POLY AND THE ART OF IMPUNITY. Part 1
Slightly over a
month ago, Poly was closed. Slightly less than 2 months of closure, the college
is poised to open for its third semester of the calendar year on 5th
October. Quite a record. It’s only in Malawi where you can have three academic
semesters in one calendar year.
Some cornestones we could embrace |
But the closure
is history now, and most students are looking forward to the opening, the
future. So too are parents and guardians, lecturers and other stakeholders.
It’s time that the students found lasting solutions to their problems. You know
what sweet mortals, it is the students who have a problem because the administration
has a problem.
So, plainly
speaking, who then has a genuine problem? Your guess is not as bad as mine. Intelligent
mortals, Poly has a problem and it is called impunity. The feeling that you can
do anything and get away with it. The feeling of lack of responsibility and
patriotism.
Truth be told,
there are two warring factions at the Polytechnic, like Nyerere and Maule,
eternal rivals. The students Union and the administration. But the good thing
is that with the
Students in an earlier riot |
Maule and Nyerere rivalry, that is a social undertaking, usually for fun. This is not the case with Poly, purely an academic institution where the highest calibre of human behavior is expected.
Fellow mortals,
as school opens there are facts you have to accept and live with. Nobody these
days fancies the idea of blocking the highway whenever there are disagreements
within the blue wall. No matter what the disagreement, nobody apart from the
ones perpetrating the demonstrations will be on your side. Fact number one.
Part of the Polytechnic |
As if to add
salt on the wound, those people who are inconvenienced are from the corporate
world. Prospective scholarship givers, employers, sponsors and partners in
various projects. This is 2015 and people are simply fed up.
Because of this
rivalry, it can be established that the administration doesn’t want to work
with the students union effectively (something smells fishy), in decisions that
affect students. As long as there is no cooperation between these two, Poly
will always be a rotten fish.
Many people
will argue that whether demonstrations or not, people will still graduate.
That brings us
to fact number two. It must also be established that it is not just about
graduating, a degree is just a certificate, but there is more to it.
As we graduate
without solving the problems that are strangling Poly right now, when we are in
the corporate world, do we seriously think we will solve the bigger problems in
the water boards, Escom, MBC, Hospitals and fight corruption currently making
our currency the worst performing in the world? A definite no.
There were
adverts before school opened in the newspapers that they were looking for
people to supply curtains, maintain the MLT, Toilets, the hostels, pavements
and floodlights around the hostels. All that will soon go down the drain...
In my next
posting, I will discuss why major maintenance has failed to take place over the
last years and why it is always the administration block being painted, why
students are treated like pieces of trash and many more.
Comments