the teachers away from Governor's House, where they wanted to deliver a memorandum to the governor. On Wednesday, the provincial education minister had criticised the teachers' associations, for their protest drive, in the Sindh Assembly, saying they had "destroyed education". He claimed that half the teachers do not show up to take classes, adding that the devolution of the education department to the city and district governments was responsible for the sorry state of education in the province.

In this tug-of-war between the government and teachers, the children of Sindh are suffering the most. Teachers' representatives have said the protests will continue till the summer vacations and may carry on after the holidays. This is a grim prospect. Educators have every right to peacefully protest and pursue their demands, but this should not be at the cost of children's education.

A compromise between both sides must be reached. Both the teachers and the government equally share the responsibility of improving the quality of education in Sindh. On the teachers' part, securing benefits without improving their performance and standards is a questionable goal. On the government's end, putting the blame for the rot in the education system on past governments will not solve the issue. Concrete measures need to be taken by all stakeholders to improve the falling standards of education in Sindh's public schools. Dawn