Tanzania Teachers Union (TTU) President Gratian Mukoba during a press
conference in Dar ea Salaam on September 12, 2013. With him is TTU
Assistant Secretary, Dagdbest Deogratias. PHOTO/ AIKA KIMARO
The teacher to student ratio in Tanzania is 1:40, with a demand of 23,546 teachers.
There are 13,657 teachers, which is only 58 per cent of requirements.
This prompted private schools to employ 9,889 teachers from neighbouring Kenya, Uganda, Malawi and Zambia.
Tanzania
Association of Managers and Owners of Non-Government Schools and
Colleges (Tamongsco) has however decried the crackdown.
According to officials, it will have serious repercussions on private English medium schools.
AWAITING RESPONSE
Tamongsco
secretary-general Benjamin Nkonya said most schools could not afford
the $2,000 fee for a two-year work permit required for foreign teachers.
"A school with ten foreign teachers, for example, cannot afford to pay $20,000. We have appealed that the fee either be scrapped or reduced," he said.
School owners raised the matter
with President Jakaya Kikwete in Mbeya last year, and were still waiting
for a response, Mr Nkonya added.
He said Tomongsco
members told the President that they had no option but to hire foreign
teachers to work in private English medium schools due to a shortage of
local tutors.
Mr Nkonya also accused police and
immigration officers of mistreating and humiliating foreign teachers,
saying some had been handcuffed in front of their pupils and bundled
into police vehicles.
"This is not only humiliating, it
also had an adverse psychological effect on pupils, especially those
who were sitting the Standard Seven national examination," he said.
EXPIRED PERMITS
However,
the country's ministry of Education and Vocational Training said it was
not in a position to help private school owners who have employed
illegal immigrants.
Ministry spokesperson Bunyanzu
Ntambi said foreign teachers should not expect preferential treatment
and must abide by immigration regulations.
"Foreign
teachers are not exempt from immigration regulations. There is not much
the ministry can do. It is up to school owners to think how best they
can handle the situation," he said.
But Dar es Salaam
Regional Commissioner Said Meck Sadick said foreign nationals found with
expired work permits would not be immediately deported, and would be
given an opportunity to renew them.
He said 527 illegal immigrants had been arrested since the operation began in the city on September 1.
In another development, criminals have been cashing in since the operation began in Dar es Salaam early this month.
Gangs
masquerading as immigration officers have been extorting bribes from
illegal immigrants by threatening them with arrest and prosecution.
This article first appeared in the Citizen.
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